Wild with All Regrets
1917 poem by Wilfred Owen
"Wild With All Regrets" is a poem by Wilfred Owen. It deals with the atrocities of World War I.
Owen wrote the poem in December 1917, while stationed at Scarborough, and sent it to his friend Siegfried Sassoon.[1] The original manuscript shows a dedication to Sassoon, accompanied by the question "May I?". Owen later expanded the poem into "A Terre".[2]
The poem's title paraphrases a line of Alfred, Lord Tennyson's 1847 poem "The Princess": "Deep as first love, and wild with all regret;"[3]
References
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Poems by Wilfred Owen
- "A Terre"
- "Anthem for Doomed Youth"
- "Apologia Pro Poemate Meo"
- "Arms and the Boy"
- "The Dead-Beat"
- "Disabled"
- "Dulce et Decorum est"
- "Futility"
- "Insensibility"
- "Mental Cases"
- "The Parable of the Old Man and the Young"
- "Spring Offensive"
- "Strange Meeting"
- "Wild with All Regrets"
- "1914"
- "Asleep"
- "At a Calvary near the Ancre"
- "Cramped in that Funnelled Hole"
- "Elegy in April and September"
- "The End"
- "Has Your Soul Sipped?"
- "I Saw His Round Mouth's Crimson"
- "The Last Laugh"
- "The Letter"
- "Miners"
- "A New Heaven"
- "The Next War"
- "Soldier's Dream"
- "Sonnet On Seeing a Piece of our Heavy Artillery Brought into Action"
- "To Eros"
- "Training"
- "With an Identity Disc"
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