Owen's style is a kind of half rhyme but very specific type and Owen adopts this as Owen's style doesn't use it in every poem. Harold Monroe who had a collection of poems actually called strange meetings which presumably was part of the influence on Owen's title of strange meeting. If you do it as a poet now you are making a kind of reference back to Owen because of that style some people actually complained that it does slightly distract from the subject matter.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the celebrated British poet of World War One. Wilfred Owen (1893-1918) had published only a handful of poems when he was killed a week before the end of the war, but in later decades he became seen as the essential British war poet. His works such as Anthem for Doomed Youth, Strange Meeting and Dulce et Decorum Est went on to be inseparable from the memory of the war and its futility. However, while Owen is best known for his poetry of the trenches, his letters offer a more nuanced insight into him such as his pride in being an officer in charge of others and in being a soldier who fought alongside his comrades.
With
Jane Potter
Reader in The School of Arts at Oxford Brookes University
Fran Brearton
Professor of Modern Poetry at Queen’s University Belfast
And
Guy Cuthbertson
Professor of British Literature and Culture at Liverpool Hope University
Producer: Simon Tillotson