Birmingham Poetry (1923-4)

Selected And Arranged by S. Fowler Wright

Published by: The Merton Press, Ltd., Abbey House, Westminster, S.W.1.
Printed by: Graves Bros., Ltd. London. N.W.1


By the same Author

Published by Fowler Wright Ltd., In England, January, 1929.

A new translation of The Inferno of Dante Alighieri.

The American edition (Cosmopolitan $2.50) Was published in October 1928.


Birmingham Poetry (1923-4)

        This is an anthology of Birmingham poetry as it is written today, and as such it should be of special interest to Birmingham citizens, and to all lovers and students of poetry in its innumerable developments.

        It comes from a locality which has always been rich in its artistic output, though so little used to boast concerning it, that the world has been disposed to take it at its own appraising - as the world will, - and so I was recently told, quite seriously, by a leading publisher that to produce an anthology of Warwickshire poetry would be an impossibility - or a jest. Could any good thing come out of Nazareth?

        Well, Shakespeare came.

        As the poetry of any period reflects the conditions of the national life in which it is nurtured, so must the poetry of a narrower area reflect the civic life in which it develops.

        Birmingham is a city of engineers and of artists, workers for the most part rather in form than colour, but all having learnt that beauty and harmony of line and figure are essential to excellence in the crafts they practice.

        It follows logically that the shapeless crudities which have masqueraded as poetry during recent years have made no growth in such an atmosphere.

        Writing with a knowledge of contemporary poetry which is necessarily somewhat exceptional, and is not confined to the work of the limited number of professionals who are able to gain the general ear of the literary public, I do not know of any area of such population within the English-speaking world which is equally free from weediness of that description.

        The pro-modernist critic will retort that its poetry must be 'derivative', and therefore contemptible. With a slovenliness in word-usage which he may have contracted from his favourite authors, he habitually confuses the verbs to derive and to imitate.

        Derivative it certainly is, as all good literary work, even of the most original genius, always must be. If it have no root in the past, it will assuredly have no fruit in the future.

        Just as for centuries before the Chaucerian era, English poetry beat blindly against the dead wall of a Saxon tradition, and made no progress, so has it during the early years of the present century been thwarted and sterilised by the posturist movement - if it can properly be called a 'movement' in which its exponents have waved their muckrakes, and displayed their ensign of the swelled head vert, and the three feathers argent, to a bewildered but un-advancing public.

        The mountain has laboured for twenty years, and there is no mouse to justify its exertions.

        The movement, if such we call it, has been a passing ripple on the great stream of poetic literature, but the stream itself has not deviated, nor is it likely to do so.

        This is Birmingham poetry as it is, and to some extent as it has been, because, though all the authors represented are living Birmingham citizens (with the exception of Mr. Howard S. Pearson, whose death took place while this book was being prepared for the press), yet more than half a century of thought and experience divides the oldest from the youngest contributor.

        In editing this and similar anthologies for other centres, I have endeavoured to represent every kind of poetry which is being produced in that locality, the best of each kind, of course, but still of every variety of attempt or experiment, without consideration of my own personal preferences, or of the kinds of verse which are popular at the moment.

        In the present volume, being myself a native of Birmingham, I have even been sufficiently catholic in my selection to include examples of my own work, although I know it to be aloof from the literary interests of today, and that it must look to the future for any recognition that it is ever likely to receive.

        But while this is an anthology of genuine Birmingham poetry - authentic poetry, spontaneously written, for the most part without any thought of ultimate publication, whatever may be its artistic standards or deficiencies - it is also the outcome of a wider movement which has extended from Vancouver to Wellington, from Jamaica to Patiala - a movement which the Empire Poetry League has done much to organise and co-ordinate, but which it could not have originated successfully had it not found a responsive spirit in every region to which its activities have extended.

Abbey House, Westminster, November, 1923.

INDEX


Publisher's Announcements.

Recommended Books Of New Verse.

Scenes From The Morte D'Arthur.

S. Fowler Wright.   4/-

Some Songs Of Bilitis.

S. Fowler Wright.   1/-





Just Published.


Poets Of Merseyside. 2/6 & 3/6

Birmingham Poetry, 1923-24, 2/6 & 3/6


Now In Preparation.

A Manchester Anthology. 2/6 & 3/6

Some Yorkshire Poets. 3/6


AN ANTHOLOGY OF DOMINION AND COLONIAL VERSE.

This is a companion to 'Voices on the Wind.'

        Its intention is to introduce the contemporary poetry of the various centres of literary culture scattered throughout the Empire, both to each other, and to English readers.

First Published 1922, 3/6 net.

VOICES ON THE WIND. (Second Impression.)


An Anthology Of Contemporary Verse By Nearly A Hundred Of The Best Of Our - Living Poets -

        With A Preface by S. Fowler Wright.


Now In The Press.

VOICES ON THE WIND. Second Series.

A second volume of contemporary verse representing the work of nearly a hundred English poets of today. It is not representative of any school or clique, and its Editor is entirely indifferent to established reputations. He has contributed a stimulating preface, dealing with the progress which has been made in the emancipation of contemporary poetry, since the first series was published.

        These are books which no lover of poetry will be content to miss, and no student of the literature of our own day can afford to disregard the only volumes which endeavour to exhibit its poetic tendencies with impartiality.

The Merton Press Ltd., Abbey House, Westminster, S.W1.


THE EMPIRE POETRY LEAGUE.

President: Sir Arthur Quiller Couch, M.A., D. Litt.

Vice-Presidents:
Miss Lillian Baylis.Thomas Moult, Esq.
Sir Frederick Black, K.C.B.Sir Gilbert Parker Bart.
Dr. F.S. Boas, LL.D.Mrs. Dorothy Una Ratcliffe
Clive Carey, Esq.Sir Landon Ronald.
Lady Carrickfergus.Mrs. Jopling Rowe, R.A.
Mrs Paterson Cranmer.E. Marston Rudland, Esq.,
W.H. Davies, Esq.Sir Owen Seaman.
Dr. C. de C. Ellis,.Henry Simpson, Esq.,
Sir Gilbert Frankau.Miss Muriel Stuart.
Miss Rose Fyleman.Miss Sybil Thorndike.
The Hon. Lady Gordon.E. Temple Thurston Esq.,
Sir Sydney Lee.Hugh Walpole, Esq.,
Dr. Habberton Lulham.Israel Zangwill, Esq.

Dr. L.H. Allen (Australia).
Mrs. Ida M. Cooke (Wellington)
Dr. P.S.G. Dubash (Karachi)
Dr. Ernest Fewster (Vancouver)
D.O.H. Holland, Esq., (South Africa)
Fredoon Kabraji, Esq., (Bombay)
Dr. J.D. Logan (Toronto)
J.E. Clare MacFarlane, Esq. (Jamaica)
Mrs. D.H. Wilcox Syndney).

Chairman: L.H.B. Knox, Esq.
Deputy Chairman: Miss M.O. Curle.

Hon. Sec.: Miss Fowler Wright, Abbey House, Westminster, S.W.1.
Hon. Treasurer: Mrs. Hamilton Scott, 9. Queen's Gate Gardens, S.W.7.

        This league is a fellowship of those who are interested in poetry, and are banded together with a view to extending the love and knowledge of all imaginative literature.

        Full particular's, programmes, &c., can be obtained on application to the Hon. Sec. as above.

Loren H.B. Knox, Chairman.

Note. - The Birmingham Centre of 'The Empire Poetry League' meets at the Birmingham Chamber of Commerce, New Street, on alternate Fridays.

        Programmes and all particulars can be obtained from H. E. Britton, Esq., 10. Milford Rd., Harborne.

        Those in other districts who desire to support the movement should communicate with the Hon. Sec. at Abbey House, as above, who will be pleased to enrol them as members, and will put them in touch with others interested in their locality, or with their nearest centre if desired.

The End

[ Home | About Author | Book Categories | Book Titles | Films | Foreword ]


All the material on this web site is © copyright.


For further information & general enquiries please contact Marrak
Technical web site enquiries to WebMaster

This is web site   http://www.sfw.org