"A New Heaven" is a sonnet by Wilfred Owen, written in England before Owen had seen active service in the trenches of France, probably in September 1916. Some MS drafts bear differing dedications (To โ on active service or To a comrade in Flanders). The poem was probably written in Milford Camp, Surrey, which was a part of Witley Camp.
The poem's title echoes a line from Revelation 21:1, "And I saw a new heaven and a new earth". The poem is written from the point of view of a soldier (or soldiers) in France wondering about death; since they have no chance of gaining entry into any mythological afterlife (or even the Christian Paradise), they call on the Channel ferry - rather than that over the Styx - to take them home and find remembrance and wholeness in their mothers' tears.
Owen's biographer Dominic Hibberd draws parallels with Owen's 1917 poem "Anthem for Doomed Youth", finding a Romantic nostalgia in both which was only expunged in the later poems written at Craiglockhart and after.[1]
References
- โ Dominic, Hibberd (2002). Bloom, Harold (ed.). Poets of World War One. Wilfred Owen and Isaac Rosenberg. Infobase Publishing. pp. 46โ49. ISBN 0-7910-5932-4. Retrieved 2011-05-01.
External links
- A New Heaven: draft manuscripts and full text at Oxford University First World War Poetry Digital Archive