Author:Wilfred Owen
From Wikisource
| ←Author Index: O | Wilfred Owen (1893–1918) |
| An English poet regarded by some as the leading poet of the First World War. The icon |
[edit] Works
- 1914
- A Terre (being the philosophy of many soldiers)
- Anthem for Doomed Youth (1917)

- Apologia Pro Poemate Meo (1917)
- Arms and the Boy (1918)
- As Bronze may be much Beautified
- Asleep
- At a Calvary near the Ancre
- Beauty
- But I was Looking at the Permanent Stars
- The Calls
- The Chances
- Le Christianisme
- Conscious
- Cramped in that Funnelled Hole
- The Dead-Beat
- Disabled
- Dulce et Decorum Est (1918)
- Elegy in April and September (jabbered among the trees)
- The End
- Exposure (1918)
- Futility (1918)
- Greater Love (1917)
- Happiness
- Has Your Soul Sipped?
- Hospital Barge
- I Saw His Round Mouth's Crimson
- Insensibility
- Inspection
- The Kind Ghosts
- The Last Laugh
- The Letter
- Mental Cases
- Miners
- Music (Owen)
- The Next War
- A New Heaven (To-On Active Service)
- The Parable of the Old Man and the Young
- The Roads Also
- S.I.W.
- Schoolmistress
- The Send-Off
- The Sentry
- The Show
- Six O'Clock in Princes Street
- Smile, Smile, Smile
- Soldier's Dream
- Sonnet On Seeing a Piece of our Heavy Artillery Brought into Action
- Spells and Incantations
- Spring Offensive (1918)
- Strange Meeting (1918)
- Training
- Uriconium An Ode
- Wild With All Regrets
- With an Identity Disc
- The Wrestlers
[edit] Transcription projects
| Some or all works by this author are in the public domain in the United States because they were published before January 1, 1923.
The author died in 1918, so works by this author are also in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 80 years or less. Works by this author may also be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works. |


