The Repercussion of War on Literature Jon Stallworthy was born in London, England, in 1935. The son of both Sir John Arthur Stallworthy, a surgeon and educator, and Margaret Wright Howie Stallworthy. He received his elementary education in Oxford, England, and graduated from Rugby High School in Warwickshire in 1953. Immediately after graduating from high school, Stallworthy entered military service. He became a lieutenant in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire infantry, serving in Nigeria from 1953 to 1955. Jon Stallworthy earned his B.Litt and MA at the University of Oxford, where he achieved the Newdigate Poetry Prize (Baker). Jon Stallworthy altered literature through his works, including Wilfred Owen, The Oxford Book Of War Poetry, and Great Poets of World War I. First of all, Jon Stallworthys’ text Wilfred Owen impacted a literature. Wilfred Owen is a biography about Wilfred Owen and his life in the military (Stallworthy). And “Red lips are not so red as the stained stones kissed by the English dead” (“Wilfred Owen Quotes”). The quote means the lives of men and women lost in war. The reason why it was written was because war poetry didn’t get a lot of attention and it's more imaginative than reading a story. …show more content…
There can be no area of human experience that has generated a wider range of powerful feelings than war. The quote is “Half a league half a league half a league coward all in the valley of death rode the six hundred “forward the light brigade charge for the guns” he said into the valley of death rode the six hundred (World War Poems). The quote about how the men were scared for their lives, but road into the valley of death because they were loyal. The quote was a literature movement because it's about history and