Walter de la Mare was among the leading proponents of the so-called
'Georgian' poets, a loose assembly of influential literary friends
who gathered in London in the years leading up to the First World
War. Concerned with a refinement of sensibility - in feeling, in
expression and in particular in regard to the natural world - the
Georgians tapped a popular vein that de la Mare first embraced then
later distanced himself from. This engaging assembly of verse and
prose, first published in 1943, is de la Mare's vivid survey on
love and sensibility, and contains, in his words, 'many of the
supreme lyrics in the language'.
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