A probing poetry collection that blends philosophy, history, and sharp social observation.
It invites readers to weigh ideas about progress, art, war, and the meaning of courage.
This edition frames a port of late-ims between 1916 and 1917, pairing a frame narrative with dramatic poems and ballads. It blends dialogue, character voices, and classical allusions to explore how genius, power, and public life collide with personal doubt and resilience. The work reads with a modern, punchy urgency while inviting careful reflection on the cost of belief and the lure of grand schemes.
- Explore a prologue that meditates on the restless will and the search for truth amid social change.
- Hear distinct voices—philosopher-shopkeepers, poets, soldiers, and critics—who debate art, politics, and the fate of civilization.
- Experience dramatic scenes and ballads that mix lyrical beauty with piercing social critique.
- Encounter historical references and timeless questions about ambition, freedom, and the costs of progress.
Ideal for readers who enjoy early 20th‑century verse, literary criticism framed as drama, and poems that blend intellect with vivid narrative.