July
24, 1895—Robert Graves, a soldier physically and psychologically wounded
during WWI, who went on to a long career as a wide-ranging man of letters, was
born in Wimbledon, near London, England.
Writing
well in one genre is a major achievement in and of itself, but how many writers
can you think of succeed as well at fiction as at poetry? As far as I’m concerned,
though many have tried their hand at both, only a halfway have consistently equaled their achievement in each: Goethe, Pushkin, Hardy, and Graves.
During
the 1970s, I became familiar with Graves’ work through the Masterpiece Theatre adaptation of his I, Claudius and its sequel, Claudius
the God. The miniseries
revived interest in these two novels from the 1930s that had been inspired by a
work he translated: Suetonius’ gossipy history The Twelve Caesars. As
the 13 episodes featuring delicious imperial intrigues unfolded, the two Graves
novels climbed to the top of the trade paperback bestseller list.
By
this time, the octogenarian Graves, living for decades as an expatriate in
Majorca, Spain, had come to resemble “a prototypical sea captain, a weathered
oak of a man with a leonine face, ropy hair, and the brusque hauteur of a man
used to exercising his command,” according to English journalist and longtime Masterpiece
Theatre host Alistair Cooke.
It
had taken the world quite a while to come around to Graves’ own high
self-estimate, which had emerged continually in outspoken interviews over the
years. In fact, he had become “such a professional surpriser that only a
conventional opinion from him could still shock us,” wrote the English-born
American novelist-essayist Wilfred Sheed in The Good Word and Other Words
(1978):
“It
has been a unique privilege of our time to watch the building of Graves, from
shell-shocked schoolboy in World War I to Mediterranean warlock, encanting at
the moon. As an expatriate in Majorca, Graves remains a bit of an Edwardian
tease, as willful and unflaggingly facetious as a Sitwell; yet in another
sense, he has grown more fully and richly than is given to most. His literary
opinions are so quirky that they seem designed solely to start lengthy feuds in
the London Times; yet in terms of his own art they are not quirky at
all.”
The
professional making of Graves could easily have been the personal unmaking of
him, as implied by Sheed: his traumas in the trenches of France in the Great
War. Breaking off his studies at Oxford to enlist at the outbreak of
hostilities, he had fought in the Battle of Loos and again in the Somme
offensive in 1916, when a shell fragment lodged in his lung was so severe that
he was mistakenly reported dead on his 21st birthday.
After
convalescing, Graves returned to the trenches in 1918, suffering yet another injury.
The Armistice announcement in November of that year only led him to wander “along
the dyke above the marshes of Rhuddlan…cursing and sobbing and thinking of the
dead.”
Forty
years after his service, Graves was still counting the cost, as demonstrated in
his poem “The Face in the Mirror”:
“Grey
haunted eyes, absent-mindedly glaring
From
wide, uneven orbits; one brow drooping
Somewhat
over the eye
Because
of a missile fragment still inhering,
Skin
deep, as a foolish record of old-world fighting.”
In
the decade after the Armistice, Graves’ reaction was even more visceral, as he
found himself recoiling at strong smells (from fear of gas attacks) and loud
noises. He was only finally able to confront his anguish head-on in his 1929
anti-war memoir, Goodbye to All That.
It
is still regarded as one of the finest literary products of the Great War, even
though, as critic Paul Fussell noted, it was really more like “fiction
disguised as a memoir,” with so much deviation from literal fact that it pained
fellow veterans Siegfried Sassoon, Edward Blunden and Doctor J. C. Dunn.
Proceeds
from Goodbye to All That were substantial enough to enable Graves
to reside most of the rest of his life in Majorca. It also meant that he could
write and live much as he pleased.
His
personal nonconformity manifested itself most vividly in his relationship with
the American poet Laura Riding. Already a father of four by the
mid-1920s, Graves brought her into his household to reside with him and wife
Nancy, then decided to add to the proceedings Geoffrey Phibbs, an Anglo-Irish
librarian. (At one point, Graves even threw himself from a third-story window
in imitation of Riding, who had just thrown herself from the fourth floor.)
His
poetry would eventually amount to 55 collected volumes, but Graves turned his
hand to other genres, too, such as a biography of Lawrence of Arabia, translations,
cultural criticism (The White Goddess, a meditation on myth-making), and historical
novels that took in not only ancient Rome but also the misunderstood wife of
poet John Milton, a British soldier’s view of the American Revolution, and even
Christ (King Jesus).
One
work that particularly appealed to me when I came across it in my college years
was a collaboration with Alan Hodge, The Reader Over Your Shoulder.
Grammarian Patricia T. O’Conner has termed it “the best book on writing ever
published.”
Under
normal circumstances, it would be hard to resist any volume that not only
offers 41 principles for writing but also examples of how they were violated by
luminaries such as T.S. Eliot, George Bernard Shaw, J.B. Priestley, H.G. Wells,
and Bertrand Russell. (In one barb, British philosopher A.N. Whitehead is
charged with "becoming as conventionally loose as any featherheaded
undergraduate.") But the book is even more delicious when Graves and Hodge
own up to mistakes of their own.
So
prolific and versatile was Graves that in 1962, he ended up on the shortlist
for the Nobel Prize in Literature. It was only revealed seven years ago that he
missed out on this great honor not so much for the inferiority of his work to
that year’s winner, John Steinbeck, but because of the frequent
behind-the-scenes politicking associated with the award.
In
1962, a key Nobel Prize committee member was reluctant to award any Anglo-Saxon
poet the prize before the death of Ezra Pound. Even though Graves wrote far
more than just poetry, the heart of his achievement was seen as lying in that
genre, so that members pressed colleagues to look for other candidates.
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