Harold Monro and Wilfrid Gibson: The Pioneers, War Poets Series 7
Dominic Hibberd
Cecil Woolf (2006)
In Collection
#3557
0*
Lit Crit
Paperback 1897967691
Great Britain  English
Product Details
Nationality British
Pub Place London
No. of Pages 48
First Edition Yes
Rare Yes
Personal Details
Read It Yes
User Defined
Conflict WW1
Notes
Not in Reilly.

Only 1 copy in Worldcat.

The War Poets 7

Contains essay by Dominic Hibberd and selected poems by Harold Monro and Wilfrid Gibson.

Monro, Harold Edward (1879–1932), poet and bookseller, was born on 14 March 1879 at 137 chaussée de Charleroi, St Gilles, Brussels, the youngest of the three surviving children of Edward William Monro (1848–1889), civil engineer, and his wife and first cousin, Arabel Sophia (1849–1926), daughter of Peter John Margary, civil engineer, and his wife, Emma. Monro belonged to the Monros of Fyrish, a London-based branch of the clan Munro. He inherited a small income from a family-owned lunatic asylum, originally bought by his direct ancestor Dr John Monro. He was first educated in Belgium, becoming bilingual; after his father's death from tuberculosis he attended prep schools in England before following his father, two uncles, and brother to Radley College in 1892. His brother died of tuberculosis in 1893.

Monro went up to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, in 1898. He became intimate with Maurice Browne, later well known as a theatre director, and they decided to become the poets of the new, post-Victorian age. After graduating with a third in French and German in 1901 Monro became a student at Lincoln's Inn, London, but soon left to write poetry in a remote Irish cottage. Browne arranged a walking tour in Germany for himself, his sister, and Monro, hoping a romance would ensue. On 2 December 1903 Monro duly married Dorothy Elizabeth Browne (1885–1960), daughter of the Revd Frederick H. Browne and Frances Anna, née Neligan; their only child, Nigel, was born a year later. In 1906 they moved from Ireland to Haslemere, Surrey.

The early deaths of his father and brother left Monro painfully aware of mortality; finding no comfort in religion, despite intensive questioning, he longed for a terrestrial state where human frailties could be overcome. He and Maurice Browne were inspired by H. G. Wells's A Modern Utopia (1905) to start an order of ‘Samurai’, Wells's voluntary ruling class. Browne also set up the Samurai Press (1907–9), a utopian venture which published work by himself, Monro, Wilfrid Gibson, John Drinkwater, and others. The nascent order collapsed, as did Monro's marriage, early in 1908.

Monro then set out on the walk from Paris to Milan described in his Chronicle of a Pilgrimage (1909), the prelude to three years abroad, mostly spent in Florence and the freethinking community at Monte Verita, Ascona. Psychoanalysed in Zürich in 1908, he seems to have accepted that he was homosexual and that his marriage was beyond rescue. The separation became permanent, ending in divorce in 1916.

Few British people can have experienced so much of the alternative lifestyles that were being tried out on the continent. Monro's Before Dawn: Poems and Impressions (July 1911) declares boundless faith in the future, advocating sexual and social freedom, Wellsian socialism, and the Nietzschean ideal of the superman living at one with the earth. Armed with this manifesto Monro arrived in London in the autumn of 1911, determined to make a practical contribution to Utopia by finding the poets of the future. He launched the monthly Poetry Review for the Poetry Society in January 1912 and published work by many of the younger poets and critics, including Ezra Pound's manifesto, ‘Prolegomena’, and F. S. Flint's monumental study of recent French poetry, two contributions which gave rise to Pound's brief imagist movement. Monro was strictly neutral, to Pound's annoyance; the Poetry Review also published Rupert Brooke's ‘Grantchester’ and other work by the poets soon to be known as the Georgians.

The success of the Review led Monro to establish a ‘Poetry House’, containing a shop, a room for readings, an editorial office, and accommodation for himself and poets in need of cheap lodgings. He took a Queen Anne house at 35 Devonshire Street in a seedy area of Bloomsbury; in December 1912 the Poetry Bookshop received its first customers and published its first book, Georgian Poetry 1911–1912. This anthology, edited by Edward Marsh with advice from Monro, Brooke, Gibson, and Drinkwater, proved immensely successful. Yet Monro's efforts to unite poets contributed to a schism, by bringing out the differences between imagists and Georgians. He deplored such divisions, always striving to disprove the myth, still current, that the bookshop was a Georgian headquarters. The only group ever to meet there regularly was T. S. Eliot's Criterion Club in the twenties; Monro and Eliot became close friends.

The Poetry Bookshop remained in business until 1935, known throughout the English-speaking world. Readings were given regularly in winter, often by famous poets. Gibson was the first lodger, followed by two leading modernists, T. E. Hulme and Jacob Epstein. The shop published numerous rhyme sheets and nearly fifty books and pamphlets, including all five volumes of Georgian Poetry (1912–22), and first books by Richard Aldington, Robert Graves, and Charlotte Mew. Monro lost control of the Poetry Review at the end of 1912, the Poetry Society having taken fright at his support for innovation, so in March 1913 he started his own quarterly, Poetry and Drama (1913–14).

Impending conscription drove Monro to volunteer in June 1916. Commissioned into the Royal Garrison Artillery, he was posted to anti-aircraft stations in Manchester, London, and Coventry, hating his servitude. A desk job in the Ministry of Information in September 1918 came too late to save his health and ideals. The shop was kept going by Alida Klemantaski (1892–1969), the daughter of Sigismund Klemantaski, a Polish–Jewish trader, and his English wife, Lizzie, née Phillips. Alida had met Monro in 1913 and had fallen in love with him, sharing some of his ideals.

Against all his instincts, but out of a sense of obligation, Monro married Alida on 27 March 1920. She had by then discovered he was drinking heavily, a weakness exacerbated by the war, and she soon realized that he had male lovers. She never lived with him, but he took a house for her in Bloomsbury and they spent weekends together in the country; he always had a cottage somewhere, rural escapes being important to him.

Monro revived the shop after the war and relaunched his periodical as the (Monthly) Chapbook (1919–25). Bookshop parties became famous; despite his chronic melancholy, the reverse side of his idealism, he was a generous host and kindly listener, delighting in serious conversation. Some people thought him handsome, others said he looked like an intelligent horse; he was tall, lean, and upright, with sleek dark hair, thick moustache, long face, and sad eyes. His tactless survey, Some Contemporary Poets (1920), shows little critical insight; his greatest service to his fellow poets was as an enabler.

Monro published his own work from the shop in four small collections: Children of Love (1915), Strange Meetings (1917), Real Property (1922), and The Earth for Sale (1928). The first contains some of his most popular poems, including ‘Overheard on a Saltmarsh’ and ‘Milk for the Cat’, and the quartet ‘Youth in Arms’, which influenced Wilfred Owen (who stayed at the shop in 1916). The 1916–17 poems, notably ‘Strange Meetings’, ‘Trees’, and ‘Week-end’, explore the relationship between humans and the earth. The 1928 book is as pessimistic as Before Dawn had been optimistic, lamenting individual isolation and environmental destruction.

When the Devonshire Street lease ran out in 1926 the Poetry Bookshop moved to 38 Great Russell Street, opposite the British Museum. Financial troubles soon forced a further move to the rear of the building. By now Monro was a disappointed man, appalled at the state of Europe and feeling forgotten by the poets he had helped. He had used up most of his money in subsidizing the shop. His drinking bouts worsened. Early in 1932 an operation revealed advanced tuberculosis, and Monro died at the Cliff Combe Nursing Home in Broadstairs, Kent, on 16 March 1932, and was cremated at Golders Green crematorium, Middlesex, on 21 March. Perhaps no one did more for the advancement of twentieth-century British poetry.

Dominic Hibberd, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography


Gibson, Wilfrid Wilson (1878–1962), poet, was born on 2 October 1878 at Hexham, Northumberland, one of the younger children in the large family of John Pattison Gibson, chemist, of Hexham, an amateur archaeologist and photographer of note, and his wife, Elizabeth Judith Frances Walton. He was educated at private schools and by his sister, Elizabeth Gibson Cheyne (1869–1931), herself a published poet, who encouraged him in his wish to write poetry. He started writing in his early youth and, except for his war service, devoted his whole life to it. He never attended university. His early volumes of poetry were highly romantic. In The Stonefolds (1907) he first approached the central theme which characterizes his poetry: the lives of ordinary people. It was with Daily Bread (1910) that he achieved fame as the poet of the ‘inarticulate poor’. After this, in some thirty books of verse-plays and long and short poems, he wrote of the poor of town and country in a plain idiom that reflected their plain speech; he spoke for and aroused sympathy for the northern people among whom he had grown up. He was admired by some of the best poets of his time—(Philip) Edward Thomas and Robert Frost, as well as Rupert Brooke.

In 1912 Gibson moved to London, which was crucial for his career, as he lived above Harold Monro's Poetry Bookshop and met John Middleton Murry and Katherine Mansfield, who introduced him to the patron Edward Marsh. Gibson became a contributor to Marsh's five volumes of Georgian Poetry (1912–22).

Through Marsh, Gibson met the young Rupert Brooke, and with him and others brought out the short-lived quarterly, New Numbers, which printed in December 1914 the ‘War Sonnets’ that made Brooke's reputation as a war poet [see Dymock poets]. One result of this collaboration was that Brooke bequeathed to Gibson, Lascelles Abercrombie, and Walter de la Mare a third share each of his property, including the proceeds of his poems—which sold in unprecedented numbers in the decades following Brooke's death on the Greek island of Skyros in April 1915.

In late 1913 Gibson married, in Dublin, Geraldine Audrey Townshend (d. 1950), Monro's assistant in the Poetry Bookshop and daughter of Charles Uniacke Townshend, land agent, of Dublin. They moved to Gloucestershire soon after. Brooke's legacy enabled Gibson to live as a poet, never following another profession, although in later days his wife sometimes had to take in paying guests.

In the first years of the war Gibson made several attempts to enlist, but was turned down because of his poor eyesight. American enthusiasm for Brooke was partly reflected in an invitation to Gibson to lecture, and his US tour in 1917 was prolonged and successful. Macmillan, New York, published Gibson's Collected Poems. Also in 1917, he was accepted by the Army Service Corps, where he served until 1919. His writings of this time include the well-known war poem entitled ‘Breakfast’ (which appeared in The Nation on 17 October 1914). In this and ‘The Return’ he showed his compassion for the ordinary man and woman, and in ‘The Lament’ he wrote movingly of ‘the heartbreak at the heart of things’ (W. W. Gibson, The Lament).

Gibson's Collected Poems was published by Macmillan, London, in 1926, and this collection, based on twenty earlier books, is impressive for its variety, as well as for its length of nearly 800 pages. This included perhaps his most enduringly popular poem, ‘Flannan Isle’ (1912), which evoked the scene of the mysterious disappearance in 1900 of three lighthouse keepers on a remote outcrop in the Outer Hebrides. He published some fourteen more books—including four during the Second World War—with titles, like The Alert (1941), which showed his continued preoccupation with war.

After 1926 Gibson's literary standing fell: Robert Frost was concerned about it as early as 1928. He had built up his reputation as the spokesman for the inarticulate poor, and lived on into a time when a self-conscious working class preferred to speak for itself. He also tended to write too much and revise too little. Too many of his longer passages lack the liveliness of ‘Hoops’ (1914), or the sheer compulsion of ‘Drove-road’ (1917).

The Gibsons suffered the tragic loss of their daughter Audrey in a landslide in Italy in 1939. They lived in Gloucestershire, in Pembrokeshire, and round about London, but never in Northumberland, the county that remained Gibson's inspiration. Geraldine Gibson died in 1950, the year of Gibson's last book, Within Four Walls, and Gibson himself died at Holloway Sanatorium, Virginia Water, Surrey, on 26 May 1962. A second daughter, Jocelyn, survived him, as did a son, Michael, who published over thirty books, including some on his special subject, the history of roses.

R. N. Currey, rev. Sayoni Basu, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography