Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. It employs striking imagery of a "flying sled" and a "leprous hillside" to convey the dangerous and desolate environment. The poem's stark language and fragmented structure reflect the chaos and brutality of war. Compared to the author's other works, this poem is particularly focused on the physical and psychological toll of war on individuals.

  2. John Allan Wyeth (October 24, 1894 – May 11, 1981) served as a lieutenant in the American Expeditionary Forces during World War I and subsequently became a war poet, composer, and painter. After the Armistice, Wyeth lived in Europe and became both a Post-Impressionist painter and a war poet.

  3. Hace 1 día · Texts about. John Allan Wyeth - John Allan Wyeth, Jr., in 1894 in New York City. He published a single book of poetry, This Man’s Army: A War in Fifty-Odd Sonnets (Harold Vinal, 1928), about his experience in World War I. Wyeth died in 1981 in New Jersey.

  4. Wyeth married Florence Nightingale Sims, the daughter of surgeon J. Marion Sims, on August 10, 1886. They had two sons and one daughter. One of their sons, Marion Sims Wyeth, became an architect who designed many mansions in Florida. Another son, John Allan Wyeth Jr., was a poet. After his first wife died, Wyeth married Marguerite Chalifoux.

  5. Wyeths poetry was not only vividly realized: it was unique. Cunningly combining traditional form and modernist methods, realistic, narrative and imagistic lyricality, Wyeth was the missing man in the history of 20th-century American poetry – an important soldier-poet from the Great War.

  6. John Allan Wyeth was an American writer, artist and school teacher. His poignant pieces written about the First World War earned him the epithet “war poet” but it actually took until the year 2008 for this to happen.

  7. The Poetry of John Allan Wyeth I John Allan Wyeth is the missing figure in the American literature of World War I-a soldier poet still worth reading. Little known in his own lifetime, he has been utterly forgotten by posterity. Even scholars and historians of the period don't recog nize his name. Yet his work remains fresh and compelling eighty