
Marlborough and other poems
PREFACE
I MARLBOROUGH - I
II BARBURY CAMP
III WHAT YOU WILL
IV ROOKS
V ROOKS (II)
VI STONES
VII EAST KENNET CHURCH AT EVENING
VIII AUTUMN DAWN
A poignant anthology that captures the fleeting brilliance of a young poet whose voice was silenced too soon. The verses move from the quiet contemplation of English countryside paths to the stark, urgent reflections of a soldier on the Western Front, revealing a mind keenly aware of both beauty and the looming darkness of war. Interwoven with the poems are brief prose excerpts taken from the writer’s own letters, offering intimate glimpses of his thoughts, humor, and the raw emotions that inspired his verses.
The collection preserves the original order in which the poems were crafted, allowing listeners to trace the poet’s development from school‑yard musings to the hardened reality of trench life. Though some pieces were penned amid training camps and battlefield mud, the language remains strikingly simple, often spare, yet resonant with a timeless yearning for meaning. This listening experience invites you to walk alongside a talented, introspective mind at the cusp of history, feeling the tension between youthful optimism and the sobering weight of conflict.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (106K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: University Press, 1916.
Credits
D A Alexander, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by University of California libraries)
Release date
2022-04-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1895–1915
A gifted young war poet whose voice was cut short at just twenty, he left behind poems and letters that feel clear-eyed, unsentimental, and startlingly alive. His work offers a vivid glimpse of youth, thought, and loss in the First World War.
View all books
by Geoffrey Chaucer

by Nathaniel Bright Emerson

by de Lorris Guillaume, de Meun Jean

by de Lorris Guillaume, de Meun Jean

by Sir Edwin Arnold

by Homer

by Hesiod