Can someone please explain how T.S. Eliot's poem, Defence of the Islands, exemplifies the Modernists, or how it does not? DEFENCE OF THE ISLANDS Let these memorials of built stone - music's enduring instrument, of many centuries of patient cultivation of the earth, of English verse be joined with the memory of this defence of the islands and the memory of those appointed to the grey ships - battleship, merchantman, trawler - contributing their share to the ages' pavement of British bone on the sea floor and of those who, in man's newest form of gamble with death, fight the power of darkness in air and fire and of those who have followed their forebears to Flanders and France, those undefeated in defeat, unalterable in triumph, changing nothing of their ancestors' ways but the weapons and those again for whom the paths of glory are the lanes and the streets of Britain: to say, to the past and the future generations of our kin and of our speech, that we took up our positions, in obedience to instructions.
Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!