Lady Henry was succeeded by Rosalind Howard, Countess of Carlisle, known as "The Radical Countess" for her opposition to alcohol consumption.
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Literary historian David Trotter asserts that the addition of women’s writing helps provide a more encompassing, and thus, stronger picture of Britain’s involvement in the First World War.
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According to Paul Fussell, many soldiers relied on poetry as a method to cope with the atrocities and horrors of the First World War.