I Come Again: New Poems
Coldicott, Rowlands
Private Publication (1934)
In Collection
#3581
0*
Poet
Hardcover 
Product Details
Edition Private printing
Nationality British
No. of Pages 112
Personal Details
Read It Yes
Links Amazon
User Defined
Conflict WW1
Notes
Reilly 90. Book not in Reilly.

Only 3 copies on Worldcat.

Served in Middle East.

Laid in poem manuscript poems on sheet of blue paper with the printed title "West Winds, Old Point, Middleton, Nr Bogner" Poems most likely by the author.

A wikepedia entry for Middleton-on-Sea, West Sussex notes the following
"In 1921 Capt. R. Coldicott began to build detached houses, some large, along Sea Lane, afterwards laying out two branch roads from it roughly parallel to the coast: Sea Way to the west and Old Point to the east. Further houses were put up by him along and to the north of Middleton Road. By 1928 he had erected over 100, at peak output claiming to finish one every ten days."

see 'Middleton-on-Sea', A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 5 Part 1: Arundel Rape: south-western part, including Arundel (1997), pp. 190-204. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=22945 Date accessed: 21 November 2009.



LONDON MEN IN PALESTINE AND HOW THEY MARCHED TO JERUSALEM (ISBN: 1843426498 / 1-84342-649-8)
Rowlands Coldicott
Bookseller: Naval and Military Press Ltd (Uckfield, East Sussex, UK, United Kingdom)
Bookseller Rating: 5-star rating
Quantity Available: 1

Book Description: 2003 N&M Press reprint (original pub 1919). SB. ix + 232pp with eight b/w photos and two maps The subtitle describes the scope of this book which has been written in the style of a novel based on the author's experiences - at least that's how it seems to me. The characters in it are fictitious, certainly none of the officers named can be found in any Army List. Coldicott does not say what his unit was nor his brigade nor division but it is clear that the 'London Men' are from the 60th London Division, a TF second-line formation, which went to France in June 1916, four months later it was transferred to Macedonia and in June 1917 it was again moved, this time to Egypt. The battalion in which the author was serving was 2/21st London, 181st Brigade, and he was a company commander (probably 'C' Company) who had been awarded the MC for his part in the action leading to the capture of Sheria, Third Battle of Gaza, immediately before this book begins. This account covers about five weeks from November 1917 to December when Jerusalem was captured and the author wounded. Coldicott is evidently something of a literary figure, the text is well-strewn with poetry and his descriptions of the desert conditions as the men marched and fought from Huj to Jerusalem are vivid enough even if the language is a bit ornate at times. In one passage he is watching the men as they struggle on in the heat and the dust and flies and the thought crosses his mind that even the sergeant-major, 'a man seemingly as strong as an ox', might fall out but he puts the thought out of his mind at once: "Pardon, O giant of strength and endurance, that I indite these words, yet did not a like shadow flit sometimes across thy own cheerful vision?" Quite so. By the time the reader reaches Jerusalem he will know he has been through the mill. Bookseller Inventory # 2699