Chapter - One
Chapter - One
Chapter - One
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
The cultural scenerio of Britain after the second world war was chiefly
characterized by the nationalization of art and the main task of the artists was to present
the classless medium of common culture. The artists were called upon to describe the
crippled condition of the nation with a view to bridg the gap between art and life.
Cultural activities were regulated by various art associations like the Entertainments
Natinoal Service Association, and the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the
Arts. The BBC became the chief spokesman of the nation during the war years in order to
glorify the non-political, natural, culturally open stance of Britain. It widened its range of
programmes to include not simply high „culture‟ but a much larger range of „light‟
entertainment also.
After the second world war the cultural activists of Britain narrowed down
their subject around London and to those provinces and regions which had remained on
the periphery. The questions of control and creativity and censorship and permissiveness
were for the time-being set aside. They threw away the garb of morality and forgot to
think for the enrichment of the world. They received support and patronage from the
government also because it thought that they could preserve the typical British attitudes
and values which were threatened to be submerged by the growing popularity of foreign
films.
The cultural activities in the fifties and sixties reflected the mood of change
very clearly. Older values of life, mainly the legacy of the Victorian morality, were
slowly giving way to a new frankness and boldness in cultural and aesthetic spheres. In
literature specifically, the trend was towards avoiding any systematic account of ideas
and beliefs. Novelists, dramatists and poets refused to preach; they were satisfied if they
had succeeded in describing the details of their particular moods or fancies without
bothering too much whether their descriptions conformed to conventional moral values
and taboos. Writers enjoyed deflating the conventional values either through open
ridicule and satire or by shutting their eyes to them. The fifties, says a sociologist,
“brought to a wider public awareness the „Movement‟ of „Angry Young Men‟. Novelists,
poets, and dramatists evoked a mood, rather than proffered a programme or a consistent
philosophy. It was a combative, irreverent, definant, edgy and ironic mood.”1 It will not
be amiss at this point to give a brief account of how the new mood was reflected in the
literature of the period. Britain had lost much in the war, though military victory was on
its side. There emerged a new national mood which showed an inclinaion towards
stability and peace rather than adventure and strife. The writers looked back to the
eighteenth century as a period when writers had concentrated their creative attention on
their contemporary society and consequently English literature had achieved a peculiar
English flavour. F.R. Leavis had become a spokesman of this Englishness during the
forties and fifties and his advocacy for Englishness had its impact on the Movement
writers.
particular of Denham, Pope, Johnson, Goldsmith, Thomas Gray and Cowper which is
gestures, a belief that the intellect and the moral judgement must play a decisive part in
the shaping of a poem.”3 They were in their conscious reaction against elusive and
obscure poetic style popularized by the modernists and returned to common sense and the
effect in poetry. They had a narrow attitude towards reality which resulted into a new
provincialism, and which has been common refrain in the criticism of Movement poetry
and fiction.
The modernists like T.S. Eliot, W.B. Yeats, Ezra Pound and D.H. Lawrence
were exiles, literally in fact, and their writings reflect their sense of isolation and their
desire to strike roots or at least seek inspiration from cultures not their own. The period
was remarkable for internationalism in every sphere of life. Political barners were
collapsing and a new era of trans-cultural and political organisation was rapidly
emerging. The writer could not be immune to what was happening around himself. He
was ready to give up his narrow political or cultural outlook and willing to experiment in
exotic and alien ideas. The inter-war years were a period of new creative adventuralism.
Insularity in the name of compactness was given up in favour of complexity ensuing from
the cultural mosaic that was a work of art. The Waste Land is the finest example of this
complex, exploratory temper. Eliot had deliberately uprooted himself from America. So
had Pound and ealrier Henry James. They were all opposed to the current opinions in
politics as well as literature. Eliot was royalist at a time when democratic socialism was
in the air. Pound and Yeats were attracted to fascism. D.H. Lawrence rejected the entire
European culture of the twentieth century as emaciated and sterile and pleaded for the
religion of the blood. All these writers had been witness to the collapse of traditional
values and beliefs and had realized that immersion in the uncreating chaos was the only
remedy to the spiritual and moral malaise that had stricken European civilization.
if he read foreign poetry, he replied in the negative. John Press defined provincialism in
this way:
primarily concerned with the values of his own cultural society, and
deep love for dear old, bloody old England, he distrusted symbolism because it was the
root cause of obscurity in arts and literature. Amis also pleaded for the same. He
observed that “I used to be lumped into the Movement of the 1950s. No doubt, I have or
Davis wrote so many articles against those earlier writers who defended
cosmopolitanism and he propogated provincialism and insularity not only through his
critical works but also through his poems. Perloof describes the basic difference between
British and American poetry of the period in terms of the complete detachment between
the poets and readers. Donald Davie writes “One is tempted to say that from many years
now British poetry and American poetry have not been on speaking terms. But the truth is
rather that they have not been on hearing terms. The American readers can‟t hear the
British poet. Neither his rhythms nor his tone of voice, and, the British readers only
pretend to hear the rhythms and the tone of American poets since Williams Carlos
Williams.6
culture and civilization as the poetic subject. He admired heroic insularity of Philip
subject.”7 He expressed the opinion that contemporary conditions for the poetic subject
relationship with their readers. Not only poets but novelists, dramatists and critics also
did not care for their readers. In The Hidden God Cleanth Brooks wrote:
“Eliot‟s World is not a beautiful world. It is in large part an urban
world where one hears „Rattling plates in basement kitchen‟s where
with morning hands raise” dingy shades/In a Thousand furnished
rooms” where the winter evening settles down/with smell of steaks
of witherd leaves about your feet/And newspapers from vacant
lots.”9
to their readers. Almost all the poets preferred „we‟ instead of „I‟ of the Modernists and
„they‟ of the sociological approach of the poets of the thirties. They always kept in mind
their audience in their dramas and the characters in their novels belong to the common
people.
the modernist poets. This was defended in the name of „wit‟ by Eliot, „irony‟ by
Richards, „ambiguity‟ by Empson and „intelligence‟ by Leavis. They all championed the
mythical method which was a euphemism for complexity and obscurity. Davie finds a
common ground between Eliot, Pound and Yeats because all of them were very fond of
they invented private mythologies in order to express their responses in a complex poetic
style.
Davie preferred Ezra Pound among all the great poets of the Modernist
poetry because he alone among the modernists was capable of using a simple style even
for complex emotional and intellectual situations. According to Davie “the enthusiants
for presentation, for embodiment, have been ill-advised in ignoring the part that authentic
syntax can play in bringing about all that they hope for, by miming a movement of the
mind or of fate.”10 Bernard Bergonzi has noted the changes in the poetic style of the
Movement poets and related these changes to the contemporary national temper:
“The Movement poets wrote their poems on simple subject and in
straight-forward manner, their ordinariness is due to the loss of
empire, the abandonment of neuclear arms, seuz, the consequences
of 1944 Education act, the creation of National Health Service, the
political tedium induced by large and growing similarities between
the two major poetries.”11
The Movement poets narrowed their poetic field and consequently, their
poetry became simple as well as straight-forward. They also rejected the principle of
tradition as the guiding principle of poetic sensibility. Philip Larkin has said “A poet‟s
only guide is his own judgement”.12 Special targets for their attack are the celebrated
modernist texts such as Eliot‟s The Waste Land, Joyce‟s Ullyses, Pound‟s Cantos and
Yeats‟ The Tower. Amis called for poetry as “free from the grime of history”.13 Neo-
romantics made on excessive use of Christian and Biblical myths which was repudiated
The Movement poets believed that “Modernism had been near distruction
of an English poetic tradition”.14 But fortunately Thomas Hardy came into light to show
the right path for the coming generation. Davie says that the charge of insularity against
the Movement poets was related to their open rejection of Modernist poets. They
championed Thomas Hardy and the war poets like Wilfred Owen because while
encountering the tragic predicament of humanity they had not sacrificed the qualities of
simplicity and transparency in their verse. The Movement poets discovered a deep
spiritual affinity not only with Hardy and Owen but also with the poets of the eighteenth
century who had clung steadfastly to rationalism and commonsense and had deep respect
of its neglect of the qualities of unity and order in poetry. The modernists showed
preference for free verse and composed their major poetical works in it. They justified
their choice of free verse in the name of the chaos and complexity of contemporary
civilization. The Movement poets admired the ordered syntax and rational outlook of the
Augustans. Amis talked about the desire to be lucid if nothing else, and a liking for strict
escape from the disappointments and defeats of contemporary civilization. They turned to
Roman Catholicism because they belived that most of the evil that afflicted Western
civilization had come with the beginning of Protestantism during the Renaissance. The
distance between the modernists and the Movements poets in their attitude to orthodox
christianity can be seen in Philip Larkin‟s “Church Going” which was published in The
Spectator on 18 November, 1955; and which Conquest included in his New Lines. It is
the representative of the Movement group regarding their attitude towards religion and
social identity. Larkin is of the opinion that there is no sense of an after-life. His „Next,
Please‟ suggests that „in the wake of death no water breed or break‟.16 In the „Huge
Artifican‟ Amis considers God as a novelist. It does not mean that they did not talk about
Christianity or God, but they did not look upon them as saviours of mankind in moments
of crisis.
cynicism among writers. A similar situation confronted the Movement poets. They could
not write about social or political ideals because they distrusted all kinds of idealism. The
movement poets were conscious of the reality of contemporary Britain and they as poets
did try to share their awareness with their readers. Didacticism, melancholy and a kind of
The Movement poets were also aware that modernist poets had laid great
bold experimentalism. This experimental poetry left the Movement poets cold. Larkin has
confessed:
“I would say that I have been most influenced by the poetry that I
have enjoyed-and this poetry has not been Eliot or Pound or anybody
who is normally regarded as modern-which is a sort of technique
word, is‟nt he? The poetry I have enjoyed has been the kind of
poetry you would associate with me. Hardy-pre eminently, Wilfred
Owen, Auden, Christina Rossetti, William Barnes; on the whole
people to whom technique seems to matter less than content, people
who accept the forms they have inherited but use them to express
their own content.”16
The poetry of the thirties had also reacted against the complexity and
obscurity of modernist poets and asserted that they had no time to be difficult or
experimental. They had lambasted Eliot and other modernists and had championed poets
W.H. Auden made a clear cut difference between the individual and
society:
...... the difference between the individual and society is no slight,
since both are so insignificant, that the latter ceases to appear as a
middle God with absolute rights, but rather as an equal subjects.”18
Auden too, cast an obvious shadow on the Movement and Robert conquest
On the whole we come on this conclusion that the Movement poets were
against the political idealism of the thirties but they did admire their effort to distance
themselves from the modernists. F.W. Bateson admires the Movement poets because they
were very much conscious about their ancestors‟ mistakes. “I find Larkin and Davie
immensely worth reading, not because their poems are better than Auden‟s or Empson‟s
but because they have had the intelligence to learn from their elder‟s occasional
mistakes.21
The reactionary mood of the Movement poets is not confined only to the
Modernists and the poets of the thirties. They expressed similar attitude towards the poets
of the forties also. The poets of the forties gave an uninhabited expression to their
emotion without bothering whether these emotions were in good taste and whether they
would appeal to the reading public. Nothing was forbidden for them in subject matter and
in syntax. They wrote with uncontrolled bardie energy and the best poet of the forties,
Dylan Thomas, was castigated by the spokesmen of the Movement. Robert Conquest
attacked Dylan Thomas and other poets of the time and declared that these poets “were
encouraged to regard their task simply as one of making an arrangement of image of sex
and violence tapped straight from the unconscious (a sort of upper-middle brow
equivalent of the horror-comic), or to evoke without comment the naivetes and nostalgias
of childhood. C.B. Cox who quotes these words of conquest goes on to observe that the
Movement poets were not interested in a new language which could satisfactorily express
the turbulance of their psyche or the bewildering and complex nature of the social
experience. The Movement poets were extremely warry of poetry as an inspired and
frenzied utterance which frightened the readers into meek sumbission by its sheer
primitive energy. For them poets were just like civilized and cultured neighbours who
spoke with wit and perspictivity. Referring to Davie‟s book Articulate Energy published
in 1955 only two years after Thomas‟s death Cox rightly says that the Movement poets
Cox gives a fair representation of the Movement attitude towards the poetry
of the forties in general and Dylan Thomas in particular. Reviewing Thomas‟ Collected
Poems in the year of the poet‟s death, John Wain, himself a no mean Movement poet and
critic minces no words in his criticism. Admitting that Thomas was a “fine, bold, original
and strong poet”, he points out that Thomas‟ poetry suffer from two major drawbacks.
The first is his limited subject matter which Wain sums up as childhood, the viscera and
religion. The first is well handled. As for the second Wain regrets that Thomas “has
added almost no good love poetry to the language, because he always seems to treat
sexual love as an affair of glandular secreteious and mingling fluids.....” About the theme
of religion, Wain says that his poems on this subject are his worst: “he never succeeds in
making me feel that he is doing more than thumbing a lift from them.” Thomas‟ second
and his gravest, from the Movement point of view, flaw is “the suspicion.... that his
writing is ... quasi automatic.” Amplifying his point further Wain remarks:
It is perfectly possible to furnish even his wildest pieces with
„meaning‟ (i.e., a paraphrasable content or a set of alternative
paraphrasable contents), but the grewing doubt remains as to
whether the writer really cared whether it meant anything precise or
not..”23
The Movement poets felt that if the great fault of the poets of the thirties
was that they effected an alliance between Marx and Freud, Thomas was guilty of the
sacrilege of marrying the Old Testament and Freud, probably under the influence of D.H.
Lawrence.
Romanticism” respectivley attacked the neo-romantic poetry lambasting the poets for
their lack of artistic control over their material and their failure to convey a precise and
singled out for pointed repudiation and they were accused of creating „nice noise‟ in the
name of melodiousness. The followers of Thomas used his work as an excuse “to kiss all
meaning good bye. All that mattered was that the verse should sound impressive.”24
which formed the major substratum of the bulk of neo-romantic poetry. Movement poetry
is a “model of restraint; the tightness of its form enacts the speakers‟ evocain of
controlled meaning. In place of welsh howl comes English stiff upper lip.25 They reacted
against what Harold Blooth said „clear imaginative space for themselves.‟26
The treatment of childhood is another typical point of contrast between the
Thomas‟ „Fern Hill‟. Here Larking disassociated himself from any kind of sentimental
treatment of childhood. Davie also felt the necessity of this revision and wrote “A Baptist
childhood” in which he rejected Thomas‟ joyful and heedless ways and said “when some
were happy as the grass was green I was as happy as a glass was dark.”27
The long sentences of Thomas in his “Fern Hill” such as “All the sun long
it was running it was lonely, the hay Fields high as the house, the tunes from chimneys, it
was air/And playing, lonely and waterly can be contrasted with Larkin‟s “I Remember, I
They not only reacted against Dylan Thomas but also against W.R.
Rodgers, Edith Sitwell and a group of poets known as Neo-Apocalypse and their
exercise, and there are always indicements to giving it up as soon as convenient.”29 The
neo-romantics laid emphasis on the importance of the subconscious mind. This stance
was rejected by the Movement poets who emphasized the role of the conscious mind
which works through reason and argument and respects order and restraint in human
utterance.
Movement poets laid considerable stress on controlled syntax and meaningfulness. John
Wain‟s “Eight Types of Ambiquity” is another typical poem attacking the neo-romantics
not because of their choice of subject, but because of their handling of that subject. He
dispassionate and witty treatment and disassociates it from the vagueness and illogicality‟
„Reason for not writing Orthodox nature poetry‟ Amis‟ „Here is Where‟, Davies‟ „Oak
opening‟, Enright‟s „Nature poetry‟ and Conquest‟s‟ „Authorer‟. Here in these poems
nature is seen not as an autonomous organism but as something which spread out before
movements of the twentieth century which is regarded only as various extensions of the
This new poetics had hardly anything new in the strict sense of the word.
Its newness lay in the fact that certain poetic methods and modes which bad fallen into
oblivian after the Romantic movement were revived. The revival itself was not merely for
the sake of revival. There was an urgent necessity, so the Movement poets thought of
rehabilitating those methods and modes because only by doing so English poetry could
catch the rhythms of life of the post-second world war England. Much had to be ridiculed
in the contemporary life and by ridiculing the surviving vestiges of romanticism English
poetry could recover its lost tradition, the tradition which looked upon poets not as
References