Rupert Brooke (b. 1887) died on April 23, 1915, two days before the start of the Battle of Gallipoli, and three weeks after his poem "The Soldier" was read from the pulpit of St Paul's Cathedral on Easter Sunday. Thus began the myth of a man whose poetry crystallizes the sentiments that drove so man
Forever England: The Life of Rupert Brooke
โ Scribed by Read, Mike
- Book ID
- 108250125
- Publisher
- Biteback Publishing
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781849548663
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Rupert Brooke, strikingly good-looking, effortlessly charming and prodigiously gifted, has become the tragic embodiment of the generation lost between 1914 and 1918. Upon the poet's tragic untimely death, Winston Churchill declared that 'we shall never see his like again', yet Brooke immortalised himself in his own poignant verse:
If I should die, think only this of me:
That there's some corner of a foreign field that is forever England.
Brooke died serving king and country on the anniversary of Shakespeare's birth, St George's Day 1915, en route to fight at Gallipoli. As the tributes poured in and the war gathered momentum, the press heralded him as a hero โ a focal point for the nation's grief.
Already an acclaimed poet and dramatist in his youth, his romantic war poetry contrasts starkly with the work of some of his more disillusioned contemporaries. But the private letters of 'the handsomest man in all of England' reveal a far more troubled,...
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Trapped in the Wars of the Roses, one woman finds herself **sister to the queen...and traitor to the crown** Katherine Woodville's sister never gave her a choice. A happy girl of modest means, Kate hardly expected to become a maker of kings. But when her sister impulsively marries King Edward IV in
In this absorbing, well-crafted biography, British historian, lecturer and TV consultant Williams charts the rise of 18th-century England's most celebrated sex symbol, best known as Admiral Nelson's mistress. Setting the rags-to-riches story of Emma Hamilton (1765โ1815) in social and historical cont
is a former student of both Karl Popper and Ludwig Wittgenstein. The two philosophers had one encounter that was brief and stormy ("the poker incident"). For years, Munz tried heroically to continue alone their unbegun dialogue and make their ghosts join together fruitfully. This book is a fascinati