Friday, December 5, 2025

Logan English, War, and the Future



Image of a young boy wearing a military uniform and saluting in front of a building.

Photo caption: A 10-year-old Logan E. English in a soldier costume on November 11, 1939 (87m33: Logan English, 1884-1986, University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center).

 

November 29, 2025, would mark Logan Eberhardt English’s 97th birthday if he had not tragically passed away in a car accident in 1983. English was primarily known for his work in the folk music scene, where he created one of the first albums as a tribute to Woody Guthrie (Logan English Sings the Woody Guthrie Songbag; read more about it by clicking on this link: here) and helped start Bob Dylan’s career. Yet his legacy extends beyond music. He was also a writer, poet, and playwright who frequently critiqued war and espoused optimism for the future.

 

A particularly striking sonnet from English is “Beware You Sons of Sorrow” which addresses the waste of wars like World War II despite the apparent “majesty” they offer enlistees. He warns that “it is the dead, who died quickly, that war serves best” because they never face the disillusionment of returning home and realizing that the sacrifices they made did not accomplish the goals their leaders promised them. Meanwhile, survivors return a “broken shell of an empty dream” because they will inevitably face the realization that the promises made to them were either never kept or faded away under “man’s neglect.”

 

Image of the text of a poem
Photo caption: English’s original sonnet “Beware You Sons of Sorrow” as it appears in the book The Kentucky Anthology: Two Hundred Years of Writing in the Bluegrass State (The University Press of Kentucky, 2010, p. 764). This piece likely originated in English’s larger original work, “The Silver Star,” (87m33: English family papers, 1884-1986, University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center).


Essentially, English used this piece to dismantle the romanticization of military glory and expose the toll it has on survivors. Regrettably, these ideas hold up today, where militaries still use abstractions as motivation. These abstractions mean that survivors of military conflict can become disillusioned and bitter when they realize the extent to which they were led astray.

 

Despite English’s grim reflections on the wars of his time, his view on the future was filled with hope. In an essay, “The Promise of a Progressive Civilization” (87m33: English family papers, 1884-1986, University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center), he acknowledges the issues he has witnessed during his time, including imperialism, war, and moral stagnation amid rapid technological advancement. However, English highlights that these failures leave enough good for humanity to progress farther in the future than we have in the past. In other words, he argues that our human failures are a stepping stone on the route to reflection and reform.

 

Image of typescript text

Photo caption: A page from English’s original essay “The Promise of a Progressive Civilization” (87m33: English family papers, 1884-1986, University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center).

 

Ultimately, English’s work depicts a man deeply concerned about the present but who kept enough faith in humanity to predict a bright future. And, his ideas should resonate with humanity today as we face new challenges. So, let us honor Logan English’s legacy by remembering that there is always the possibility of a better tomorrow.

--Blog post by Matthew Mitchem