Photo de l'auteur

Rupert Brooke (1887–1915)

Auteur de The Collected Poems of Rupert Brooke

49+ oeuvres 1,377 utilisateurs 10 critiques 5 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Rupert Brooke was a poet who took a patriotic, somewhat idealized, view of World War I. He was born in Rugby, where his father was headmaster of a house at the elite Rugby School. Blond, athletic, and intelligent, Brooke embodied the English stereotype of the golden youth. After he had studied at afficher plus the Rugby School, Brooke went on to King's College, where he joined the Apostles, a venerable intellectual club, which counted Alfred Lord Tennyson among its earlier members. In 1911, Brooke published his first collection of poetry titled Poems. His verse moved from fashionably decadent to nearly Georgian, often with a quiet pastoralism that now seems conventional. Brooke joined the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve in August 1914, served in Belgium, and was sent to Gallipoli with the Hood Battalion but died of blood poisoning en route in the Aegean. He is best remembered for his war sonnets, which idealize both combat and patriotic feelings in a way that other war poets would later react against sharply. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Rupert Brooke

The Collected Poems of Rupert Brooke (1915) 397 exemplaires
The Poetical Works of Rupert Brooke (1946) 273 exemplaires
1914 and Other Poems (1915) 156 exemplaires
The Complete Poems (1932) 148 exemplaires
Poems (1916) 79 exemplaires
Selected Poems (1919) 53 exemplaires
Lettres d'Amérique (1919) 53 exemplaires
Twenty Poems (1935) 17 exemplaires
If I Should Die (1996) 15 exemplaires
The Letters of Rupert Brooke (1968) 12 exemplaires
Democracy and the arts (1946) 7 exemplaires
Lithuania (1989) 7 exemplaires
Selected Poems 5 exemplaires
The prose of Rupert Brooke (1956) 5 exemplaires
Rupert Brooke {Pocket Poets} (1960) 5 exemplaires
The War Poets: A Selection of World War I Poetry (2nd Edition) (2011) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires
La poussière des dieux (1991) 3 exemplaires
The Soldier [poem] (1915) 2 exemplaires
The Poems Of Rupert Brooke (1961) 2 exemplaires
The old vicarage, Grantchester (2010) 1 exemplaire
"A Channel Passage" 1 exemplaire
Peace 1 exemplaire
Rupert Brooke (1971) 1 exemplaire
The great lover (1995) 1 exemplaire
What the Poet Saw (1993) 1 exemplaire
[Works] 1 exemplaire
Rupert Brooke Poems (1950) 1 exemplaire
Heaven {poem} 1 exemplaire
Si je meurs... (2004) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Nation's Favourite Poems (1996) — Contributeur — 625 exemplaires
The Best Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy-Onassis (2001) — Contributeur — 546 exemplaires
A Pocket Book of Modern Verse (1954) — Contributeur, quelques éditions443 exemplaires
World War One British Poets (1997) — Contributeur — 401 exemplaires
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 4th Edition, Volume 2 (1979) — Contributeur — 250 exemplaires
Above the Dreamless Dead: World War I in Poetry and Comics (2014) — Auteur — 129 exemplaires
Poetry of the First World War: an anthology (2013) — Contributeur — 126 exemplaires
The Standard Book of British and American Verse (1932) — Contributeur — 116 exemplaires
Thirty Famous One-Act Plays (1943) — Contributeur — 110 exemplaires
Masters of British Literature, Volume B (2007) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
Pity of War: Poems of the First World War (1985) — Contributeur — 11 exemplaires
All Day Long: An Anthology of Poetry for Children (1954) — Contributeur — 9 exemplaires
Men and Women: The Poetry of Love (1970) — Contributeur — 8 exemplaires
Treelines: A collection of poems (2018) 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Brooke, Rupert Chawner
Date de naissance
1887-08-03
Date de décès
1915-04-23
Lieu de sépulture
Skyros Island, Greece
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Pays (pour la carte)
England, UK
Lieu de naissance
Rugby, Warwickshire, England, UK
Lieu du décès
Skyros, Greece
Cause du décès
sepsis
Lieux de résidence
Rugby, Warwickshire, England, UK
Études
Rugby School
King's College, Cambridge
Professions
poet
army officer
Organisations
Cambridge Apostles
Georgian Poets
Marlowe Society
British Army

Membres

Critiques

I had this book for at least ten years before I read it. I picked it up at a used-book store when I was sweeping the place for poetry books. I'm sorry I waited so long. Brooke is the best new (to me) poet I've come across in a long time. I've always known I'd come to the Georgian poets eventually, that true stock of poetry from the good old tradition, the thread that was sadly cut off by the Great War in Europe and the realms of poesy. Modernism ruined the matter and meter of poetry, killed its audience, and sent the true heirs of the English poetic tradition into exile, where they cower together, few and unknown. Any of the nonsense writers of the last century could only dream of doing what Brooke did; no doubt they daren't read him for shame.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
judeprufrock | Jul 4, 2023 |
While known as a war poet most of Brooke's poetry was written prior to the Great War. When war was declared in 1914 he had his first experience of war on the disastrous expedition to Antwerp, spending a few days and nights being shelled in trenches. Early in 1915 he sailed with the Expeditionary Force to the Dardanelles, but died of blood poisoning on a French hospital ship at Scyros, Greece on April 23rd, Saint George's Day. He was buried at night, by torchlight, in an olive grove.

I found much of his words pompous by modern standards, generally glorifying war although he had so little experience of it, yet his voice called to mind the generation of young men who were lost. Although his most famous lines are in "The Soldier", I found this poem particularly appealing:

Song

All suddenly the wind comes soft,
And Spring is here again;
And the hawthorn quickens with buds of green,
And my heart with buds of pain.

My heart all Winter lay so numb,
The earth so dead and frore,
That I never thought the Spring would come,
Or my heart wake any more.

But Winter's broken and earth has woken,
And the small birds cry again;
And the hawthorn hedge puts forth its buds,
And my heart puts forth its pain.”
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
VivienneR | 2 autres critiques | Nov 10, 2020 |
The Poetical Works of Rupert Brooke is a collection of all his poems the editors found fit to print organized from last to first with a collection of fragments from his final journey to Gallipoli in an appendix at the end. The problem with collections ordered this way is that all the good stuff is at the beginning, and the drift towards juvenilia makes for increasingly tiresome reading. Considering that Brooke's best work was done in a few short years before his early death from septicemia on the Mediterranean front of World War I, at times it becomes quite a slog. But Brooke wrote poems worth reading: including his war sonnets, "Grantcester", and some very interesting pieces set in Polynesia. And he deserves to be remembered, as a minor poet, perhaps, but as someone who had genuine poetic talent. It helps that both he and I are fans of the poets of the 90s. At times you can feel a bit of their rhythmic musicality come through his more modern style. So if you are interested in poets who died in World War I or just 20th century poets in general, Brooke is one you will want to bump into, and this volume is a good way to do so.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
inge87 | 2 autres critiques | Aug 31, 2016 |

Listes

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
49
Aussi par
16
Membres
1,377
Popularité
#18,670
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
10
ISBN
141
Langues
2
Favoris
5

Tableaux et graphiques