Robert Graves From Great War Poet to Good Bye to All That 1895 1929 Jean Moorcroft Wilson – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 1472929152, 9781472929150
Product details:
- ISBN 10: 1472929152
- ISBN 13: 9781472929150
- Author: Jean
The writer and poet Robert Graves suppressed virtually all of the poems he had published during and just after the First World War. Until his son, William Graves, reprinted almost all the Poems About War in 1988, Graves’s status as a ‘war poet’ seems to have depended mainly on his prose memoir (and bestseller), Good-bye to All That. None of the previous biographies written on Graves, however excellent, attempt to deal with this paradox in any depth. Robert Graves the war poet and the suppressed poems themselves have been largely neglected – until now. Jean Moorcroft Wilson, celebrated biographer of poets Siegfried Sassoon, Isaac Rosenberg and Edward Thomas, relates Graves’s fascinating life during this period, his experiences in the war, his being left for dead at the Battle of the Somme, his leap from a third-storey window after his lover Laura Riding’s even more dramatic jump from the fourth storey, his move to Spain and his final ‘goodbye’ to ‘all that’.
Table of contents:
1 ‘A Mixed Litter’
2 Victorian Beginnings and an Edwardian Education (1895–1909)
3 Charterhouse: ‘the Public School Spirit’ (1909–12)
4 Charterhouse: Of Cherry-Whisky and Other Matters (1912–14)
5 ‘On Finding Myself a Soldier’ (August 1914–May 1915)
6 ‘These Soul-Deadening Trenches’ (May–July 1915)
7 The Battle of Loos (August–October 1915)
8 Siegfried Sassoon and a Recipe for Rum Punch (October 1915–March 1916)
9 The Road to High Wood (March–JULY 1916)
10 The Survivor (July 1916–February 1917)
11 A Change of Direction (March–June 1917)
12 A Protest, Craiglockhart and ‘A Capable Farmer’s Boy’ (June–July 1917)
13 The Fairy and the Fusilier (October 1917–January 1918)
14 Babes in the Wood (January 1918–January 1919)
15 A Poet on Parnassus (January–October 1919)
16 Oxford and ‘Pier-Glass Hauntings’ (October 1919–March 1921)
17 ‘Roots Down into a Cabbage Patch’ (1921–5)
18 From Psychology to Philosophy and Beyond
19 Into the Unknown: Cairo and Laura Riding (January–June 1926)
20 The World Well Lost (June 1926– April 1927)
21 ‘Free Love Corner’ (May 1927– October 1928)
22 ‘Like the Plot of a Russian Novel’ (February–April 1929)
23 ‘A Doom-Echoing Shout’ (26 April– June 1929)
24 Good-bye to All That (June–November 1929)
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