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3 Dec 2008

Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)


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Rupert Brooke (1887-1915) was educated at Rugby school, where his father was a housemaster and later won a scholarship to Kings College Cambridge where he spent 5 years. He began to publish poems in journals in 1909, and also contributed work to the first and second volumes of 'Georgian Poetry', edited by his friend E.Marsh (see our poem 'The Wind' by Harold Monro who was the publisher of these works). In 1914 he was commissioned in the Royal Navy and after seeing action at the defence of Antwerp, spent his Christmas leave at home where he wrote five sonnets, including 'The Soldier' ('If I should die...). In 1915 Brookes was dispatched to the Dardanelles, but died of blood poisoning on the way and was buried in Scyros in the Northern Aegean. Winston Churchill,then First Lord of the Admiralty, described him as being 'all that one would wish England's noblest sons to be'.


Visit here to purchase 'Rupert Brooke' a book about his tragically short life.

 
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