Modern poetry came into being not out of a manifesto not the inauguration of a new school of writing but out of a revolution of ideas both about the outer world and about the world of the self. Each era was named for the monarch at that time. Note: In the twentieth century, the period 1910–1936 was informally called the Georgian Era during the reign of George V (following the Edwardian Era), and is sometimes still referred to as such; see Georgian Poetry Georgian poetry, a variety of lyrical poetry produced in the early 20th century by an assortment of British poets, including Lascelles Abercrombie, Hilaire Belloc, Edmund Charles Blunden, Rupert Brooke, William Henry Davies, Ralph Hodgson, John Drinkwater, James Elroy Flecker, Wilfred Wilson Edwardian poetry It began with Edwardian and Georgian poetry. This book considers together seven poets — Henry Newbolt, John Masefield, Thomas Hardy, Edward Thomas, A. E. Housman, John Davidson, and Rupert Brooke — and argues that their work is worthy of more serious critical attention than it has previously received. The poets writing in the first years of the 20th century have commonly been discussed in isolation. Avishai L and David J Emily Dickinson The Victorian, Edwardian, and Georgian poetic movement spanned from the 1830s to the 1920s. Overall, they symbolized the transition from romanticism to its own style of poetry.