
In this eclectic volume the poet moves from the rolling hills of the English countryside to the stark confines of wartime captivity, offering a mosaic of verses that celebrate both the ordinary and the profound. Sun‑lit fields, wind‑shaken wheat and the quiet hush of winter trees sit alongside prayers that seek to translate the divine into colour and sound. Light‑hearted pieces about ducks, laughter of babies, and witty observations of everyday life balance more solemn meditations on mortality and identity. The collection also includes sonnets, triolet forms and experimental free‑verse, each rendered in a voice that is at once personal and universally resonant.
Listeners will find the poet’s language vivid yet accessible, with frequent shifts between reverent awe and gentle humor. The poems often read like conversations with nature, inviting the audience to linger on the texture of a meadow or the cadence of a night wind. Interspersed prose poems and reflective essays add a narrative thread that ties the disparate sections together, making the whole work feel like a wandering walk through memory and landscape.
Language
en
Duration
~43 minutes (42K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: Sidgwick & Jackson, Ltd.,1921.
Credits
D A Alexander, David E. Brown, 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
2021-10-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1888–1957
Best known for poems shaped by his experiences in the First World War, this English writer brought warmth, humor, and deep feeling to verse about ordinary life and the Gloucestershire countryside.
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