“Ah, pitiful / The twisted memories of an ancient fool / And sweet the silence of a young man dead!”
There’s a tendency to romanticize, sometimes extravagantly, the gifted young who die early. Think of Chatterton, Keats and Wilfred Owen. Granted longer lives, what might they have accomplished? Ironically, with Keats, there’s probably less reason to mourn, given the brilliance of his sonnets, odes and letters. He died at twenty-five and the quality of much of his work exceeds that of most poets who survive into their dotage. The lines quoted above were written by Edward Shanks (1892-1953) in his poem “The Dead Poet” (Poems, 1916) about his friend Rupert Brooke. Shanks worked as a literary journalist and university lecturer, and wrote books about Shaw, Kipling and Poe.
I learned of Shanks from
Theodore Dalrymple’s book chronicle Not for Ambition or Bread (Mirabeau
Press, 2025). Shanks served in France with the British Army during the Great
War but was invalided out in 1915 and never saw combat. “The Dead Poet” begins:
“When I grow old they’ll
come to me and say:
Did you then know him in
that distant day?
Did you speak with him,
touch his hand, observe
The proud eyes’ fire, soft
voice and light lips’ curve?
And I shall answer: This
man was my friend;
Call to my memory, add,
improve, amend
And count up all the
meetings that we had
And note his good and
touch upon his bad.”
Brooke (b. 1887) graduated
from Cambridge in 1909. After the start of the Great War, he joined the Royal
Navy Volunteer Reserve. In February 1915, he sailed to the Dardanelles in
preparation for the Gallipoli campaign. He contracted blood poisoning from an
insect bite and died on April 23, age twenty-seven. Brooke was buried on the
Greek island of Skyros. Dalrymple writes: "Shanks almost makes Brooke’s early
death seem like a benefit received—it sealed his reputation for ever—but foolish
as it may seem, one knows what he, Shanks, means.” Here are the closing lines
of “The Dead Poet”: “Whose limbs shall never waste, eyes never fall, / And
whose clear brain shall not be dimmed at all.” Dalrymple’s gloss on them:
“How extraordinarily
romantic, written at a time when 20,000 young men or more were being mown down
daily before or not long after their age of majority! It’s absurd, or wrong, or
totally irrational, but yet we know what Shanks means and are moved by it. We
tend to remember people as they last were, just before they died, not as they
once were. This does not flatter us, those of us who live to be old.”
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