CEF Study Group Recommended Great War Websites

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

CEF Study Group Recommended Great War Websites Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group – Recommended Great War Websites – January 2019 CEF Study Group Recommended Great War Websites - 1 January 201 9 - Dwight G Mercer – R e g i n a , C a n a d a Edited and Copyright by D.G. Mercer – Regina, Canada © Page 1 of 159 Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group – Recommended Great War Websites – January 2019 he 1 January 2019 edition of the Recommended Great War Websites by the Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group (CEF Study Group) is part of the CEF Study Group T internet discussion forum dedicated to the study, exchange of information and discussion related to the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) in the Great War. This List is intended to assist the reader in their research of a specific Great War soldier, nurse or any multitude of other aspects. Further, this recommended List of Great War websites is intended to compliment to the active discourse on the Forum by its members. [URL provided below] The CEF Study Group forum was formed in 2004 and was generally based around some of the original "Canadian Pals" who first met on the Great War Discussion forum based in Great Britain. As our requirements were more specific, there was a desire to create this discussion forum almost 15 years ago - eons on the Internet. As there have been numerous key volunteers on the CEF Discussion Forum over the years, we will not mention any by name for fear of missing someone. Volunteers, much like the original soldiers of the Canadian Expeditionary Force, remain the cornerstone of this effort. However, it is the daily contribution of the members themselves (the Other Ranks) which is the “engine” which drives the continual development of this discussion forum. The objective of the CEF Study Group List of Recommended Great War Websites is to serve as a directory for the reader and student of the Great War. These websites have been researched and grouped into logical sections. Each abstract, in general, attempts to include a few key- words to enable a "key word" search of this extensive list to find websites of immediate interest. The date which each website has been included and/or revisited is generally included in the abstract. All aspects of the Canadian Expeditionary Force are open to examination. Emphasis is on coordinated study, information exchange, civil and constructive critiquing of postings and general mutual support in the research and study of the CEF. Wherever possible, we ask that members provide a reference source for any information posted. This will enable future readers to build upon the work of earlier researchers. In general, you will not find many websites on this List which glorify war and conflict - the common theme is generally to accurately document this world impacting event and to provide for the Remembrance and an understanding of those who participated in this historic world conflict. If you have a recommendation of a website related to either the Canadian Expeditionary Force and/or the Great War in general, or to report a broken website link, please forward a short note and URL address to “Borden Battery” [nomme de plume] on the CEF Study Group discussion forum. Many website abstracts include the name of the person who referred a good or unique website to this List. About 250 new websites are being assessed at present. Edited and Copyright by D.G. Mercer – Regina, Canada © Page 2 of 159 Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group – Recommended Great War Websites – January 2019 Membership is free (but donations gratefully accepted) as there are definite fixed costs associated with the operation and file maintenance of what are now substantial amounts of posted information – over 108,000 postings as of December 2018. Member backgrounds range from first-time neophytes of military history, to serious amateurs and finally to doctoral researchers and published authors. Everyone retains the informal status of "Other Ranks" or Privates on the CEF Study Group discussion forum - we all are expected to undertake "fatigue duties" for the Group. The synergy of over 1,100 members can be immense. In Q2 of 2012, the CEF Study Group was required to relocate to a new server and make a number of upgrades to its software and security. In addition, server costs have now increased, and the hundreds of hours of volunteer labour now requires donations to cover the internet server costs. Richard Laughton oversaw much of the technical reconfiguration of the discussion forum. And finally; and perhaps most importantly - this List is Dedicated to the many Webmasters and assistants who are creating a medium whereby the documentation, cataloguing and dissemination of cooperative research on the Great War is enabled. There are hundreds of thousands of hours of volunteer work invested to create this "community of information". As you visit and utilize the information on these websites, remember to provide suggestions and factual input to these webmasters - a thank you to these webmasters would also be appreciated. Please feel free to forward this List to other persons and groups interested in the Great War. Webmasters of all Great War websites have permission to use this List. The CEF Study Group Discussion Forum can be accessed at the following URL address: http://cefresearch.ca/phpBB3/index.php?sid=0cd6a9809a4ed04cc4dafb5dec7bd149 Note: The List is under constant review and update. Edited and Copyright by D.G. Mercer – Regina, Canada © Page 3 of 159 Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group – Recommended Great War Websites – January 2019 - Table of Contents - CEF Study Group Recommended Great War Websites ____________________________________________________________________________________ Quick Guide for Researching a Great War Soldier C E F - Canadian Government Websites - Pa rt 1 C E F - General Research Websites - P ar t 2 General Great War Websites • CEF - General Websites - Part 3(a) • BEF - General Websites - Part 3(b) • AIF - General Websites - Part 3(c) • AEF, French & Other General Websites - Part 3(d) • General Research Websites - Part 3(e) Individual Great War Soldier Websites - P a rt 4 CEF Battalion & Regimental Websites - P a rt 5 Allied Battalion & Regimental W e bs it e s - P a rt 6 Great War Discussion Forums - P ar t 7 Miscellaneous Great War Websites - P a rt 8 Great War Weapons & Railway Websites - P a rt 9 Great War Photographic & Mapping Websites - P ar t 1 0 Great War Art and Paintings Websites - P a rt 1 1 Ge ne ra l G r eat War Nominal Roll Websites - P art 1 2 Great War Air Force Websites - P art 1 3 General Medical Websites - P art 1 4 Great War Honour Websites - P art 1 5 Great War Reference Book Websites - P a rt 1 6 Great War Documents Websites - P a rt 1 7 General Great War Naval Websites - P a rt 1 8 General Great War - Eastern Front - P art 1 9 Edited and Copyright by D.G. Mercer – Regina, Canada © Page 4 of 159 Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group – Recommended Great War Websites – January 2019 General Great War Artillery - P a rt 2 0 Great War Medal s & Collections - P art 2 1 General Great War Middle East - P a rt 2 2 Chemical Warfare Websites - P art 2 3 Ge rm a n & Austrian Great War Websites - P a rt 2 4 Belgium General Great War Websites - P a rt 2 5 Great War Blog Sites - P a rt 2 6 Great War Docu ment Download Websites - P a rt 2 7 Great War Poetry - P a rt 2 8 Internet YouTube Websites on Great War - P art 2 9 G re a t W a r A c a de m ic - P a rt 30 ____________________________________________ Edited and Copyright by D.G. Mercer – Regina, Canada © Page 5 of 159 Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group – Recommended Great War Websites – January 2019 Quick Guide for Researching a Great War Soldier _________________________________________________________________________ The following short list of recommended websites and a couple introductory books should provide a new researcher a quick and distilled introduction to researching a Canadian soldier from the Canadian Expeditionary Force from the Great War. While there are many common denominators regarding the experiences of the 620,000 soldiers who served, each soldier also has a unique story and the specific research often takes one on a separate path. For this reason, a wide range of additional websites are often required to fill in many "blanks". Researching Canadian Soldiers of the First World War - By Michael O'Leary; The Regimental Rogue The following element from the main Regimental Rogue website provides a brief but very clear introduction to researching Canadian soldiers of the First World. It is highly recommended as one of the first websites to consider when starting your research - especially for someone new to the Great War. The material represents many hours of planning by the author and will save the reader, many more hours in their initial research on the soldier under review. Experienced researchers will also benefit from this organized topic treatment. The following layout (hot URL links per part) will take the reader on an organized research path. This part of the newly updated parent website (http://regimentalrogue.com/ from Part 8 of this List). [CEF Study Group - Updated October 2017] • Part 1: Find your Man (or Woman) • Part 2: The Service Record • Part 3: Court Martial Records • Part 4: War Diaries and Unit Histories • Part 5: Casualties • Part 6: Researching Honours and Awards • Part 7: Deciphering Battlefield Location Information • Part 8: More Mapping Information • Part 9: Matching Battlefield Locations to the Modern Map • Part 10: Service Numbers; More than meets the eye • Part 11: Rank, no simple progression • Part 12: Medals; Pip, Squeak, Wilfred and the whole gang • Part 13: Evacuation to Hospital • Part 14: The Wounded and Sick • Part 15: Crime … • Part 16: … and Punishment • Part 17: Battalions and Brigades, Companies and Corps • Part 18: Photo Forensics: Badges and Patches Note: the above volumes have live hyperlinks in the text.
Recommended publications
  • Sounds of War and Peace: Soundscapes of European Cities in 1945
    10 This book vividly evokes for the reader the sound world of a number of Eu- Renata Tańczuk / Sławomir Wieczorek (eds.) ropean cities in the last year of the Second World War. It allows the reader to “hear” elements of the soundscapes of Amsterdam, Dortmund, Lwów/Lviv, Warsaw and Breslau/Wrocław that are bound up with the traumatising experi- ences of violence, threats and death. Exploiting to the full methodologies and research tools developed in the fields of sound and soundscape studies, the Sounds of War and Peace authors analyse their reflections on autobiographical texts and art. The studies demonstrate the role urban sounds played in the inhabitants’ forging a sense of 1945 Soundscapes of European Cities in 1945 identity as they adapted to new living conditions. The chapters also shed light on the ideological forces at work in the creation of urban sound space. Sounds of War and Peace. War Sounds of Soundscapes of European Cities in Volume 10 Eastern European Studies in Musicology Edited by Maciej Gołąb Renata Tańczuk is a professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Wrocław, Poland. Sławomir Wieczorek is a faculty member of the Institute of Musicology at the University of Wrocław, Poland. Renata Tańczuk / Sławomir Wieczorek (eds.) · Wieczorek / Sławomir Tańczuk Renata ISBN 978-3-631-75336-1 EESM 10_275336_Wieczorek_SG_A5HC globalL.indd 1 16.04.18 14:11 10 This book vividly evokes for the reader the sound world of a number of Eu- Renata Tańczuk / Sławomir Wieczorek (eds.) ropean cities in the last year of the Second World War. It allows the reader to “hear” elements of the soundscapes of Amsterdam, Dortmund, Lwów/Lviv, Warsaw and Breslau/Wrocław that are bound up with the traumatising experi- ences of violence, threats and death.
    [Show full text]
  • Ezra Pound His Metric and Poetry Books by Ezra Pound
    EZRA POUND HIS METRIC AND POETRY BOOKS BY EZRA POUND PROVENÇA, being poems selected from Personae, Exultations, and Canzoniere. (Small, Maynard, Boston, 1910) THE SPIRIT OF ROMANCE: An attempt to define somewhat the charm of the pre-renaissance literature of Latin-Europe. (Dent, London, 1910; and Dutton, New York) THE SONNETS AND BALLATE OF GUIDO CAVALCANTI. (Small, Maynard, Boston, 1912) RIPOSTES. (Swift, London, 1912; and Mathews, London, 1913) DES IMAGISTES: An anthology of the Imagists, Ezra Pound, Aldington, Amy Lowell, Ford Maddox Hueffer, and others GAUDIER-BRZESKA: A memoir. (John Lane, London and New York, 1916) NOH: A study of the Classical Stage of Japan with Ernest Fenollosa. (Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1917; and Macmillan, London, 1917) LUSTRA with Earlier Poems. (Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1917) PAVANNES AHD DIVISIONS. (Prose. In preparation: Alfred A. Knopf, New York) EZRA POUND HIS METRIC AND POETRY I "All talk on modern poetry, by people who know," wrote Mr. Carl Sandburg in _Poetry_, "ends with dragging in Ezra Pound somewhere. He may be named only to be cursed as wanton and mocker, poseur, trifler and vagrant. Or he may be classed as filling a niche today like that of Keats in a preceding epoch. The point is, he will be mentioned." This is a simple statement of fact. But though Mr. Pound is well known, even having been the victim of interviews for Sunday papers, it does not follow that his work is thoroughly known. There are twenty people who have their opinion of him for every one who has read his writings with any care.
    [Show full text]
  • UNCOLLECTED PROSE of JAMES STEPHENS Volume 2, 1916-48
    UNCOLLECTED PROSE OF JAMES STEPHENS Volume 2, 1916-48 James Stephens was an adventurous writer, exploring all the territories of prose. He wrote fiction, essays, radio scripts, literary reviews, drama, journalistic reports as well as other forms of literature. His career began in 1907 with a modest essay in an Irish nationalist journal, and proceeded for forty-three years until the last of his broadcasts on the BBC shortly before his death at his home in London in 1950. During this period, Stephens progressed from talented amateur to highly-regarded professional, from an un­ known essayist to a prominent writer, and from an author of printed works to a popular radio commentator. While his career progi-essed, his reputation as an artist increased to the point where he enjoyed the admiration ofW. B. Yeats, Lady Gregory, George Moore and George Russell and where his abilities persuaded James Joyce to ask him to complete Finnegans Wake if Joyce could not do so. While these two volumes are by no means a complete collection of Stephens' prose, this is the first time his work has been collected in this way and the pieces are carefully chosen to demonstrate the development of his artistic craftmanship. Readers of this edition who may know Stephens as the beloved author of The Crock oJGold, The Charwoman's Daughter and other novels, can observe him in a variety of other roles: as political journalist, dramatist, speaker, critic, and storyteller. The editor Patricia A. McFate is President of the American-Scandinavian Foundation in New York. Her previous appointments have in­ cluded Deputy Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities, Vice Provost of the University of Pennsylvania and she has taught at City College of New York, Northwestern University, and the Universities of Illinois and Pennsylvania.
    [Show full text]
  • The History/Literature Problem in First World War Studies Nicholas Milne-Walasek Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Graduate
    The History/Literature Problem in First World War Studies Nicholas Milne-Walasek Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a doctoral degree in English Literature Department of English Faculty of Arts University of Ottawa © Nicholas Milne-Walasek, Ottawa, Canada, 2016 ii ABSTRACT In a cultural context, the First World War has come to occupy an unusual existential point half- way between history and art. Modris Eksteins has described it as being “more a matter of art than of history;” Samuel Hynes calls it “a gap in history;” Paul Fussell has exclaimed “Oh what a literary war!” and placed it outside of the bounds of conventional history. The primary artistic mode through which the war continues to be encountered and remembered is that of literature—and yet the war is also a fact of history, an event, a happening. Because of this complex and often confounding mixture of history and literature, the joint roles of historiography and literary scholarship in understanding both the war and the literature it occasioned demand to be acknowledged. Novels, poems, and memoirs may be understood as engagements with and accounts of history as much as they may be understood as literary artifacts; the war and its culture have in turn generated an idiosyncratic poetics. It has conventionally been argued that the dawn of the war's modern literary scholarship and historiography can be traced back to the late 1960s and early 1970s—a period which the cultural historian Jay Winter has described as the “Vietnam Generation” of scholarship.
    [Show full text]
  • The Poetry of Alice Meynell and Its Literary Contexts, 1875-1923 Jared Hromadka Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2013 The al ws of verse : the poetry of Alice Meynell and its literary contexts, 1875-1923 Jared Hromadka Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Hromadka, Jared, "The al ws of verse : the poetry of Alice Meynell and its literary contexts, 1875-1923" (2013). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 1246. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/1246 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. THE LAWS OF VERSE: THE POETRY OF ALICE MEYNELL AND ITS LITERARY CONTEXTS, 1875-1923 A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of English by Jared Hromadka B.A., Louisiana State University, 2004 M.A., Auburn University, 2006 August 2013 for S. M. and T. ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Special thanks is due to Dr. Elsie Michie, without whose encouragement and guidance this project would have been impossible. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS..............................................................................................................iii
    [Show full text]
  • Lascelles Abercrombie: a Checklist © Jeff Cooper 1
    Lascelles Abercrombie: A Checklist © Jeff Cooper LASCELLES ABERCROMBIE Towards a complete checklist of his published writings Compiled by Jeff Cooper First published in Great Britain in 2004 by White Sheep Press Second edition published on-line in 2013; third edition, 2017 © 2013, 2017 Jeff Cooper All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be copied or reproduced for publication or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, or otherwise stored in a retrieval system, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. The rights of Jeff Cooper to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. PREFACE This is the third edition, with additions and amendments (and a renumbering), of the edition originally published in 2004 by White Sheep Press. The intention of this checklist is to list all of the writings published by Abercrombie (although there are almost certainly a large number of book reviews and articles for the Nation that have not been traced). However, without this essential building block, which puts his works into context, meaningful analysis and criticism of his work is difficult. This is a working document, and if you would like to help make it a definitive list, please send any amendments and additions to me at [email protected]. They will be incorporated in the list and acknowledged. The format of the checklist is chronological, in order of first publication in periodical and book form. It should be borne in mind that there is a bibliographical hierarchy: contributions to periodicals, then contributions to books, and finally principal books.
    [Show full text]
  • James Stephens - Poems
    Classic Poetry Series James Stephens - poems - Publication Date: 2012 Publisher: Poemhunter.com - The World's Poetry Archive James Stephens(9 February 1882 - 26 December 1950) James Stephens was an Irish novelist and poet. James Stephens produced many retellings of Irish myths and fairy tales. His retellings are marked by a rare combination of humor and lyricism (Deirdre, and Irish Fairy Tales are often especially praise). He also wrote several original novels (Crock of Gold, Etched in Moonlight, Demi-Gods) based loosely on Irish fairy tales. "Crock of Gold," in particular, achieved enduring popularity and was reprinted frequently throughout the author's lifetime. Stephens began his career as a poet with the tutelage of "Æ" (<a href="http://www.poemhunter.com/george-william-a-e-russell-2/">George William Russel</a>l). His first book of poems, "Insurrections," was published during 1909. His last book, "Kings and the Moon" (1938), was also a volume of verse. During the 1930s, Stephens had some acquaintance with <a href="http://www.poemhunter.com/james-joyce/">James Joyce</a>, who found that they shared a birth year (and, Joyce mistakenly believed, a birthday). Joyce, who was concerned with his ability to finish what later became Finnegans Wake, proposed that Stephens assist him, with the authorship credited to JJ & S (James Joyce & Stephens, also a pun for the popular Irish whiskey made by John Jameson & Sons). The plan, however, was never implemented, as Joyce was able to complete the work on his own. During the last decade of his life, Stephens found a new audience through a series of broadcasts on the BBC.
    [Show full text]
  • John Buchan's Uncollected Journalism a Critical and Bibliographic Investigation
    JOHN BUCHAN’S UNCOLLECTED JOURNALISM A CRITICAL AND BIBLIOGRAPHIC INVESTIGATION PART II CATALOGUE OF BUCHAN’S UNCOLLECTED JOURNALISM PART II CATALOGUE OF BUCHAN’S UNCOLLECTED JOURNALISM Volume One INTRODUCTION............................................................................................. 1 A: LITERATURE AND BOOKS…………………………………………………………………….. 11 B: POETRY AND VERSE…………………………………………………………………………….. 30 C: BIOGRAPHY, MEMOIRS, AND LETTERS………………………………………………… 62 D: HISTORY………………………………………………………………………………………………. 99 E: RELIGION……………………………………………………………………………………………. 126 F: PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE………………………………………………………………… 130 G: POLITICS AND SOCIETY……………………………………………………………………… 146 Volume Two H: IMPERIAL AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS……………………………………………………… 178 I: WAR, MILITARY, AND NAVAL AFFAIRS……………………………………………….. 229 J: ECONOMICS, BUSINESS, AND TRADE UNIONS…………………………………… 262 K: EDUCATION……………………………………………………………………………………….. 272 L: THE LAW AND LEGAL CASES………………………………………………………………. 278 M: TRAVEL AND EXPLORATION……………………………………………………………… 283 N: FISHING, HUNTING, MOUNTAINEERING, AND OTHER SPORTS………….. 304 PART II CATALOGUE OF BUCHAN’S UNCOLLECTED JOURNALISM INTRODUCTION This catalogue has been prepared to assist Buchan specialists and other scholars of all levels and interests who are seeking to research his uncollected journalism. It is based on the standard reference work for Buchan scholars, Robert G Blanchard’s The First Editions of John Buchan: A Collector’s Bibliography (1981), which is generally referred to as Blanchard. The catalogue builds on this work
    [Show full text]
  • The Anglo-Catholic Identities of Frederick George Scott, 1861 -1944
    The Anglo-Catholic Identities of Frederick George Scott, 1861-1944. BY Terrence Jacob Whalen A thesis submitted to the Department of History in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Queen's University Kingston, Ontario, Canada September, 2000 @ copyright Terrence Jacob Whalen, 2000 National Library Bibliothequê nationale du Canada Acquisitions and Acquisitions et Bibliographie Services services bibliographiques 395 Wellingtcm Street 395, nre Wellington OttawaON KIAW OüawaON K1AW Canada CaMda The author has granted a non- L'auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive licence aliowing the exclusive permettant à la National Library of Canada to Bibliothèque nationale du Canada de reproduce, loan, distribute or sell reproduire, prêter, distribuer ou copies of this thesis in microform, vendre des copies de cette thèse sous paper or electronic formats. la forme de microfiche/film, de reproduction sur papier ou sur format électronique. The author retains ownership of the L'auteur conserve la propriété du copyright in this thesis. Neither the droit d'auteur qui protège cette thèse. thesis nor substantiai extracts fkom it Ni la thèse ni des extraits substantiels may be printed or otherwise de ceUe-ci ne doivent être imprimés reproduced without the author's ou autrement reproduits sans son permission. autorisation. Frederick George Scott, New York City, 1942. (McCord Museum, Montreal.) *. 11 TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract iii Acknowledgements iv List of Illustrations v Introduction F.G. Scott: A Biographical Sketch 1 Chapter 1 God and Evolution in F.G. Scott's ReSigious Thought 7 Chapter 2 Scott's Emergence as an Anglo-Catholic Patriarc h 34 Chapter 3 'The Pilgrirnage of Canon Scott': industrial Paternalism 63 and the Cape Breton Miners, 1923 Conclusion 90 Appendix A Scott's algebraic expression of the Holy Eucharist in the 94 scheme of evolution.
    [Show full text]
  • A MEDIUM for MODERNISM: BRITISH POETRY and AMERICAN AUDIENCES April 1997-August 1997
    A MEDIUM FOR MODERNISM: BRITISH POETRY AND AMERICAN AUDIENCES April 1997-August 1997 CASE 1 1. Photograph of Harriet Monroe. 1914. Archival Photographic Files Harriet Monroe (1860-1936) was born in Chicago and pursued a career as a journalist, art critic, and poet. In 1889 she wrote the verse for the opening of the Auditorium Theater, and in 1893 she was commissioned to compose the dedicatory ode for the World’s Columbian Exposition. Monroe’s difficulties finding publishers and readers for her work led her to establish Poetry: A Magazine of Verse to publish and encourage appreciation for the best new writing. 2. Joan Fitzgerald (b. 1930). Bronze head of Ezra Pound. Venice, 1963. On Loan from Richard G. Stern This portrait head was made from life by the American artist Joan Fitzgerald in the winter and spring of 1963. Pound was then living in Venice, where Fitzgerald had moved to take advantage of a foundry which cast her work. Fitzgerald made another, somewhat more abstract, head of Pound, which is in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. Pound preferred this version, now in the collection of Richard G. Stern. Pound’s last years were lived in the political shadows cast by his indictment for treason because of the broadcasts he made from Italy during the war years. Pound was returned to the United States in 1945; he was declared unfit to stand trial on grounds of insanity and confined to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital for thirteen years. Stern’s novel Stitch (1965) contains a fictional account of some of these events.
    [Show full text]
  • First World War Centenary Poetry Collection
    First World War Centenary Poetry Collection 28th July 2014 All items in this collection are in the U.S. Public Domain owing to date of publication. If you are not in the U.S.A., please check your own country's copyright laws. Whether an item is still in copyright will depend on the author's date of death. 01 Preface to Poems by Wilfred Owen (1893 - 1918) This Preface was found, in an unfinished condition, among Wilfred Owen's papers after his death. The (slightly amended) words from the preface “My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity” are inscribed on the memorial in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey. 02 For the Fallen by Laurence Binyon (1869 - 1943) Published when the Battle of the Marne was raw in people's memories, For the Fallen was written in honour of the war dead. The fourth verse including the words “We will remember them” has become the Ode of Remembrance to people of many nations and is used in services of remembrance all over the world. 03 [RUSSIAN] Мама и убитый немцами вечер (Mama i ubity nemcami vecher) by Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893 - 1930) В стихах «Война объявлена!» и «Мама и убитый немцами вечер» В.В. Маяковский описывает боль жертв кровавой войны и свое отвращение к этой войне. In this poem “Mama and the Evening Killed by the Germans” Mayakovsky describes the victims' pain of bloody war and his disgust for this war. 04 To Germany by Charles Hamilton Sorley (1895 - 1915) Sorley is regarded by some, including John Masefield, as the greatest loss of all the poets killed during the war.
    [Show full text]
  • Orpheu Et Al. Modernism, Women, and the War
    Orpheu et al. Modernism, Women, and the War M. Irene Ramalho-Santos* Keywords Little magazines, Poetry, Modernism, The Great War, Society, Sexual mores. Abstract The article takes off from Orpheu, the little magazine at the origin of Portuguese modernism, to reflect, from a comparative perspective, on the development of modernist poetry in the context of the Great War and the social changes evolving during the first decades of the twentieth century on both sides of the Atlantic. Palavras-chave “Little magazines,” Poesia, Modernismo, A Grande Guerra, Sociedade, Costumes sexuais. Resumo O artigo parte de Orpheu, a revista que dá origem ao modernismo português, para reflectir, numa perspectiva comparada, soBre o desenvolvimento da poesia modernista no contexto da Grande Guerra e das mudanças sociais emergentes nas primeiras décadas do século XX dos dois lados do Atlântico. * Universidade de CoimBra; University of Wisconsin-Madison. Ramalho Santos Orpheu et al. It is frequently repeated in the relevant scholarship that Western literary and artistic modernism started in little magazines.1 The useful online Modernist Journals Project (Brown University / Tulsa University), dealing so far only with American and British magazines, uses as its epigraph the much quoted phrase: “modernism began in the magazines”, see SCHOLES and WULFMAN (2010) and BROOKER and THACKER (2009-2013). With two issues published in 1915 and a third one stopped that same year in the galley proofs for lack of funding, the Portuguese little magazine Orpheu inaugurated modernism in Portugal pretty much at the same time as all the other major little magazines in Europe and the United States. This is interesting, given the proverbial belatedness of Portuguese accomplishments, and no less interesting the fact that, like everywhere else, Orpheu was followed, in Portugal as well, By a number of other little magazines.
    [Show full text]