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85 pages 2 hours read

Robert Graves

Goodbye to All That

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | YA | Published in 1929

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Key Figures

Robert Graves

Born July 24, 1895, Robert Graves, a young middle-class Englishman, joins the officer training of the Royal Welch Fusiliers eight days after England enters World War I. Self-described as tall, with black hair and gray eyes, Graves also has a wry sense of humor, little verbal filter, and a "rebellious nature" (347). His father has Irish roots while his mother's family is German; Graves inherits his mother's family name, von Ranke, as his middle name. This name causes Graves trouble from the time he starts high school until the middle of World War II, as suspicion about Germans begins and increases. Graves’s family has a "persistent literary tradition" (8) and Graves is, himself, a writer—mostly of poetry, but later of novels and works of nonfiction.

After a fraught period at Charterhouse, the well-regarded though chaotic boarding school Graves attends, Graves joins the British army, partly to avoid going to college at Oxford. Graves had dropped out of Officers' Training College due to his "revolt against the theory of obedience to implicit orders" (58) and his horror at being shown "the latest military fortifications" (58). Though Graves enters the service knowing "nothing of Army tradition" (70) and receives frequent chastisement for improper dress, he attains the initial rank of second lieutenant. Graves will go on to attain the rank of captain, suffer a few war wounds, and give a total of four rounds of service during World War I. After the Armistice in November 1918, Graves receives his military demobilization and goes onto receive his degree in English Literature from Oxford. Resolving to support himself through writing alone, Graves spends one year teaching English in Egypt then undertakes the writing of this memoir. He spends the majority of the rest of his life in Majorca, Spain.

Siegfried Sassoon

Born to an upper-class family in England in 1886, Siegfried Sassoon becomes a close friend and colleague of Robert Graves. Sassoon also serves in the Royal Welch Fusiliers and consistently exhibits a higher degree of bravery than Graves. Early into Sassoon's service, prior to serving in the trenches, he and Graves share their poems with each other. Sassoon remarks that he doesn’t think war should be written about "in such a realistic way" (175). Graves replies, in his "old-soldier manner" (175), that Sassoon will soon change his mind. As the war continues, Sassoon comes to blame the patriotic rhetoric of English politicians, among others, for perpetuating a jingoistic war. Sassoon vacillates between "happy warrior and bitter pacifist" (275), something reflected in his poetry. 

Nancy Nicholson

Graves meets Nancy Nicholson, who comes to be his wife, at her family's home in Harlech. She is an independent woman who leaves home at 17 to live and work by herself on a farm in Wales. She also paints when Graves first meets her but gives it up when faced with the task of raising four children with Graves. Contrary to the traditional values with which she's been raised, Nancy is both an atheist and a feminist, and warns Graves he must "be careful what [he says] about women" (269) around her. When marrying Graves, Nancy attaches "no significance to the ceremony" (271), though she goes through with it to please her father. Nancy also supports socialism and the Labor Party, with which she engages, alongside Graves, in activism. 

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