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Robert Graves [1895-1985] ENG
Ranked #199 in the top 380 poets
Votes 81%: 297 up, 68 down

Translations and innovative analysis and interpretations of the Greek myths.

Study of poetic inspiration. Historical novels.

Clarity and entertaining style.

Poet, novelist, critic and classicist.

Robert Graves was born in 1895 in Wimbledon, a  suburb of London. He  was known as a poet, lecturer and novelist.  He was also known as a classicist and a mythographer. Perhaps his first known and revered poems were the poems Graves wrote behind the lines in World War One. He later became known as one of the most superb English language `Love` poets.  He then became recognised as one of the finest love poets writing in the English language.      

Members of the poetry, novel writing, historian, and classical scholarly community often feel indebted to the man and his works. Robert Graves was born into an interesting time in history. He actually saw Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee procession at the age of two or three. His family was quite patriotic, educated, strict and upper middle class.He saw his father as an authoritarian. He was not liked by his peers in school, nor did he care much for them. He attended British public school. He feared most of his Masters at the school. When he did seek out company, it was of the same sex and his relationships were clearly same sex in orientation.

Although he had a scholarship secured in the classics at Oxford, he escaped his childhood and Father through leaving for the Great War. Graves married twice, once to Nancy Nicholson, and they had  four children, and his second marriage to Beryl Pritchard brought forth four more children. Graves married Nancy Nicholson before the war.  

Graves` own poetry and prose is the best source for a description of his war experiences. It suffices to say that Graves never found what he was looking for leaving for war, but rather, terror and madness in the war. He was wounded, left for dead and pronounced dead by his surgeon in the field and his commanding officer in a telegram to his parents but subsequently recovered to read the report of his own demise in The Times. He amazingly recovered and was given home service for the rest of the war.However, like many of his fellow soldiers who were disabled by war, he could not get over the guilt he had leaving the other soldiers to fight without him. Somehow, he insisted he be posted back to the front lines. The military surgeon threatened him with court marshall if he didn’t get off the front. Graves returned to England trained troops, while maintaining contact with his poet friends behind the lines. In this way he was able to save one friend from court martial after he published an antiwar manifesto. 

Though their relationship was initially happy and productive (Nancy and Robert worked on a children`s book together), the stress of family life, little money and Robert`s continual shell-shocked condition caused them troubles. Laura Ridding arriving on the scene finished off their marriage.Laura Riding and Robert Graves` relationship was immensely influential upon both of their lives and careers. After Riding`s arrival in England, she began to exert an influence on more than just Graves` writing. Following a sequence of events so crazy that they seem more suitable to fiction than reality (including, for example, Laura Riding leaping from a third floor window and breaking her pelvic bone in three places), Graves abandoned his family and moved with Riding from England to Spain. The events of this period were so momentous that all three biographers that have covered his story,  dedicate a large part of their studies to this couple.It`s easy to vilify Laura Riding. Graves was but one victim of her controlling personality and her ambition. But then, Graves had his victims too. What cannot be questioned is the value of some of the work that they did together. Much of it remains important to both literary history as well as to scholarship. 

	

In 1943 Robert Graves received the news that his son, David, was missing in action. While he and Nancy held out hope that he would be found alive or that he might have been taken prisoner, later reports suggested otherwise. David, Robert and Nancy learned, had been shot while attempting to single-handedly take out a well-defended enemy position. The chances that he had survived were not good.By 1946 as England and Europe began to survey its post-War state, Graves managed to secure transport for his family back to Majorca. Once safely back there, then other than annual trips to England, occasional visits to the continent and even rarer trips to America, the Graves` made Deya their home for good. After 1948 and the publication of The White Goddess, as Graves` fame and celebrity grew, Graves began a period of discovering muses who provided him with a flesh-and-blood manifestation of his poetic and mythic muse. Some of these relationships were short, others seemed largely innocent and more flirtatious than serious or deeply poetic; however, four were, without doubt, significant to Graves` life and, subsequently, to his work.

Graves` first muse after Nancy Nicholson, Laura Riding and Beryl Graves,  the first after he his White Goddess theories, was Judith Bledsoe. Judith was a naïve young girl who found in the older Graves something of a father figure Graves found in her the embodiment of the White Goddess.Graves had many celebrity friends including film stars like Ava Gardner and Ingrid Bergman, fellow writers like T. S. Eliot and Gertrude Stein. Robert Graves ceased writing after his 80th birthday and his celebrity status slowly began to fade. However, where his own career stopped, the critical and academic industry was just beginning. He died in 1985 in Deja, a Majorcan village that he had moved to and lived in since 1929.

Atheism, Georgian poets, Modernism, Myth, War

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
-800--700
GRC
Homer
← translated by Robert Graves
1048-1122
IRN
Omar Khayyam
← translated by Robert Graves
1918-2002
IRL
Spike Milligan
← friend of Robert Graves
1930-
LCA
Derek Walcott
← praised by Robert Graves
1930-1998
ENG
Ted Hughes
← influenced by Robert Graves


WorkLangRating
Like Snow
eng
13
The Naked And The Nude
eng
10
To Juan At The Winter Solstice
eng
9
Welsh Incident
eng
8
Down, Wanton, Down!
eng
4
She Tells Her Love
eng
4
Two Fusiliers
eng
4
A Dead Boche
eng
2
In Broken Images
eng
2
Pot And Kettle
eng
2
The Next War
eng
2
The Shivering Beggar
eng
2
Cherry-Time
eng
1
Corporal Stare
eng
1
Counting The Beats
eng
1
Goliath And David
eng
1
I`d Love To Be A Fairy`s Child
eng
1
Marigolds
eng
1
Symptoms Of Love
eng
1
The Cruel Moon
eng
1
The Persian Version
eng
1
The Travellers` Curse After Misdirection
eng
1
To Lucasta On Going To The War - For The Fourth Time
eng
1
1805
eng
0
1915
eng
0
A Ballad Of Nursery Rhyme
eng
0
A Boy In Church
eng
0
A Child`s Nightmare
eng
0
A First Review
eng
0
A Frostry Night
eng
0
A Lover Since Childhood
eng
0
A Pinch Of Salt
eng
0
A Rhyme Of Friends
eng
0
A Slice Of Wedding Cake
eng
0
A Song For Two Children
eng
0
Advice To Lovers
eng
0
After The Play
eng
0
Allie
eng
0
An English Wood
eng
0
An Old Twenty-Third
eng
0
Apples And Water
eng
0
Babylon
eng
0
Baloo Loo For Jenny
eng
0
Big Words
eng
0
Brittle Bones
eng
0
Call It A Good Marriage
eng
0
Careers
eng
0
Country At War
eng
0
Dead Cow Farm
eng
0
Dew-drop And Diamond
eng
0
Dicky
eng
0
Double Red Daisies
eng
0
Escape
eng
0
Faun
eng
0
Finland
eng
0
Flying Crooked
eng
0
Fox`s Dingle
eng
0
Free Verse
eng
0
Full Moon
eng
0
Ghost Raddled
eng
0
Give Us Rain
eng
0
Hate Not - Fear Not
eng
0
Haunted
eng
0
Hawk And Buckle
eng
0
Here They Lie
eng
0
I Wonder What It Feels Like To Be Drowned?
eng
0
In The Wilderness
eng
0
It`s A Queer Time
eng
0
Jane
eng
0
John Skelton
eng
0
Jonah
eng
0
Knowledge Of God
eng
0
Letter To S.S. From Mametz Wood
eng
0
Love And Black Magic
eng
0
Love Without Hope
eng
0
Loving Henry
eng
0
Manticor In Arabia
eng
0
Morning Phœnix
eng
0
Mr. Philosopher
eng
0
Nebuchadnezzar`s Fall
eng
0
Neglectful Edward
eng
0
Nine O`Clock
eng
0
Not Dead
eng
0
Not To sleep
eng
0
On Giving
eng
0
Outlaws
eng
0
Recalling War
eng
0
Retrospect: The Jests Of The Clock
eng
0
Rocky Acres
eng
0
Smoke-Rings
eng
0
Song: One Hard Look
eng
0
Sorley’s Weather
eng
0
Sospan Fach
eng
0
Star-Talk
eng
0
Strong Beer
eng
0
Sullen Moods
eng
0
The "Alice Jean"
eng
0
The Assault Heroic
eng
0
The Beach
eng
0
The Beacon
eng
0
The Bough Of Nonsense
eng
0
The Boy In Church
eng
0
The Boy Out Of Church
eng
0
The Caterpillar
eng
0
The Cool Web
eng
0
The Cottage
eng
0
The Cupboard
eng
0
The Dead Fox Hunter
eng
0
The Frog And The Golden Ball
eng
0
The General Elliott
eng
0
The God Called Poetry
eng
0
The Lady Visitor In The Pauper Ward
eng
0
The Last Post
eng
0
The Laureate
eng
0
The Leveller
eng
0
The Lost Love
eng
0
The Patchwork Bonnet
eng
0
The Patchwork Quilt
eng
0
The Picture Book
eng
0
The Pier-Glass
eng
0
The Poet In The Nursery
eng
0
The Promised Lullaby
eng
0
The Snapped Thread
eng
0
The Spoilsport
eng
0
The Thieves
eng
0
The Three Drinkers
eng
0
The Troll`s Nosegay
eng
0
The Voice Of Beauty Drowned
eng
0
The Well-Dressed Children
eng
0
The White Goddess
eng
0
Thunder At Night
eng
0
To An Ungentle Critic
eng
0
To Robert Nichols
eng
0
Tom Taylor
eng
0
True Johnny
eng
0
Vain And Careless
eng
0
Warning To Children
eng
0
When I`m Killed
eng
0
Wild Strawberries
eng
0

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