scourge of the Georgian Anthology." Pound and Wyndham Lewis declared emphatically that democracy had brought decay of language. Eliot wanted to replace the Romanticsand especially Wordsworth ("To remain with Wordsworth is equivalent to ignoring the whole of science subsequent to Erasmus Darwin")with the Metaphysical Poets and the French symbolistes , as a source and model for poetry. He directly attacked Wordsworth's definitions of poetry and poetic diction (in the "Preface'' to Lyrical Ballads ): "Poetry is not a turning loose of emotion, but an escape from emotion; it is not the expression of personality, but an escape from personality." Against Wordsworth's emphasis on clear and natural poetry, Eliot asserted the syntactical complexity and "artificiality" of his own style of poetry: "Poets in our civilization, as it exists at present, must be difficult . . . . The poet must become more and more comprehensive, more allusive, more indirect, in order to force, to dislocate if necessary, language into his meaning. . . . " Eliot prescribed "town" poetry for a cosmopolitan elite in place of the accessible, familiar "country" poetry of the popular "Georgians."
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In his campaign against the established Georgians and their anthologies Eliot even praised the first volume of Wheels , edited by Edith Sitwell in 1916. Eliot called it "a more serious book" than the current volume of Marsh's Georgian Poetry , one that, like his own work, looked outside the English canonto classical and European poetry, especially the French, for its sources: "Instead of rainbows, cuckoos, daffodils, and timid hares, they give us garden-gods, guitars and mandolins . . . they have extracted the juice from Verlaine and Laforgue." However, Eliot damned the Georgians with faint praise for the poets in Wheels , saying that "the book as a whole has a dilettante effect" and adding, in another review, "The poets who consider themselves most opposed to Georgianism, and who know a little French, are mostly such as could imagine the Last Judgement only as a lavish display of Bengal lights, Roman candles, catherine-wheels, and inflammable fire-balloons."
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Certainly poetic extravagance and personal flamboyance identify the work of Sitwell, who, along with her brothers, Osbert and Sacheverell, published six volumes of Wheels between 1916 and 1921. In 1923, when she and Osbert introduced the poems in the volume Facade with a public performance in London, the two spoke through megaphones from behind masks on a curtain, accompanied by music composed by William Walton. One of the poems from Façade , "Hornpipe," begins,
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