Book Read Free

Voices of Silence

Page 43

by Vivien Noakes

Submarines

  The German Dug-out

  The Lusitania

  Bryden, Walter M.

  In 1916 held the rank of Sergeant. He appears to have survived the war.

  The Catechism of the Kit

  Burnet, W. Hodgson (b. 1873)

  The author of a number of humorous books.

  Requisitional

  Bynner, Witter (1881–1968)

  American poet and man of letters.

  The True Pacifist

  Cannan, May Wedderburn (1893–1973)

  Enrolled in the VAD, 1911; served briefly at Rouen; returned to Oxford as part of the government’s War Propaganda Bureau; joined MI5 in Paris, 1918; was engaged to Bevil Quiller-Couch, son of ‘Q’, who survived the war but died in 1919 from influenza while serving with the Army of Occupation in Germany.

  English Leave

  For a Girl

  Perfect Epilogue

  The Armistice

  Cappe, Lucas

  A Song

  Carpenter, Edward (1844–1929)

  A writer associated with the arts and crafts movement and social reform. A friend of Siegfried Sassoon, he was part of the pacifist group that gathered round Lady Ottoline Morrell. His book The Intermediate Sex (1908) was a ground-breaking study of homosexuality.

  Lieutenant Tattoon, M.C.

  Carstairs, Carroll (1888–1948)

  An American, he claimed to be Canadian and served in the Royal Artillery and Grenadier Guards; Lieutenant; severely wounded in November 1918. The author of A Generation Missing (1930).

  Life and Death

  Chadwick, J.C.

  The Wood

  Chance, Wade

  A Father at the Grave of his Son

  Chapman, John Jay (1862–1933)

  American-born lawyer and author.

  To a Dog

  Choyce, A.N.

  In December 1918 he was a Lieutenant and being treated for wounds in Heywood Auxiliary Hospital.

  My Pal and I

  Churchill, John Strange Spencer, known as Jack (1880–1947)

  Younger brother of Winston Churchill. As a Major TA Reserve (later Oxfordshire Yeomenry) he served in the South African War 1899–1900. In the First World War he served in Gallipoli and France; mentioned in dispatches.

  Y Beach

  Clarke, E.F.

  Contributor to Punch.

  The Infantryman

  Clayton, T.

  Poet who contributed to the Accrington Observer and Times.

  Leave your Change

  [There are tear-dimmed eyes in the town today]

  Where are the Russians?

  Clifford, C.

  In Memory of Kaiser Bill (The Butcher)

  Cobb, Walter H.

  After the war he became an illustrator of children’s books.

  The Armoured(illo) Train

  The German Herr

  The Newt-ral

  The Sentrypede

  The Skunk

  The Sloth

  Corbett, N.M.F.

  In 1916 held the rank of Lieutenant-Commander, RN.

  The Auxiliary Cruiser

  The Sailing of the Fleet

  Coulson, Leslie (1889–1916)

  Enlisted in the ranks of 2nd Bttn, London Regt (Royal Fusiliers), September 1914; served in Gallipoli, where he was slightly wounded; in hospital in Egypt; transferred to France; attached to the 12th Bttn, London Regt (The Rangers); promoted Sergeant and took part in the Battle of the Somme; shot, 7 October 1916 and died the following day. He is buried at Grove Town Cemetery, Meaulte.

  From the Somme

  When I Come Home

  Cranmer, Elsie Paterson

  The Dead Hero

  Cutler, Stuart

  Lieutenant, 23rd US Infantry, AEF.

  Somewhere in France (1)

  Dawson, George C.

  Sergeant, 19th Railway Engineers, AEF.

  To the Recruitin’ Sergeant

  de Stein, Edward Sinauer (1887–1965)

  Enlisted before the war in the Oxford OTC; to France as Captain July 1915; transferred to the Machine Gun Corps, October 1915; promoted Major in the King’s Royal Rifle Corps (60th Rifles), 1918. Knighted in 1946.

  Joseph Arthur Brown

  The Romance of Place-Names

  The Sacred Documents

  The Turn of the Tide

  Dearmer, Geoffrey (1893–1996)

  Enlisted at the outbreak of war; commissioned into the 2nd Bttn, London Regt (Royal Fusiliers), September 1914; served in Egypt, Gallipoli and France. Edited BBC radio Children’s Hour, 1939– 59. The last surviving of the First World War poets.

  Gommecourt

  Mudros after the Evacuation

  Dennys, Joyce (1893–1991)

  Illustrator. Served as a VAD in Cornwall 1915–16.

  Concert

  [Pansy ran a knitting party]

  [The Flag-Day girl is dressed in white]

  Dobell, Eva (1867–1963)

  Volunteered as a nurse; corresponded with prisoners of war. A published poet before the war, she produced five further volumes of verse afterwards.

  The Band

  Dowsing, William

  Known as William Dowsing of Sheffield, he was the author of books of sonnets, including six volumes inspired by Louis Raemaerker’s war cartoons.

  The Kaiser’s Cry for Peace

  Drinkwater, John (1882–1937)

  Georgian poet, dramatist and biographer.

  England to Belgium

  Eastman, Max (1883–1969)

  The American socialist writer who in 1913 was appointed editor of The Masses, a journal whose frequent denunciations of American involvement in the war led to its closure under the Espionage Act in 1918.

  The Battle-fields

  Elton, Godfrey (1892–1973)

  Commissioned into 4th Hampshire Regt, 1914; wounded and captured at Kut-al-Amara; prisoner of war in Turkey, 1915–18; promoted Captain, 1918. Fellow and lecturer in Modern History at Queen’s College Oxford 1919–39; created 1st Baron Elton, 1934.

  The War Memorial

  Ewer, William Norman (1885–1976)

  A Fabian Socialist and left-wing journalist, he is alleged to have spied for the Soviet Union in the 1920s, although his later writing took an anti-Soviet line.

  Christmas Truce

  Cousins German

  The Only Way

  To any Diplomatist

  To any Pacifist

  War Aims

  ffrench, [first name unknown]

  Captain, Royal Air Force.

  [Here in the eye of the sun]

  Fish, Wallace Wilfrid Blair (1889–1968)

  Contributor to Punch, 1908–17, he was a playwright, poet, journalist and publisher.

  On Christmas Leave

  Fletcher, John Gould (1886–1950)

  American-born Imagists poet, resident in London, 1916–33.

  The Last Rally

  Fox-Smith, C. (1882–1954)

  Poet and children’s writer.

  The Call

  Foxcroft, Charles T. (1868–1929)

  In 1900, during the South African War, he was commissioned into the 1st Somerset Volunteers; came out in 1904 with the rank of Captain. In 1914 he was gazetted Captain in the 2nd/4th Somerset Regt; invalided out in 1916. He was an MP for Bath, October 1918–December 1929.

  A Veteran’s View

  Retreat

  ‘Si Monumentum requiris’

  Travail

  Frankau, Gilbert (1884–1952)

  Commissioned into the 9th Bttn, East Surrey Regt, October 1914; transferred to RFA, March 1915; fought at Loos, Ypres and on the Somme; Staff Captain in Italy working on counter-propaganda, October 1916; invalided out with shell-shock, February 1918. Later an author; served in the RAF Volunteer Reserve in the Second World War; Squadron Leader, 1940; invalided out, 1951.

  Eyes in the Air

  Gun-Teams

  Headquarters

  Only an Officer

  Poison

  T
he Other Side

  The Reason

  Unknown

  Urgent or Ordinary

  Wails to the Mail

  French, F.H.

  Victory Assured!

  Freston, Hugh Reginald (Rex) (1891–1916)

  Commissioned into the 3rd Royal Berkshire Regt (Special Reserve of Officers) in April 1915; to France, December 1915; killed, 24 January 1916. Buried at Becourt Military Cemetery, Becordel-Becourt.

  To A.M.

  Fyson, Geoffrey F.

  The Survivors

  To a Pacifist

  Gellert, Leon (1892–1977)

  As part of the 10th Bttn, AIF, he took part in the first landings at Gallipoli; he was discharged as medically unfit, June 1916. After the war was a poet and journalist, and Literary Editor and feature writer for the Sydney Morning Herald, 1942–61.

  Anzac Cove

  The Cripple

  Gibson, Wilfrid Wilson (1878–1962)

  Georgian poet; volunteered, 1915; rejected with poor eyesight; accepted in the RASC, 1917 but did not

  serve abroad.

  Bacchanal

  Between the Lines

  Mad

  Ragtime

  The Messages

  Girling, T.A. (1876–1919)

  Captain, Canadian Army Veterinary Corps. He died while still on Active Service on 1 March 1919 and is buried in Belgrade Cemetery, near Namur in Belgium.

  Dumb Heroes

  Glasgow, Geraldine Robertson

  A prolific story writer.

  Missing

  Goddard, Leslie M.

  To a V.A.D. from a V.A.D.

  Godfrey-Turner, L.

  Cricket Field or Battle Field?

  Golding, Louis (1895–1958)

  At the outbreak of war attempted to join the OTC but was rejected on medical grounds; served as a hospital orderly in the Fifth Canadian Hospital in Salonika. After the war was a novelist, essayist and travel writer.

  Broken Bodies

  During the Battle

  Evening – Kent

  German Boy

  Statesmen Debonair

  The New Trade

  The Woman who Shrieked against Peace

  Gordon, Hampden (1885–1960)

  Went to work in the War Office in 1908, where he was throughout the war. The author of a number of illustrated and children’s books, he remained a career Civil Servant.

  Concert

  Letters Home

  [Patsy ran a Knitting Party]

  [The Flag-Day Girl is dressed in white]

  [The Women’s Volunteer Reserve]

  Gorell Barnes, Ronald (1884–1963)

  Before the war he was on the editorial staff of The Times. Captain and Adjutant, 7th Bttn. The Rifle Brigade, 1916, MC 1917, Major, General Staff, 1918, when he was appointed Deputy Director of Staff Duties (Education) at the War Office; founded the Royal Army Education Corps. He succeeded his brother as Lord Gorell, 1917.

  Ypres

  Graves, C.L. (1856–1944)

  Joined the Staff of Punch in 1902, assistant editor, 1928–36. With E.V. Lucas translated H.G. Puzzuoli’s The War of the Wenuses (1898).

  Beasts and Superbeasts

  The Freedom of the Press

  The Missing Leader

  Winston’s Last Phase

  Grindlay, I.

  3617, QMAAC.

  Khaki

  Route March Sentiments

  Guppy, Alfred Leslie (1887–1917)

  Company QMS with the 14th AIF in Gallipoli and France; reported missing April 1917; confirmed as German POW June 1917.

  Evacuation of Gallipoli

  Hall, Ralph J.

  Corporal, Company B, 101st Mounted Police, AEF.

  Slacker, Think it Over!

  Hamund, St John (d. 1929)

  Before the war, he was an actor with Shakespeare Theatre, Liverpool.

  The Armoured(illo) Train

  The German Herr

  The Newt-ral

  The Sentrypede

  The Skunk

  The Sloth

  Hancock, Augusta

  Contributor to The Lady.

  The Women

  These Little Ones!

  Hannan, Thomas

  A British Boy

  Harkins, J.M.

  A member of the AIF, he appears to have survived the war.

  The Chats’ Parade

  Harris, Dudley H.

  Cadet, Tank Corps; he appears to have survived the war.

  Left Alone

  Harvey, Frederick William (1888–1957)

  Enlisted as Private in the Gloucestershire Regt, 1915; Lance-Corporal, 1915; won DCM during a reconnaissance raid, August 1915; commissioned, 1915; captured during solo daylight raid on German lines, August 1916; spent the rest of the war in captivity.

  A True Tale of the Listening Post

  At Afternoon Tea

  Back to the Trenches

  Ballad of Army Pay

  Gonnehem

  Loneliness

  Peace – The Dead Speak

  Requiescat

  The Route March

  To Certain Persons

  To the Kaiser – Confidentially

  Harwood, Henry Cecil (1893–1964)

  Lieutenant in 1916. Was called to the Bar in 1922, and became a journalist.

  From the Youth of all Nations

  Head, Henry (1861–1940)

  A distinguished neurologist and Fellow and Vice-President of the Royal Society, he worked with William Rivers, the psychiatrist, with whom he published Studies in Neurology in 1922. Virginia Woolf was a patient. He was knighted in 1927.

  Destroyers

  Hennesley, Edmund

  Sergeant, Honourable Artillery Company; he appears to have survived the war.

  A Day in Spring

  Herbert, Alan Patrick (1890–1971)

  Enlisted 1914 as Ordinary Seaman in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve; commissioned as Sub-Lieutenant, March 1915; served in the Royal Naval Division (Hawk Bttn) in Gallipoli and France; mentioned in dispatches; severely wounded and invalided out, April 1917; promoted Lieutenant, September 1917 and served on staff of HMS President. After the war, became an MP and a distinguished writer.

  After the Battle

  Beaucourt Revisited

  Eye-wash

  Open Warfare

  The Deserters

  The Draft

  The German Graves

  The Green Estaminet

  The Tide

  To James

  Twitting the Turk

  Zero!

  Heywood, Raymond

  In 1918 held the rank of Lieutenant, Devonshire Regt. He published two volumes of poems.

  At Stand Down

  Before Battle

  On Patrol

  Hill, Brian

  In 1917 held the rank of 2nd Lieutenant, Durham Light Infantry.

  Salonika in November

  Hodgkinson, T.

  Contributor to Punch.

  A Literary War Worker

  Hogben, John

  Scottish author of several volumes of poetry written before and after the war.

  Below

  Somewhere in France (2)

  Holmes, William Kersley (b. 1882)

  In 1915 held the rank of Captain in the Royal Field Artillery. He wrote a number of volumes of poetry, and was a Scottish writer for children, adapting fairy stories.

  Horse-Bathing Parade

  Letters to Tommy

  My Beautiful

  Singing ‘Tipperary’

  The Barrack Room

  The Camp in the Sands

  The Inspection

  The Squadron Takes the Ford

  Ingamells, H.

  Mine Sweepers

  Jenkins, Elinor (1893–1920)

  The House by the Highway

  The Last Evening

  Keigwin, Richard Prescott (1883–1972)

  Lieutenant in the RNVR; present at the surrender of the German fleet. Before the war he played hockey for England
, cricket for the MCC and tennis for Gloucestershire, as well as being a Cambridge blue in cricket, football, hockey and rackets. After the war he became a schoolmaster.

  The Four Sea Lords

  Kennedy, Revd Geoffrey Anketell Studdert (1883–1929)

  ‘Woodbine Willie’. Enlisted as army chaplain, December 1915; in the trenches on the Somme, 1916, Messines Ridge, 1917 and final advance, 1918; MC 1917; described his ministry as taking ‘a box of fags in your haversack, and a great deal of love in your heart’.

  Walking Wounded

  Waste

  Kerr, Roderick Watson (1895–1960)

  Before the war was leader writer and reviewer on the staff of The Scotsman. 2nd Lieutenant and later Lieutenant, the Tank Corps, 1916–19; severely wounded and awarded MC during the German attack of March 1918. After the war he returned to journalism.

  A Vignette

  From the Line

  Music in a Dug-out

  Rain

  Sounds by Night

  Wounded

  Knight-Adkin, James H.

  Nothing is known about him, but he appears to have survived the war.

  No Man’s Land

  Knox, Edmund Gregory Valpy (1881–1971)

  Worked under the pseudonym ‘Evoe’. Commissioned into the Lincolnshire Regt, 1914; wounded at Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele, 1917). Editor of Punch, 1932–49.

  Mufti Once More

  Laing, Allan M.

  Imprisoned for a year as a conscientious objector in Wormwood Scrubs.

  I Lived a Year in London

  Large, D.

  Private with the Army Service Corps in Rouen.

  On Leave

  Lawson, Henry Archibald Hertzberg (1867–1922)

  Australian poet and short-story writer.

  Fighting Hard

  Lee, Joseph (1876–1949)

  Enlisted as Private in the Black Watch, 1914; to France, February 1915; reached rank of Sergeant; commissioned, August 1917 into the King’s Royal Rifle Corps (60th Rifles); captured, November 1917 and spent rest of the war in prison in Germany. After the war he returned to being an artist.

  Carrying-Party

  Macfarlane’s Dug-out

  Stand-to!

  The Billet

  The Bullet

  The Mouth-Organ

  The Penitent

  Tommy and Fritz

  Leslie, Will

  Private, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders; he appears to have survived the war.

  A Letter from Home

  Gallipoli – In Memoriam

  Letts, Winifred M. (1882–1971)

  Served from 1915 as VAD nurse. An Irish playwright and children’s author, she contributed to a number of journals, including Punch and the Spectator.

  A Sister in a Military Hospital

  Pro Patria

  The Call to Arms

  Levey, Sivori (b. 1879)

  Lieutenant, 13th West Yorkshire Regt. Before the war he was an established writer of popular songs and verses; his final book, a study of the songs in Shakespeare’s plays, was published in 1924.

 

‹ Prev