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13

ST EDWARD’S

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Both Brittle

and Beautiful

by

JohnTrotman

,

(MCR, 1985-1992)

Alyn Shipton, the writer and

broadcaster wrote of the

poems: ‘In carefully poised

language, these poems explore

three interwoven themes:

the passage of time, travel

and the world that surrounds

us. John Trotman journeys

from childhood to fatherhood

(sometimes on the same page)

and shares a life’s experience

made richer through a sense of

place as acute in dark corners of

London as in the sunlit uplands

of New Zealand. Throughout it

all is a keen sense of texture, of

objects animate and inanimate,

and of the brittle transient

beauty of the moment.’

Dashing Dragoon,

Anguished Emissary

by

HughTweed

(D, 1955-1960)

Dashing Dragoon, Anguished

Emissar

y is about a former

cavalry officer from

Bedfordshire in England sent

by the British government to

southern Africa in the mid-19th

century to try to bring about

peace in the troubled lands

outside the boundaries of Cape

Colony. William Samuel Hogge’s

crowning achievements, the

signing of the Sand River

Convention with Boer leaders

at the beginning of 1852, and

accords with Moshoeshoe I,

paramount leader of the Basuto

people, brought peace, for a

time, to this part of the African

continent. The drama is made

more poignant by Hogge’s early

death in the furtherance of

his duties. This story, much of

which is told by Hogge himself

through letters to his adored

wife, is about great personal

sacrifice and will appeal to

anyone interested in one man’s

struggle against adversity as well

as to students and followers

of Victorian era politics and

military history, both in the UK

and South Africa.

Unknown Warriers

by

John Stevens

(D, 1950-1954)

Kate Luard was one of a select

number of fully trained military

nurses who worked in hospital

trains and casualty clearing

stations during the First World

War, coming as close to the

front as a woman could. She

was already a war veteran when

she arrived in France in 1914,

aged 42, having served in the

Second Boer War, and was

awarded the RRC and Bar. The

book offers a very personal

glimpse into the hidden world

of the military field hospital

where patients struggled

with pain and trauma, and

nurses fought to save lives and

preserve emotional integrity.

Through her letters home Kate

conveyed a vivid and honest

portrait of war. It is also a

portrait of close family affection

and trust in a world of conflict.

In publishing some of these

letters her intention was to bear

witness to the suffering of the

ordinary soldier.

The Belvedere Quartet

Vol III The Voyage of

King Roy the First

by

Timothy Plant

(B, 1957-1961)

183rd in line of succession

to the Throne of Canute,

the young Prince Roy has

never imagined that one day

he could become king. Then

unexpectedly this happens.

His novel approach to dealing

with the ruling classes and

their ossified structures causes

general dismay, but earns him

the admiration of the people.

Eventually he goes too far,

decides to resign, and decrees

‘The Person’s Republic of

England’. The palace is stormed

by royalists and he’s forced

to go into exile. He sets sail

for America on the ship of his

dreams, and that is where the

story really begins!

Editor's Note: Timothy painted

the

Wind in the Willows

mural

at St Edward’s, as featured in the

previous issue of

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