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Fatal glamour: the life of Rupert Brooke

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Rupert Brooke (b. 1887) died on April 23, 1915, two days before the start of the Battle of Gallipoli, and three weeks after his poem "The Soldier" was read from the pulpit of St Paul's Cathedral on Easter Sunday.

Thus began the myth of a man whose poetry crystallizes the sentiments that drove so many to enlist and assured those who remained in England that their beloved sons had been absolved of their sins and made perfect by going to war.

In Fatal Glamour, Paul Delany details the person behind the myth to show that Brooke was a conflicted, but magnetic figure.

Strikingly beautiful and able to fascinate almost everyone who saw him - from Winston Churchill to Henry James - Brooke was sexually ambivalent and emotionally erratic.

He had a series of turbulent affairs with women, but also a hidden gay life.

He was attracted by the Fabian Society's socialist idealism and Neo-Pagan innocence, but could be by turns nasty, misogynistic, and anti-Semitic.

Brooke's emotional troubles were...

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£75.00
Product Details
Amberley
0773582770 / 9780773582774
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
821.912
01/04/2015
England
English
341 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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