24 Ernest Raymond, Tell England (1922) and Other Writings
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George Simmers
Abstract
Ernest Raymond had served as an Army chaplain in Gallipoli in 1915, and in Tell England: The Story of a Generation, expressed his feeling that the campaign “had a glamour, a tragic beauty all its own”. The book’s first half depicts the main characters’ boisterous schooldays, and the second half takes them to war; at school they are fallible and very human, but war gives them an opportunity to prove themselves as men. In this they are aided by Padre Monty, an energetic High Churchman, and the sort of chaplain that Raymond wished that he himself could have been. Re-reading the novel many years later, Raymond claims to have been surprised by what he described as its “unconscious homosexuality”. When he returned to the subject of Gallipoli in The Jesting Army (1930) and The Quiet Shore (1958), a troubled masculinity is again a theme. The Quiet Shore deals more directly with the hero’s feelings for a fellow-officer. In both of these later novels the Gallipoli campaign is still presented as a spiritual triumph.
Abstract
Ernest Raymond had served as an Army chaplain in Gallipoli in 1915, and in Tell England: The Story of a Generation, expressed his feeling that the campaign “had a glamour, a tragic beauty all its own”. The book’s first half depicts the main characters’ boisterous schooldays, and the second half takes them to war; at school they are fallible and very human, but war gives them an opportunity to prove themselves as men. In this they are aided by Padre Monty, an energetic High Churchman, and the sort of chaplain that Raymond wished that he himself could have been. Re-reading the novel many years later, Raymond claims to have been surprised by what he described as its “unconscious homosexuality”. When he returned to the subject of Gallipoli in The Jesting Army (1930) and The Quiet Shore (1958), a troubled masculinity is again a theme. The Quiet Shore deals more directly with the hero’s feelings for a fellow-officer. In both of these later novels the Gallipoli campaign is still presented as a spiritual triumph.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Editors’ Preface V
- Preface VII
- Contents IX
- 0 Introduction 1
-
Part I: Systematic Questions: Genres and Perspectives
- 1 The First World War in Poetry 37
- 2 Autobiographical Writing and the First World War 65
- 3 The Novel of the First World War 87
- 4 The Short Story of the First World War 103
- 5 The First World War in British Narrative Film and Television: From Visual Archive to Filmic Imagination 117
- 6 Gendering the First World War: Masculinity and Femininity in First World War Literary and Cultural Production 147
- 7 Indian Writings of the First World War 167
-
Part II: Close Readings
- 8 Richard Aldington, Images of War (1919) and Death of a Hero (1929) 183
- 9 Enid Bagnold, A Diary Without Dates (1918) and The Happy Foreigner (1920) 197
- 10 Arnold Bennett, The Pretty Lady (1918) 205
- 11 Edmund Blunden, Undertones of War (1928) and War Poetry 215
- 12 Mary Borden, The Forbidden Zone (1929) and Sarah Gay (1931) 231
- 13 Vera Brittain, Testament of Youth (1933) 241
- 14 Ford Madox Ford, Parade’s End (tetralogy, 1924–1928) 253
- 15 Robert Graves, War Poetry and Goodbye To all That (1929) 267
- 16 Ivor Gurney, War Poetry 281
- 17 Thomas Hardy, War Poetry 291
- 18 Storm Jameson, That Was Yesterday (1932) and Mirror in Darkness (1934–1936) 307
- 19 David Jones, In Parenthesis (1937) 323
- 20 Rudyard Kipling, Poetry and Short Stories of the First World War 337
- 21 Vernon Lee, Satan the Waster (1920) and Peace with Honour (1915) 349
- 22 Rose Macaulay, Non-Combatants and Others (1916) and Other War Writings 371
- 23 Wilfred Owen, War Poetry 381
- 24 Ernest Raymond, Tell England (1922) and Other Writings 397
- 25 Isaac Rosenberg, War Poetry 407
- 26 Siegfried Sassoon, War Poems (1919) and The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston (1937) 423
- 27 R.C. Sherriff, Journey’s End (1928) 435
- 28 May Sinclair, A Journal of Impressions in Belgium (1915), War Poetry and Fiction 445
- 29 Virginia Woolf, Jacob’s Room (1922), Mrs. Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), The Years (1937) and Three Guineas (1938) 459
- 30 Joan Littlewood and the Theatre Workshop, Oh What a Lovely War (1963) 483
- 31 Susan Hill, Strange Meeting (1971) 491
- 32 Sebastian Faulks, Birdsong: A Novel of Love and War (1993) 499
- Index of Subjects 507
- Index of Names 515
- List of Contributors 527
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Editors’ Preface V
- Preface VII
- Contents IX
- 0 Introduction 1
-
Part I: Systematic Questions: Genres and Perspectives
- 1 The First World War in Poetry 37
- 2 Autobiographical Writing and the First World War 65
- 3 The Novel of the First World War 87
- 4 The Short Story of the First World War 103
- 5 The First World War in British Narrative Film and Television: From Visual Archive to Filmic Imagination 117
- 6 Gendering the First World War: Masculinity and Femininity in First World War Literary and Cultural Production 147
- 7 Indian Writings of the First World War 167
-
Part II: Close Readings
- 8 Richard Aldington, Images of War (1919) and Death of a Hero (1929) 183
- 9 Enid Bagnold, A Diary Without Dates (1918) and The Happy Foreigner (1920) 197
- 10 Arnold Bennett, The Pretty Lady (1918) 205
- 11 Edmund Blunden, Undertones of War (1928) and War Poetry 215
- 12 Mary Borden, The Forbidden Zone (1929) and Sarah Gay (1931) 231
- 13 Vera Brittain, Testament of Youth (1933) 241
- 14 Ford Madox Ford, Parade’s End (tetralogy, 1924–1928) 253
- 15 Robert Graves, War Poetry and Goodbye To all That (1929) 267
- 16 Ivor Gurney, War Poetry 281
- 17 Thomas Hardy, War Poetry 291
- 18 Storm Jameson, That Was Yesterday (1932) and Mirror in Darkness (1934–1936) 307
- 19 David Jones, In Parenthesis (1937) 323
- 20 Rudyard Kipling, Poetry and Short Stories of the First World War 337
- 21 Vernon Lee, Satan the Waster (1920) and Peace with Honour (1915) 349
- 22 Rose Macaulay, Non-Combatants and Others (1916) and Other War Writings 371
- 23 Wilfred Owen, War Poetry 381
- 24 Ernest Raymond, Tell England (1922) and Other Writings 397
- 25 Isaac Rosenberg, War Poetry 407
- 26 Siegfried Sassoon, War Poems (1919) and The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston (1937) 423
- 27 R.C. Sherriff, Journey’s End (1928) 435
- 28 May Sinclair, A Journal of Impressions in Belgium (1915), War Poetry and Fiction 445
- 29 Virginia Woolf, Jacob’s Room (1922), Mrs. Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), The Years (1937) and Three Guineas (1938) 459
- 30 Joan Littlewood and the Theatre Workshop, Oh What a Lovely War (1963) 483
- 31 Susan Hill, Strange Meeting (1971) 491
- 32 Sebastian Faulks, Birdsong: A Novel of Love and War (1993) 499
- Index of Subjects 507
- Index of Names 515
- List of Contributors 527