Vera Brittain
and the
First World War
By the same author
Vera Brittain
Letters from a Lost Generation
Lives for Sale
Florence Nightingale
Because You Died
The Fateful Year
Vera Brittain
and the
First World War
The Story of
Testament of Youth
Mark Bostridge
For Shirley Williams
and for
Sam and Nat Honey
– the next generation
Vera Brittain in 1917
All sorrows can be borne if you put them into a story or tell a story about them.
Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen)
Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword
1 Provincial Young Ladyhood 1893–1914
2 Love and War 1914–1915
3 To the Bitter End 1916–1918
4 ‘Didn’t Women Have Their War As Well?’ 1918–1933
5 From Book to Film 1934–2014
Afterword: Ipplepen 269: The Tragic Fate of Edward Brittain
Chronology
Gazetteer of Places Associated with Vera Brittain and Testament of Youth
Further Reading
Index
Plate Section
List of Illustrations
Text
Vera Brittain in 1917. (Shirley Williams)
Vera Brittain at the front window of ‘Melrose’, her Buxton home, in about 1912. (McMaster)
Vera, circa 1912, dressed in her best clothes, perhaps for one of the Sunday Church parades in Buxton’s Pavilion Gardens. (McMaster)
Vera in 1913, at about the time she started studying for Oxford University. (McMaster)
Programme for the Uppingham School Speech Day, in July 1914. (McMaster)
Vera’s diary entry for 4 August 1914. (McMaster)
The photograph of herself that Vera sent to Roland Leighton in December 1914. (McMaster)
Vera’s VAD record card (British Red Cross)
Vera as a VAD at the First London General Hospital, Camberwell. (McMaster)
The text of the telegram to Roland’s family, informing them of his death, copied by Vera into her notebook. (McMaster)
An early photograph of Roland’s grave at Louvencourt, pasted by Vera into her notebook. (McMaster)
Vera with a group of her patients at St George’s Hospital, Malta. (McMaster)
An ‘In Memoriam’ page to Roland, Victor, Geoffrey and Edward from Vera’s notebook. (McMaster)
A publicity photograph of Vera in 1933 taken for Testament of Youth. (Shirley Williams)
Vera’s plan for ‘This Was Their War’ (originally ‘The Incidental Adam’), one of the fictional versions of her war experiences. (McMaster)
An early typed draft of the opening page of the first chapter of Testament of Youth. (McMaster)
Gollancz’s catalogue announcement of the publication of Testament of Youth in August 1933. (McMaster)
Juliette Towhidi, James Kent, and Rosie Alison on the set of Testament of Youth. (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Edward Brittain’s grave at the British military cemetery at Granezza, on the Asiago Plateau in northern Italy. (McMaster)
Devonshire Hospital, Buxton (McMaster)
First London General Hospital, Camberwell (Mark Bostridge)
Ploegsteert Wood and Ploegsteert village (McMaster)
Louvencourt Church (McMaster)
Etaples (McMaster)
St George’s Hospital (McMaster)
Granezza Cenotaph (McMaster)
Plates
Vera Brittain circa 1898 (McMaster)
Edith and Arthur Brittain (McMaster)
Edward and Vera Brittain (Mark Bostridge)
Revd Joseph Ward, curate of St Peter’s, Fairfield (Mark Bostridge)
Roland Leighton, circa 1913 (McMaster)
‘The Three Musketeers’: Edward, Roland and Victor (McMaster)
Edward Brittain (McMaster)
Roland Leighton drilling his platoon, Peterborough, 1915 (David Leighton)
Victor Richardson (McMaster)
Geoffrey Thurlow (McMaster)
Vera as a VAD, Buxton, 1915 (Shirley Williams)
Vera, St George’s Bay, Malta, 1916 (McMaster)
Gloria, the ballet inspired by Testament of Youth (Royal Opera House)
Cheryl Campbell and Peter Woodward as Vera Brittain and Roland Leighton in the BBC-TV adaptation of Testament of Youth, 1979 (BBC Archive)
Shirley Williams outside her mother’s home, ‘Melrose’, Buxton, 2008 (Mark Bostridge)
Vera (Alicia Vikander) with Edward (Taron Egerton) before the war in a scene from the BBC Films/Heyday Films production of Testament of Youth (Testament Distribution Ltd)
The ‘Three Musketeers’ at the Uppingham Speech Day. Roland (Kit Harington), Victor (Colin Morgan) and Edward (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Vera at Oxford reading the casualty lists (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Geoffrey (Jonathan Bailey) (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Vera with the blinded Victor (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Vera as a VAD (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Roland picks a violet in Plug Street Wood (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Roland and Vera during Roland’s final leave (Testament Distribution Ltd)
Foreword
In the deepening gloom of an autumn evening, with only the newly lit street lamps puncturing the encroaching darkness, a young woman called Vera Brittain walks up Whitehall in central London. She makes her way through the jubilant mass of celebrating crowds, past the spot where Edwin Lutyens’s Cenotaph will be unveiled exactly two years later. It is 11 November 1918. The guns had fallen silent at 11 o’clock that morning, marking the end of a World War that had lasted for more than four years, at a cost in lives, to the British Empire alone, of nearly a million men.
Vera Brittain could not share in those feelings of celebration. The end of the war had come too late for her and for her male contemporaries. Instead, the dominant emotions she felt that day were ones of isolation and loneliness, born of the sudden full realisation that everything that had hitherto made up her life had vanished with the loss of four young men killed in the war: her fiancé, Roland Leighton, two close friends, Victor Richardson and Geoffrey Thurlow, and, finally, her beloved only brother Edward. Years later, in a letter to a friend, Brittain relived the sensations of that day. She related them to her recurrent fear ‘of being left alone again in a world where no one cares with me for the things I care for, or understands why I should care for them – a blind, empty, soundless world like the world for me on the first Armistice Day’.
Vera Brittain’s sense of alienation on that November evening in 1918 is portrayed with heartrending anguish in her most famous book, Testament of Youth, her classic memoir of the war years, during which she postponed her university education at Oxford and served as a Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse in hospitals in London, Malta and France. First published in Britain and the United States in 1933, the book instantly became a bestseller on both sides of the Atlantic. At the end of the 1970s it became a bestseller again when it was republished in a new paperback edition by Virago Press, and triumphantly adapted for an award-winning BBC Television series. To Shirley Williams, Vera Brittain’s daughter, the republication of the book allowed a new generation more distant from the First World War ‘to discover the anguish and pain’ of young people like her mother and her male contemporaries, and, in discovering, to understand.
More than three
decades on from its reappearance, as we commemorate the centenary of the First World War, deprived of the living witness of the men and women who struggled through those four years of conflict, Testament of Youth is still helping us to understand. It tells the reader in highly personal terms about the lasting impact of war on ordinary people’s lives, and issues a warning to succeeding generations about the dangers of succumbing out of naive idealism to the false glamour of war. Vera Brittain called Testament of Youth a ‘passionate plea for peace’, which attempts to show ‘without any polite disguise, the agony of war … and its destructiveness to the human race’. The book is arguably the greatest work of love, loss and remembrance to emerge from the First World War. To my mind there is nothing else in the prose literature of the war that so eloquently and movingly conveys the suffering and bereavement inflicted on the generation of 1914.
And while it is regrettable that other fine books by women about the war are not better known, Testament of Youth is the only book by a woman to find a place in the British canon of Great War literature, alongside works by such male writers as Edmund Blunden, Robert Graves and Siegfried Sassoon. Brittain was intent on offering her book as a corrective to masculine accounts, which emphasised women’s passive suffering during the war instead of their active service. To Brittain, the women of the war generation had helped to bridge the gulf between their Victorian forbears, ‘who merely endured’, and ‘the 20th century women, who pull down and change things, adventure and construct’.
Paradoxically, the war that devastated Brittain’s youth also helped to create her as a writer. Vera Brittain spent much of her writing life describing the war and its impact, in a wide variety of literary genres: diaries, letters, poetry, fiction, memoir, journalism, polemic (the only comparable male writer of the war in this respect, constantly rewriting his experiences, is Sassoon). But it is Testament of Youth that stands alone as her lasting contribution to history and to literature.
In this short book I have tried to present in concise form the outline of Vera Brittain’s First World War experiences, alongside chapters about the writing of Testament of Youth, and its eventual translation to television; to the world of dance (as the inspiration for Kenneth MacMillan’s ballet Gloria); and, in 2015, to the big screen, in the feature film adaptation of the book, starring Alicia Vikander and Kit Harington.
The standard full-length biography remains Vera Brittain: A Life by Paul Berry and myself, first published 20 years ago (I provide some details of our unlikely, though ultimately successful, collaboration in a closing piece about the biographical mystery surrounding Edward Brittain’s last days, prior to his death in action in northern Italy, in June 1918). But this new book draws on material about the complex evolution of Testament of Youth that was not available at the time of the researching and writing of the biography. I hope it will serve as an initial port of call for those coming to Vera Brittain for the first time, perhaps as a result of seeing the film, or of studying Testament of Youth at school or university. I hope also that it may stimulate further critical work about the place of Testament of Youth in First World War literature.
I am deeply indebted to two people without whose friendship I would never have studied Vera Brittain’s life and work: Rebecca Williams and Timothy Brittain-Catlin. I appreciate the fact that they have never so much as broached the subject of whether I am ever going to stop writing about their grandmother. I am immensely grateful to Shirley Williams, David Leighton (Roland Leighton’s nephew) and Shiona Robotham (Victor Richardson’s niece), who have been generous and supportive over many years. I would like to pay tribute to the memory of Paul Berry, a close friend of Vera Brittain’s for 28 years, and her one-time literary executor, who worked tirelessly for Vera Brittain’s reputation in the 30 years after her death.
I’d also like to take this opportunity to salute the actresses who have portrayed Vera Brittain in various productions since 1979: Cheryl Campbell, Rohan McCullough (whose one-woman show toured Britain for over a quarter of a century), Amanda Root, Katherine Manners and Alicia Vikander.
The late Elaine Morgan, who died in 2013, was enormously helpful in providing me with her recollections of the 1979 television adaptation of Testament of Youth.
Rosie Alison, producer with David Heyman of the film of Testament of Youth, kindly allowed me to visit filming on many occasions over the seven-week shoot. Vera Brittain’s family and her Estate owe her a great deal, for without her passionate commitment the film would never have gone before the cameras. I personally am indebted to her for many kindnesses. My warmest thanks to the members of the cast and crew, especially to the director James Kent, screenwriter Juliette Towhidi, co-producer Celia Duval, costume designer Consolata Boyle, and the actors Alicia Vikander, Kit Harington, Colin Morgan, Joanna Scanlan and Miranda Richardson. I am additionally grateful to Juliette Towhidi for allowing me to reproduce some words from her screenplay.
I am very grateful to Joe Oppenheimer for all his kindness and consideration during the six years that the film was in development, and to his colleagues at BBC Films, Christine Langan and Beth Pattinson. Thanks also to Victoria Brooks and Una Maguire at Milk Publicity, to Alice Seabright at Heyday Films, to Nick Manzi at Lionsgate and to Lennie Goodings, Publisher at Virago, who continues to keep Testament of Youth at the forefront of her list. I acknowledge the kind assistance of the librarians and archivists at the William Ready Special Archives at McMaster University, in Hamilton, Ontario, which houses the vast Vera Brittain Archive; and of Anne Manuel at Somerville College, Oxford, home to a smaller collection of Brittain papers amassed during the writing of the authorised biography.
Special thanks are due to Georgina Gordon-Smith at United Agents for all her expertise and supportive advice concerning the film. Thanks, too, for their consummate professionalism to my literary agents Ariella Feiner and Robert Kirby at United Agents, and to my editors at Bloomsbury, Jamie Birkett and Robin Baird-Smith.
1 Provincial Young Ladyhood 1893–1914
On 7 November 1915, Vera Brittain wrote a letter to her fiancé Roland Leighton. Roland had been out in Flanders and France for seven months, serving on the Western Front with the 7th Worcestershire Regiment. Vera had been nursing as a Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse at a military hospital in Camberwell for no more than a few weeks. She had seen him only once since his departure, when he returned home on leave in August, and they had become engaged.
Her overriding wish, she now admitted to Roland for the first time, was for an immediate end to the war. But she also wondered if war, and nursing the shattered bodies of the wounded and dying, had changed her irrevocably, and whether it was possible that she would ever be the same person again after ‘some of the dreadful things I have to see here’. A week earlier, the experience of assisting at an amputation dressing had seared itself on her memory. She had come away from it ‘with my hands covered in blood and my mind full of a passionate fury at the wickedness of war, and I wished that I had never been born.’
Nothing in the circumstances of Vera Brittain’s background or upbringing could have prepared her for the ways in which her personal destiny would be transformed, before she had reached the age of 25, by the cataclysm of a global conflict. To Vera’s generation, born in the final decade of Queen Victoria’s reign, war had appeared as something remote and unimaginable: ‘its monstrous destructions and distresses safely shut up’, she remembered towards the end of her life, ‘… between the covers of history books’.
Her own future at birth had seemed comfortable, sheltered and assured. Vera Mary Brittain was born on 29 December 1893, at Atherstone House, Sidmouth Avenue, a small black and white fronted villa in Newcastle-under-Lyme, North Staffordshire. Her father was Thomas Arthur Brittain (generally known as Arthur, to distinguish him from his father and grandfather), a director of the family paper-making firm of Brittains Limited, which operated mills at Hanley in Stoke-on-Trent (one of the novelist Arnold Bennett’s ‘Five Towns’), and at Cheddleton, near Leek.
Among the innovations at the Brittain paper mills was the development of the thin, tough and opaque paper used by Oxford University Press in the production of its prayer books and bibles.
This manufacturing success, during the last decades of the nineteenth century, had laid the foundations of the Brittain family’s wealth. When old Thomas Brittain, Arthur’s grandfather and the founder of the business, died in 1894, he left behind him a vast fortune of over £100,000, though money was frequently to be the source of bitter legal dispute among Vera’s large clan of quarrelsome Brittain uncles and aunts.
Vera Brittain at the front window of ‘Melrose’, her Buxton home, in about 1912.
In stark contrast to the Brittains’ wealth, the Bervons, the family of Vera’s mother Edith, came from a background of genteel poverty. Inglis Bervon, Vera’s maternal grandfather, was originally from Birmingham, but had adopted a peripatetic lifestyle as a professional singer. By the time Edith, the third of six children, two boys, four girls, was born in 1868, Inglis and Emma Bervon and their family had moved to Aberystwyth where Inglis was employed as a church organist. In the mid-1880s, he set up a successful, but scarcely lucrative, practice as a singing teacher in Hanley. One of his pupils was Arthur Brittain, who was instantly attracted to Inglis’s daughter, Edith.
They were married in the spring of 1891. It was not a love match, as Edith once confided to Vera, though the marriage was to last for more than 40 years and was undoubtedly a contented union for much of that time. Arthur could be irascible and, like several of his siblings, was increasingly prone to depressive illness as he got older. However, as a young man he possessed the ambition and drive of the enterprising businessman. Edith may have been socially at a disadvantage, marrying into the middle-class respectability of the Brittain family, but she dressed well, an essential prerequisite of this newfound respectability – and something in which she would be more than emulated by her daughter, who remained fashion conscious to a high degree. Furthermore Edith showed herself more than able to create a secure and tranquil home, providing a harmonious backdrop for Vera’s ‘serene and uneventful’ childhood.
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