
audiobook
by Richard Aldington, John Gould Fletcher, F. S. (Frank Stewart) Flint, H. D. (Hilda Doolittle), D. H. (David Herbert) Lawrence, Amy Lowell
This anthology gathers a diverse group of early‑twentieth‑century poets who share a common commitment to a fresh, direct form of verse. Each writer selects the pieces they feel best represent their own voice, offering readers a candid snapshot of a movement that values everyday language, precise imagery, and new rhythmic patterns. The poets aim to strip away vague generalities, presenting clear, concentrated snapshots of modern life while allowing any subject to surface—whether the mundane or the startlingly original.
Beyond the poems themselves, the collection includes a thoughtful preface that outlines the group’s guiding principles: the use of exact words, the creation of innovative cadences, and an insistence on vivid, hard‑focused images. This introductory essay gives listeners insight into why these writers chose to collaborate, how they differ from earlier schools, and what they hope to achieve through their cooperative, annually‑issued volumes. The result is a compelling portrait of a literary moment that still resonates with anyone seeking poetry that speaks plainly yet powerfully.
Language
en
Duration
~47 minutes (45K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Meredith Bach, Stephanie Eason, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2009-10-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1892–1962
Best known as a poet, novelist, and critic, he was one of the early voices of Imagism and later wrote the powerful World War I novel Death of a Hero. His work often blends sharp modern style with the emotional weight of war and disillusionment.
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1886–1950
An adventurous modernist voice, this Arkansas-born poet helped bring Imagism into American poetry and later became the first Southern poet to win the Pulitzer Prize. His work ranges from sharp, visual free verse to dreamlike meditations shaped by travel, art, and inner struggle.
View all books1885–1960
A self-educated London poet and translator, he became one of the key early voices behind Imagism, helping shape modern poetry with sharp, economical language. His path from leaving school at thirteen to becoming a respected critic and man of letters gives his work an especially hard-won edge.
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1886–1961
A central voice of literary modernism, this American poet helped shape Imagism with spare, luminous verse that still feels fresh. She also wrote novels and memoirs that opened into mythology, memory, and inner life.
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1885–1930
A fierce, searching voice of English literature, this novelist and poet wrote with unusual candor about love, class, desire, and the strain modern life puts on the human spirit. His books still feel alive because they push past manners and convention to ask what it really means to live fully.
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1874–1925
A bold American poet of the Imagist movement, she helped push modern poetry toward sharper images, freer rhythms, and a more conversational voice. Her work ranged from intimate lyric poems to ambitious longer pieces, and it won lasting recognition after her death with the 1926 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.
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by D. H. (David Herbert) Lawrence

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