| Before the First World War, Sassoon enjoyed
life as a gentleman of independent means dividing his time between literary London
and his country estate. Awarded the Military Cross for valour, Sassoon's brutal
experiences in the trenches turned him against the military top brass. Convinced
that the authorities were prolonging the conflict and exploiting the men, in 1917
(the year in which his first collection was published) he threw away his medal
and launched a one-man campaign to halt the war. Sent to a hospital to recuperate
from shell shock, he met Wilfred Owen whose poetic endeavours he greatly encouraged.
Sassoon's own wartime verse savaged the patriotic cant of the generals. Bitter,
shocking and incisively satiric, it is underpinned by a deep compassion for the
plight of the ordinary soldier. Later in life he turned to devotional poetry,
and was received into the Catholic Church in 1957. He also wrote a trilogy of
semi-autobiographical novels, The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston.
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