J. C. Squire
For British late 20th century musician of the same name, see John SquireSir
John Squire (
John Collings Squire) (
1882â€"
1958) was a
British poet,
writer,
historian, and influential literary editor of the post-
World War I period. He also moved in society circles.
Born in
Plymouth, he was educated at
Blundell's School and
St. John's College, Cambridge. He was one of those published in the
Georgian poetry collections of
Edward Marsh. His own
Selections from Modern Poets anthology series, launched in 1921, became definitive of the conservative style of
Georgian poetry (whether or not that was fair). From 1919 to 1932, Squire was the editor of the important monthly periodical, the
London Mercury, a publication which showcased the work of the Georgian poets and was an important outlet for many new writers.
Alec Waugh described the elements of Squire's 'hegemony' as acquired largely by accident.
In his book
If It Had Happened Otherwise (
1932) he collected a series of essays, many of which could be considered
alternative histories, from some of the leading historians of the period (like
Hilaire Belloc and
Winston Churchill).
The
Bloomsbury group named the coterie of writers that surrounded Squire as the
Squirearchy.
T. S. Eliot accused Squire of using the
London Mercury to saturate literary London with journalistic and popular criticism. Since his death the reputation of Squire has declined as modernist scholarship has absorbed the strictures of his contemporaries, and the first generation of
English literature critics in the universities.
Since the 1990s, however, there has been a gradual reappraisal of the periodical network of early twentieth-century literary London and increasing interest in the Georgian poets. Problems with the term
modernism have encouraged scholars to cast their nets beyond the traditional venue of modernism - the
little magazine - to seek to better understand the role mass-market periodicals such as the
London Mercury played in promoting new and progressive writers.
Lascelles Abercrombie -
J. R. Ackerley -
E. N. Da C. Andrade -
Martin Armstrong -
Kenneth H. Ashley -
Maurice Baring -
Hilaire Belloc -
Paul Bewsher -
Edmund Blunden -
Gordon Bottomley -
Frederick V. Branford -
Rupert Brooke -
Francis Burrows -
A. Y. Campbell -
Dudley Carew -
G. K. Chesterton -
Gwen Clear -
Padraic Colum -
Frances Cornford -
W. H. Davies -
Edward L. Davison -
Jeffrey Day -
Geoffrey Dearmer -
Walter De la Mare -
John Drinkwater -
R. C. K. Ensor -
James Elroy Flecker -
Robin Flower -
John Freeman -
Wilfrid Wilson Gibson -
Louis Golding -
Gerald Gould -
Robert Graves -
Julian Grenfell -
Ivor Gurney -
George Rostrevor Hamilton -
Ralph Hodgson -
James Joyce -
Frank Kendon -
William Kerr -
D. H. Lawrence -
Francis Ledwidge -
E. R. R. Linklater -
Sylvia Lynd -
P. H. B. Lyon -
Rose Macaulay -
Thomas MacDonagh -
John Masefield -
Harold Monro -
T. Sturge Moore -
John Middleton Murry -
Robert Nichols -
Alfred Noyes -
Seumas O'Sullivan -
Wilfred Owen -
J. D. C. Pellow -
Joseph Plunkett -
Frank Prewett -
J. B. Priestley -
Vita Sackville-West -
Siegfried Sassoon -
Edward Shanks -
C. H. Sorley -
James Stephens -
Edward Wyndham Tennant -
Edward Thomas -
W. J. Turner -
Dorothy Wellesley -
Iolo Aneurin Williams -
Francis Brett Young