Until at least the 19th century, Welsh poets writing in the English language tended to imitate the conventions of English verse. Only in translations from the Welsh did a national voice succeed in making itself heard. The beginnings of true Anglo-Welsh poetry are found in the work of poets such as Gerard Manley Hopkins and Wilfred Owen; their Welsh ancestry, not perhaps apparent in any other aspect of their lives, is clearly audible in the rhythms of their verse.