Read Some Desperate Glory Online
Authors: Max Egremont
âwe should all die': Blunden,
Undertones
, p. 165.
âaim in war': Owen,
Collected Letters
, p. 467.
âa great child':
ibid.
, p.
482.
âI have just been':
ibid.
, pp. 484â5.
âmodest and ingratiating': Siegfried Sassoon,
Siegfried's Journey
(London 1945), p. 58.
âtalks as badly': Owen,
Collected Letters
, p.
487.
âcut capers':
ibid.
, p. 489.
âI hate washy pacifists':
ibid.
, p.
498.
âdamn fine': Jon Stallworthy,
Wilfred Owen
(London 1974), p. 229.
âCaptain Graves': Owen,
Collected Letters
, p. 499.
âI go out of':
ibid.
, p. 521.
âalmost a laughing matter': Blunden,
Undertones
, p. 165.
âthe general grossness':
ibid.
âmournful passion': Ann Thwaite,
Edmund Gosse
(London 1984), p. 471.
âNichols, Graves and Sassoon': Robert Graves,
In Broken Images: Selected Letters 1914â1946
, ed. Paul O'Prey (London 1982), p. 74.
âWhen Rupert Brooke': Gurney,
War Letters
, p. 232.
âI don't think R.G.': Sassoon,
Diaries 1915â1918
, p. 195.
âan incomprehensible look': Owen,
Collected Letters
, p. 521.
âan attempt to show': Egremont,
Sassoon
, p. 175.
the new Rupert Brooke: Harry Ricketts,
Strange Meetings: The Poets of the Great War
(London 2010), p. 129.
âoffensive to come back': Cynthia Asquith,
Diaries 1915â1918
(London 1968), p. 381.
âraved and screamed': Charlton and Charlton,
Putting Poetry First
, p. 71.
âSassoon has power': Rosenberg,
Collected Works
, p. 267.
âI am back in the trenches':
ibid.
1918
âquiet little person': Hibberd,
Owen
, p. 298.
âthe immense desire': Ernst Jünger,
Storm of Steel
(London 2003 edn), p. 232.
âWe will become': Rosenberg,
Selected Poems and Letters
, p. 175.
âHow small a thing': Rosenberg,
Collected Works
, p. 298.
âWith our backs': for this see Duff Cooper,
Haig
, vol. II (London 1936), p. 275.
âI knew I should': Vera Brittain,
Testament of Youth
(London 1933), p. 420.
âmy little friend': Notes for
Siegfried's Journey
, Sassoon collection, Cambridge University Library.
âhave done just':
ibid.
âthe best poet': Egremont,
Sassoon
, p.
196.
âdamned hankering':
ibid.
, p. 205.
âa portrait of war':
ibid.
, p. 204.
âsafe smugness':
ibid.
, p. 206.
âwhat would he':
Times Literary Supplement
, 8 August 1918.
âa disgraceful sloppy': Virginia Woolf,
Diary
,
vol. I:
1915â1919
, ed. Anne Olivier Bell (London 1977), p. 171.
âpiece' of England: Owen,
Collected Letters
, p. 570.
âWhen I go':
ibid.
, p. 430.
âI lost all':
ibid.
, p. 580.
âevery word, every figure':
Collected Letters
, p. 510.
âI came out':
ibid.
, p. 580.
âIt is a great':
ibid.
, p. 591.
âa loathsome ending': Sassoon,
Diaries 1915â1918
, p. 282.
âthe tall Shelley-like': Webb,
Blunden
, p. 56.
âI am glad': Gurney,
War Letters
, p. 261.
âyou'll have to': Graves,
The Assault Heroic
, p. 198.
âcursing and sobbing': Graves,
Goodbye to All That
, p. 248.
âicebergs': Charlton and Charlton,
Putting Poetry First
, p. 86.
âvery much I think':
ibid.
, p. 87.
A
FTERMATH
âyouth, charm, genius': manuscript at Rugby School.
âablest of men': Virginia Woolf,
Letters
,
vol. III, ed. Nigel Nicolson (London 1977), p. 178.
âA great pamphlet':
Nation
, 6 December 1919.
âmere journalism':
London Mercury
, December 1919.
âevery word, every figure': Owen,
Collected Letters
, p. 510.
âI don't want': see Wilfred Owen,
The Complete Poems and Fragments
, ed. Jon Stallworthy, 2 vols (London 2013 edn), vol. I, p. 193.
âwonderfully normal': Hurd,
The Ordeal
, p. 132.
âdetested mere cleverness': Edward Thomas,
Collected Poems
(London 1920), p. v.
âIt was wireless': Hurd,
The Ordeal
, p. 168.
âIt is too late':
ibid.
, p. 169.
âI hope it may': Edward Marsh (ed.),
Georgian Poetry 1918â19
(London 1919), prefatory note.
âTaste. Good taste': H. G. Wells,
Men Like Gods
(London 1923), p. 29.
âconcerned with Nature': Richard Perceval Graves,
Robert Graves: The Years with Laura Riding
1926â40
(London paperback edn 1995), p. 44.
âDid we believe': Virginia Woolf,
Diary
, vol. II:
1920â1924
, ed. Anne Olivier Bell (London 1978), p. 297.
âOf the many young poets': Isaac Rosenberg,
Poems
, ed. Gordon Bottomley (London 1922), p. 1.
âwindy': Moorcroft Wilson,
Rosenberg
, p. 378.
âa fruitful fusion': Rosenberg,
Poems
, p. ix.
âpoor little Isaac': Edward Marsh and Christopher Hassall,
Ambrosia and Small Beer: The Record of a Correspondence between Edward Marsh and Christopher Hassall
, arranged by Christopher Hassall (London 1964), p. 53.
âa trumpet call': the Earl of Lytton,
Antony (Viscount Knebworth): A Record of Youth
(London 1935), p. 568.
âIt's what Sassoon': John Middleton Murry,
Letters of John Middleton Murry to Katherine Mansfield
,
ed. C. A. Hankin (London 1983), p. 234.
âprofound humanity': Egremont,
Sassoon
, p. 257.
âone of the few': âThe Real War',
Athenaeum
, 10 December 1920.
âthe industrial towns': Stephen Spender,
The Destructive Element
(London 1935), pp. 220â1.
âthe Rupert Brooke': Stephen Spender,
The Thirties and After
(London 1978), p. 17.
âunworthy of the poets' corner': Jon Stallworthy, âYeats as Anthologist', in A. Norman Jeffares and K. G. W. Cross (eds),
In Excited Reverie: A Centenary Tribute to W. B. Yeats
(London 1965), p. 190.
âunreadable, vague':
ibid.
, p. 183.
âand always with loud': W. B. Yeats (ed.),
The
Oxford Book of Modern Verse
(Oxford 1936), p. xxxv.
âthe old men': Christopher Isherwood,
Diaries
, vol. I:
1939â60
, ed. Katherine Bucknell (London 1996), p. 5.
âin an ecstasy': Samuel Hynes,
The Auden Generation
(London 1976), p. 21.
âIf I can be': Robert Graves,
But It Still Goes On
(London 1930), p. 155.
âthe truth by a condensation': Graves,
The Assault Heroic
, p. 288.
âDo you know how': Graves,
But It Still Goes On
, p. 245.
âstrike a responsive chord': Edmonds,
A Subaltern's War
, pp. 8â9.
âall we can do': Graves,
Goodbye to All That
, p. 275.
âa terrific comet': Ritchie,
Strange Meetings
, p. 212.
âmad': Charlton and Charlton,
Putting Poetry First
, pp. 95â6.
âthe great love':
ibid.
, p. 214.
âthe sound of my': Marsh and Hassall,
Ambrosia and Small Beer
, p. 213.
âyou'll find a tea cake': Nichols (ed.),
Anthology of War Poetry
, p. 17.
âacceptance rather than': Alan Ross,
Blindfold Games
(London 1986), p. 239.
âsymbolic poetry': Egremont,
Sassoon
, p. 483.
âI destroyed them': Robert Graves,
Conversations with Robert Graves
, ed. Frank L. Kersnowski (Jackson, Miss., and London 1989), p. 96.
âSassoon's idealism': Robert Graves and Spike Milligan,
Dear Robert, Dear Spike: The GravesâMilligan Correspondence
, ed. Pauline Scudamore (Stroud 1991), p. 94.
âHow right dear Robbie': Egremont,
Sassoon
, p. 478.
âthe most unspeakably horrible': George A. Panichas (ed.),
Promise of Greatness
(London 1968), p. 8.
âgiven me not only':
ibid.
, p. 11.
âPeople like reading': Graves,
But It Still Goes On
, p. 15.
âmany thoughts and mentions': Sassoon and Blunden,
Selected Letters
, vol. III, p. 315.
âcomplete': Jack,
General Jack's Diary
, pp. 306â7.
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Bibliography
E
DITIONS OF
P
OETS
U
SED
Blunden, Edmund.
Poems of Many Years
(London 1957).
_______
Overtones of War: Poems of the First World War
, ed. Martin Taylor (London 1996).
Brooke, Rupert.
Collected Poems, with a Memoir
, ed. Edward Marsh (London 1918).
Graves, Robert.
Complete Poems
, 3 vols, ed. Beryl Graves and Dunstan Ward (Manchester 1995â9 edn).
Grenfell, Julian. Manuscripts in the Cowper/Grenfell papers in the Hertfordshire Archives, ref. DE/X789/F23.
Gurney, Ivor.
Collected Poems
, ed. P. J. Kavanagh (Manchester 2004 edn).
Nichols, Robert.
Ardours and Endurances
(London 1917).
_______
Aurelia and Other Poems
(London 1920).
Owen, Wilfred.
The Complete Poems and Fragments
, ed. Jon Stallworthy, 2 vols (London 2013 edn).
Rosenberg, Isaac.
The Poems and Plays of Isaac Rosenberg
, ed. Vivian Noakes (Oxford 2004).
Sassoon, Siegfried.
Collected Poems 1908â1956
(London 1961).
_______
The War Poems
ed. Rupert Hart-Davis (London 1983).
Sorley, Charles.
Marlborough and Other Poems
(Cambridge 1916).
Thomas, Edward.
The Annotated Collected Poems
, ed. Edna Longley (Tarset 2008).
Â
O
THER
W
ORKS
Asquith, Cynthia.
Diaries 1915â1918
(London 1968).
Barnett, Correlli.
The Collapse of British Power
(London 1972).
Beckett, Ian F. W.
The First World War 1914â1918
(Harlow 2001).
_______
The Making of the First World War
(London and New Haven 2012).
Bergonzi, Bernard.
Wartime and Aftermath
(Oxford 1993).
_______
Heroes' Twilight
(Manchester 1996 edn).
Blunden, Edmund.
Cricket Country
(London 1945).
_______
Undertones of War
(London Penguin edn 2000).
Boden, Anthony (ed.).
Stars on a Dark Night: Letters of Ivor Gurney to the Chapman Family
(Stroud 2004 edn).
Bond, Brian.
A Victory Worse than Defeat? British Interpretations of the First World War
(London 1997).
_______
The Unquiet Western Front
(Cambridge 2002).
_______
Survivors of a Kind: Memoirs of the Western Front
(London 2008).
Bradley, A. G. et al.
A History of Marlborough College
(London 1923).
Brittain, Vera.
Testament of Youth
(London 1933).
Brooke, Rupert.
Letters
, ed. Geoffrey Keynes (London 1968).
_______
The Poetical Works
, ed. Geoffrey Keynes (London 1974 edn).
_______
and James Strachey.
Friends and Apostles: The Correspondence of Rupert Brooke and James Strachey 1905â1914
, ed. Keith Hale (New Haven and London 1998).
Caesar, Adrian.
Taking It Like a Man: Suffering, Sexuality and the War Poets
(Manchester 1993).
Cecil, Hugh.
The Flower of Battle: British Writers and the First World War
(London 1995).
Charlton, Anne and William.
Putting Poetry First: A Life of Robert Nichols 1893â1944
(Norwich 2003).
Cohen, Joseph.
Journey to the Trenches: The Life of Isaac Rosenberg
(London 1975).
Cooper, Duff.
Haig
, vol. II (London 1936).
Cuthbertson, Guy, and Lucy Newlyn.
Branch-Lines: Edward Thomas and Contemporary Poetry
(London 2007).
Dakers, Caroline.
The Countryside at War
(London 1987).