Brooke, Rupert, 1887-1915

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1887-08-03
Death 1915-04-23
Britons,
English,

Biographical notes:

Poet and British naval officer.

From the description of Rupert Brooke papers, 1913-1914. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 79456150

English poet.

From the description of Sonnet : place not specified : autograph manuscript of the poem signed, 1914 June 25. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 270135815

Rupert Brooke was a British Georgian poet, a privileged, intelligent, handsome youth, and his verse has come to represent the prevailing mood of England prior to World War I. Both he and his poetry were extremely popular in their day, but later reassessment has found the poems to be naive and sentimental. His untimely death during World War I provoked national mourning, and, although critical reaction remains divided, his verse is lyrically charming and instinctively patriotic.

From the description of Rupert Brooke postcards, 1911-1915. (Pennsylvania State University Libraries). WorldCat record id: 52999906

Rupert Brooke (1887-1915), educated at Rugby School and King's College, Cambridge, was a member of the Georgian Poets. His most famous work, the sonnet sequence 1914 and Other Poems, appeared in 1915. Brooke joined the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve in August 1914; he died of sepsis from an infected mosquito bite on a French hospital ship on his way to Gallipoli.

From the description of Rupert Brooke letters to Dudley Ward and to Frances Cornford, 1908-1915. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702199318

Rupert Brooke was an English poet, playwright, and essayist.

From the description of Rupert Brooke collection of papers, [1905]-[1937] bulk (1912-1929). (New York Public Library). WorldCat record id: 122465530

From the guide to the Rupert Brooke collection of papers, 1905]-[1937, 1912-1929, (The New York Public Library. Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature.)

Rupert Brooke was educated at Rugby, where his father was master for many years and where he became friends with Geoffrey Keynes. He matriculated at King's College, Cambridge in 1906 as a classics scholar, though he was later to concentrate on English. In 1909, having completed the first part of the Classical Tripos, he moved to Grantchester where he would become the centre of a group known as the 'neo-pagans' and began to write the poetry for which he would become famous. In the same year he won the Charles Oldham Shakespeare Scholarship and in 1910 the Harness Prize. He was elected a fellow of King's College in 1913.

Personal problems prompted Brooke to take a long holiday, despite his recent election to a fellowship, and he spent a year traveling in America, Canada and the Pacific, along the way writing a series of articles for the Westminster Gazette. He returned in June 1914 and soon received a commission as a Sub-Lieutenant in the Hood Battalion of the Royal Naval Division. Thereafter he served at Antwerp, trained for a winter at Blandford Camp and then joined the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force in February of 1915. He died on the following 23 April and was buried at Skyros, the victim in succession of sunstroke and blood poisoning.

From the guide to the The Papers of Rupert Chawner Brooke, 1869-1989, (King's College Archive Centre, Cambridge)

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Subjects:

  • Poets, English
  • Poets, English
  • War
  • Poetry
  • Poets, Georgian
  • World War, 1914-1918

Occupations:

  • Naval officers, British
  • Poets

Places:

  • Great Britain (as recorded)
  • Daradanelles (Turkey) (as recorded)
  • Canada (as recorded)
  • Oceania (as recorded)
  • Cambridge (England) (as recorded)