Robert Graves - A Critical Biography
by
Dr Ian Firla, St John's College, Oxford, Robert Graves Trust
Contents
Part One - A broad overview of
Robert Graves' Life
Part Two - A critical overview
of Robert Graves' Works
Part Three - A Survey of
Critical Studies for further reference
Part Four - Works Cited and
Acknowledgements
Part One: A broad overview
of Robert Graves' Life
Robert Graves, poet,
novelist, biographer, mythographer, classical scholar and translator was born in
1895 in Wimbledon, a well-to-do suburb of London, and died in 1985 in Deja, the
Majorcan village he had made his home (with the exception of the Spanish civil
war and the Second World War) since 1929. Graves married twice. His first
marriage to Nancy Nicholson, the daughter of the painter William Nicholson,
produced four children: Jenny, David, Catherine and Sam. His second marriage to
Beryl Pritchard produced a further four children: William, Lucia, Juan and
Tomas.
Graves' career spanned
the majority of the 20th century. He was a youthful witness to the evolution of
this century's self-conscious notion of its own modernity. He nearly died
fighting for a belief in nation and England at a time when modern ideals were
displacing the notion of 'for king and country' with sometimes contradictory
socio-political ideals. He witnessed the same upheavals and suffered many of
the same trials of his avant-garde contemporaries (such as Breton, Soupault and
Apollinaire in France and T.E. Hulme, David Jones and Wyndham Lewis in Britain)
in the First World War yet, along with other poets like Edward Thomas, Wilfred
Owen and Siegfried Sassoon, wrote about them very differently. He saw things
going wrong again and decided then to say 'Goodbye to All That' and try out life
on his own terms.
His own terms led him
to domestic crisis as he separated from his wife and his family to follow a
dominant and domineering woman and poet. His own terms saw him abandon, not
just England, but the modern world, modern living and modernism to move to a
rural village in a remote part of an island set off from the European mainland
where he could write the books that he thought needed to be written: some might
say for himself, others, the books that he thought a sane world needed. One
thing is certain, Graves' life itself was very rarely stable.
The period immediately
following Robert Graves' birth is described in an amusing an impressionistic
manner in the opening pages of his autobiography. The juxtaposed images of
Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee procession, that he witnessed at the age of
two or three, and then that of the terror of his encounter with his father's
Shakespeare folios say much: his family was patriotic, upper middle class,
well-educated and strict.
His childhood seems
unremarkable and his struggles through adolescence at the British public
school, Charterhouse, seem rather de rigeur: he disliked and was disliked by
most of his peers and was afraid of the majority of his masters. Toward those
whose company he did seek, he developed rather innocent though clearly earnest
homosexual feelings. He was expected to go up to Oxford where he had already
secured a classical scholarship at St. John's. Like most adolescents, Graves
viewed has father as an oppressive patriarch and, with the convenient outbreak
of the Great War, thought he had an opportunity to escape childhood and
oppression for manhood and glory.
Graves' own poetry and
prose is the best source for a description of his war experiences. It suffices
to say that Graves found neither manhood nor glory but 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.
Amazingly, given the extent and the nature of his wounds, Graves made a full
recovery and was assured of home-service for the duration of the war. However,
like many of his fellow invalided combatants, though home in the most
'honourable' circumstances possible, Graves could not overcome the feeling of
guilt that he had left his soldiers in peril while he himself was safe. He
managed to have himself posted back to the front. Before seeing action again
though, he was met by his company surgeon who threatened him with court-martial
if he did not immediately remove himself from the front.
He returned to England
and tried to make himself as useful as possible to his regiment in training
troops for service in France while maintaining contact with his fellow poets.
Graves played an important part, for example, in saving Sassoon from
court-martial after the latter published a manifesto denouncing the war. The
story is well documented in the biographies as well as in Pat Barker's
Regeneration trilogy and in the film of the same title.
Before the armistice,
Graves married Nancy Nicholson. Nancy was a 'modern woman' who refused to take
on Graves' names and preferred wearing trousers to dresses (much, according to
the biographers, to his mother's dismay!). 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 persistent
shell-shocked condition caused them troubles. It is not surprising, then, that
Laura Riding's arrival spelled the beginning of the end of their marriage.
Luara 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,
Martin Seymour-Smith, Richard Perceval Graves and Miranda Seymour, dedicate a
significant proportion of their studies to them.
Miranda Seymour has
also written a novel, The Telling, that recounts the continuation
of the sad story. Seymour's novel fictionalises the events that occur after
Graves and Riding's arrival in Pennsylvania where they travelled, on Riding's
prompting, after Graves' friend, the editor of Time Magazine, Tom
Matthews, secured a good review of Riding's poetry. The reviewer, Schuyler
Jackson, his wife and four children invited Graves and Riding into their home.
As Richard Perceval Graves in the third volume of his biography tells it:
Having decided that the handsome Schuyler must be hers, Laura had behaved
with calculated ferocity. Schuyler Jackson's wife Kit, the good-natured mother
of their four young children, was a serious obstacle; but within six weeks,
through sheer force of will, Riding had reduced her to a demented and violent
creature prepared to 'confess' to witchcraft before being removed to an insane
asylum. By then, the atmosphere of horror had become so pervasive that many of
those present would come to believe that they had been in the presence of great
spiritual evil.
On Kit's departure, Laura Riding had taken over the running of the
Pennsylvania farmhouse in the hamlet of Brownsburg, just south of New Hope,
Pennsylvania, which she and Robert and a few other members of her inner circle
had been sharing with the Jacksons. Soon afterwards, she had disappeared into a
bedroom with Schuyler for two days, emerging to announce (for the benefit of
anyone who was uncertain about her present views on the subject) that 'Schuyler
and I do'. (Robert Graves and The White Goddess, 5)
Clearly this and
Laura's leap through a window is stuff for the silver screen. Even in a
post-Fatal Attraction Hollywood context, it's difficult to imagine these events
in anything other than a Hollywood Schlock-buster. Yet, it seems as though R.
P. Graves' description of events is, and perhaps justifiably, biased. There
seems little doubt that, at this time of her life, Riding exerted control over
a number of individuals who idolised and idealised her. Catherine Dalton,
Graves' daughter of the first marriage, perhaps best expresses the family's
feelings toward Riding. In Seán ó Mórdha's documentary on Graves' life for the
BBC series 'Bookmark', Catherine and Robert's daughter of the second marriage,
Lucia, go to the Bloomsbury house on St. Peter's Square where Laura made her
famous leap. Lucia describes the event, as though to Catherine but actually for
the benefit of the camera. When she reaches the dramatic conclusion: Laura
shouting 'Goodbye chaps' and making her leap, Catherine adds: 'I suppose she
survived... she shouldn't have, but she did. A mistake, I think.'
It's easy to vilify
Laura Riding. Graves was but one victim of her 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. Together, they founded the small,
yet important, Seizin Press, co-authored two very successful books (A Survey
of Modernist Poetry, London: Heinemann, 1927 and A Pamphlet Against
Anthologies, London: Cape, 1928) as well as a disastrous novel, published
under the pseudonym 'Barbara Rich' entitled No Decency Left.
A Survey, in fact, is the first
published work that describes the poems being written by Eliot, Pound,
cummings, Stein, and Sitwell amongst others of the period as 'modernist'. It is
also ironically, as some critics argue, not only the first work of criticism on
the Modernists but also the first anti-Modernist criticism. It is safe to say,
in the context of works such as A Survey and A Pamplet that
neither Graves nor Riding would have evolved as they did had it not been for
one another. They influenced each others' works throughout their years together
(1926-1939). Numerous biographers and scholars have argued, and quite correctly
at that, that the relationship continued to influence their works long after
they separated.
Before Riding, indeed,
before Nancy, there were several other influential people, places and events in
his life. Both of his parents, Alfred and Amy, proved an influence on Graves.
Alfred because he, himself, was a poet and an educator and Amy because of her
stern Victorian temper. There are several emphatic statements in Graves'
autobiography, Goodbye To All That, that express Graves' attitude toward
his parents' influence on his development beyond question. Not the least of
these is the moment when Graves, returned home as a disenchanted, embittered
and wounded soldier is put on 'parade' by his parents, proudly patriotic,
completely Victorian and entirely ignorant of their son's frustration and
embarrassment (1957, Penguin, 165-7). Here, the circle from the first page of
the autobiography is squared: Graves' 'modern' attitudes are in conflict with
his parent's old-fashioned mores. However, it also should not be forgotten that
Graves and his friends relied on Alfred's literary reputation and, most
especially, on his literary connections to see their own work published and
favourably reviewed. Alfred represented the poetry of both Robert and Siegfried
Sassoon, for example, while they were serving the trenches.
It is a sad fact that
Robert did not participate in his father's centenary celebrations. One could
suppose that his absence suggested that he was afraid to admit his adolescent
indulgence in denigrating his father now that he was a mature and established
poet in his own right. Graves absence suggests that he was afraid to admit that
his father was an important reason for the early successes of his own
career-and besides, it was highly unfashionable to be close to a father who was
so clearly a relic of another era (Robert Graves and the White Goddess,
124-5).
Robert Graves had
various mentors throughout his career; however, he encountered three of the
most significant during the war and in his Oxford days: W. H. R. Rivers, T. E.
Lawrence and Basanta Mallick. All three, at various stages, dominated Graves'
thought and influenced his work but, unlike the ideas of many of the more
'fashionable' theorists that Riding insisted that she and Graves subscribe to,
all three remained, to a greater or lesser extent, influences on Graves' life
and work.
After Graves' return
from America, his relationship with Beryl Graves began in earnest. As the war
began, England was in turmoil and Graves began trying to assemble a new life
and begin a new family. Indeed, based in Devon as the rest of Europe was drawn
into a vortex, he and Beryl briefly experienced something of a personal peace. The
terror of Laura Riding had faded and their life was beginning anew. However,
anything like an 'idyll' was impossible at this time and soon the events of the
war began to overtake them in the most dramatic ways.
In 1943 Robert Graves
received the dreadful 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.
The period began what
should have remained a period of domestic harmony and literary productivity;
however, 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, indeed, the first after
he articulated his White Goddess theories, was Judith Bledsoe. Judith, by all
accounts, was a naïve young girl who found in the older Graves something of a
father figure whose intellect and worldly knowledge was appealing. Graves found
in her the physical embodiment of the White Goddess. It seems that in the case
of Judith, as in the muses that followed, who or what the person might actually
have been seemed less important to Graves than what he believed the person to
be. And so Judith who at first was clearly enamoured with the attention she was
receiving began to buckle under the pressure and, as R. P. Graves reports,
Beryl "... took Judith out to lunch alone, and quite calmly asked her
whether she wanted Robert or not. To which Judith could only protest, quite
honestly, that she loved Beryl and Robert more than her mother and father, and
that she had no intention of doing anything to injure their marriage" (The
White Goddess, 188).
Again, this document is
only intended to be a brief survey of the life and works of Graves and the
biographers give a much fairer treatment of the complications and the
intricacies of Robert's fascinatingly convoluted life where I can only reduce
and summarise.
Graves had three
further muses in his life: Margot, Cindy and Juli. Of the three, Cindy was
potentially the most destructive to Graves. Her story is painful to read and I
refer the reader to any of the biographies for the account though I do think
that Miranda Seymour's might be the best. Juli, the fourth and last muse, took
on the role only toward the end of his life and then, it seems, was there as a
salve to his battered mind and spirit and less a temptress and inspiration.
Though, it is true, that his last good poems were written for and about her.
Over his long career
but most especially at the height of his fame, Graves had many celebrity
friends including films stars like Ava Gardner and Ingrid Bergman, fellow
writers like T. S. Eliot and Gertrude Stein, and was courted (to the annoyance
of the general Deyan population) by tens of hangers-on and aspiring poets. He
was, himself, a celebrity whose appearance on television and radio programmes
virtually guaranteed a good audience.
Robert Graves passed
away on December 7, 1985 after a long and slow mental and physical
disintegration. He is buried in Deya. His marker is a simple concrete slate
with the inscription: "Robert Graves, Poeta, 1895-1985".
Part Two -
A critical overview of Robert Graves' Works
Robert Graves is probably
best known as the author of I, Claudius and Claudius the God
(1934), a two-volume fictional autobiography of the Roman emperor of the first
century that was serialised for television broadcasting by the BBC. If the
Claudius books are well known because of their world-wide television, an almost
equal audience has been introduced to Graves through his autobiography, Goodbye
to All That (first published in 1929 and then substantially revised for a
new edition in 1957). Graves, however would most like to have been best
remembered as a poet and, indeed, for a time received numerous accolades that
suggested that that might be the case. He was made the Professor of Poetry at
Oxford and was asked to give the prestigious Clark Lectures at Cambridge. He
was awarded the Queen's Medal for Poetry as well as made a member of the American Academy for Poets. He was invited to
deliver numerous lectures in America that would have proved quite lucrative. He
was, not surprisingly, very seriously considered for the Nobel Prize around
this time.
While his reputation as
a novelist is modest, it is relatively constant. Several of his works including
the Claudius books and Wife to Mr Milton have been in print ever since
they were first published. Others, like King Jesus, sold-out their
initial war-time print run of 12,000 in their first week and continue to be
reprinted by various presses on both sides of the Atlantic from time to time.
His reputation as a poet
though has been less secure. His slim volume, Collected Poems 1938-45,
probably because of his success with his fiction sold out its initial print run
of 5000 almost immediately and was well reviewed. Sales of 5000 copies of a
poetry book are impressive (well, at least until the recent records set by Ted
Hughes' Birthday Letters) for any age but for post-War England they were
very good indeed.
Much of Graves' poetic
reputation is bound up with his theories on poetry. Many critics have done so
already (and it is a worthwhile exercise if one is to come to more than a
superficial understanding of his poetry) but tracing the theories that he
eventually wrote up in his The White Goddess (Faber, 1948) as important
elements throughout his career can valuably inform one's reading of his poetry.
The prominence of his own and very particular theories on poetry--their very
necessity to his verse is one likely explanation for the susceptibility of his
poetry to critical fashion. Graves' ideas on poetry are highly esoteric and
critical schools that dominate academia at various times tend not to accept
what may seem too individual and too indulgent for their otherwise doctrinate
methodologies.
However, just as
reoccurrences of The White Goddess throughout his poetry can, for some
critics, mar his work, it also makes Graves a part of an important British
tradition. Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth century, books on the
anti-rational anthropology of culture and myth have been a hallmark of a highly
esoteric but also scholarly tradition that includes authors like Matthew
Arnold, Andrew Lang, W.B. Yeats, James Fraser, Jane Harrison and Joseph
Campbell. The 'Movement' poets who rose to prominence in the 1950s like John
Wain, DJ Enright and Donald Davie first appreciated Graves' poetry because of
its effort to be a part of a tradition considered particularly English. Some,
like Davie, soon revised their opinions but as his presence and reading at the
Graves Centenary conference at St John's College in Oxford in 1995 suggest, he
continued to appreciate Graves. Ted Hughes and Seamus Heaney, for two other
examples, though hardly poets one would term Gravesians, at various stages of
their careers paid tributes to Graves' poetry and especially to his The
White Goddess.
Modern 'continental'
literary criticism as it is practised in Anglo-American universities, owes much
to William Empson's Seven Types of Ambiguity which, itself, is largely
indebted to the methodology of the analysis of Shakespeare's Sonnets performed
by Graves and Riding in A Survey of Modernist Poetry.
Indeed, in his career,
there was little that Graves did not touch upon, and few 'experts' whom he did
not offend by venturing into their fields. Graves was the author of numerous
other works, some of which will be discussed below, of which the most popular
were:
Graves was the author or the editor of
over 140 books or collections of essays or poetry. Carcanet Press is now
re-issuing a large number of these books in a 24 volume uniform edition.
Part Three:
A Survey of Critical and Biographical Studies for further reference.
Robert Graves ceased
writing after his 80th birthday and his celebrity slowly began to fade. However,
where his own career stopped, the critical/ academic industry was just
beginning.
Several significant
works had already appeared before his death in 1985. The most notable was the
biography by Martin Seymour-Smith, Robert Graves: His Life and His Work,
first published in 1983 and updated in 1995. Seymour-Smith's biography is, like
the author, very opinionated. But because of the author's immense knowledge and
his writerly skills, his opinions are rarely intrusive.
The other two
significant biographical studies that have been published are the well-written Life on the Edge by Miranda Seymour
and the superbly researched three-volume biography by R.P Graves.
R.P's third volume and
Miranda Seymour's book were both published in 1995, the year of Robert's
centenary celebrations. Both have their strong points. Seymour's work is very
readable and provides a good analysis and speculations on the psychological motivations
for some of Robert's actions. R.P's biography is very well researched and all
of his research is very well documented-sometimes at the cost of the flow of
the story. However, from a scholarly perspective, R.P's tomes are essential.
Combined with Martin Seymour-Smith's biography, one really has all the crucial
background material for initiating a study into Graves' life and work to hand.
The first critical
study on Graves' poetry was also written by Martin Seymour-Smith, in 1956! The
pamphlet for the British Council's Writers and Their Works series was,
in many ways, too early a work. Much of Graves' writing was still to come.
J.M. Cohen also wrote a
study on Graves that may have appeared too soon. Cohen's study was along the
lines of Seymour-Smith's: a short volume that attempted to survey the entirety
of Graves' literary and poetic output and to connect it to his life. Published
in 1960, Cohen's Robert Graves published for the Writers and Critics
series was important in defining a nascent critical attitude toward Graves.
Douglas Day's Swifter
Than Reason, however, was, and continues to be, an essential study of his
poetry and criticism. Published in 1963, for Chapel Hill, Day's study follows
the patterns defined by Seymour-Smith and Cohen but is more detached and modern
in its critical attitudes.
Finally, of the early
surveys, George Stade's volume for the Columbia Essays on Modern Writers
Series published in 1967 cements, as it were, the pattern for the approach
that criticism will take toward Robert Graves and his work.
A career as long and as
varied as Robert Graves' must, by the way that academia works, be chopped up
and divided. Graves' life, for all of its twists and loops has several moments
whose peaks are slightly higher than the other peaks or lows whose lows are
slightly lower than the other lows. Between the early critics: Seymour-Smith,
Cohen, Day, Stade and, implicitly, because he tended to vet any secondary
criticism that required his copyright permissions, Robert Graves himself, a
pattern for Graves' life and career began to emerge: Stern Anglo-Irish
upbringing, Charterhouse, the Great War, Nancy Nicholson and Oxford, Laura
Riding and then the White Goddess.
It was not until
Michael Kirkham's The Poetry of Robert Graves (Athlone Press, 1967) that
a new phase was added: that of the Black Goddess. Kirkham's study is important
because, along with Day's, it begins to attempt something like a criticism that
is less concerned with pleasing the subject than it is with cutting to core and
asking the sort of questions that need to be asked about a poet's work.
However, Kirkham also needed Graves' permission to quote and a certain air of
complicity between subject and author-of the author writing what he believed
the subject may have wanted to read, continues to disturb the otherwise
incisive critical voice in this book.
Since the 1960s the
Gravesian critical industry has not been quiet; however, book length studies
have become more rare. Patrick Keane's A Wild Civility: Interactions in the
Poetry of Robert Graves (1980) was the first major work published since
Kirkham's.
DNG Carter's, Robert
Graves: The Lasting Poetic Achievement (1989) followed on from Keane's but
both works do little that their predecessors had not accomplished. Granted, the
critical apparatus of both of these works is greatly improved and both should
be referred to for any study that has ambitions of furthering Gravesian
studies, or even of assessing what has been written to date.
A more recent
book-length study is Patrick Quinn's The Great War and the Missing Muse
(AUP, 1994). Quinn's book, as the title suggests, focuses its attention on
poetry written as a direct result of the Great War. Quinn's study questions the
notion of the influence of the war and of the traditional role of the muse to
the poetry of the period. The book divides its attention between the poetry of
Graves and of Siegfried Sassoon and marks a significant departure from the
earlier works by giving attention to a single aspect of Graves' life and work.
John Smeds' Statement
and Story, the most recent work, published by Abö Akademy Press, is, again,
a work that pays attention to one aspect of Graves' life and his work, albeit a
rather inclusive one in this case: Graves' use of myth in his poetry and his
prose. Smeds' study is a useful one; however, it is, rather unfortunately, a
printing of a doctoral thesis without having had any of its self-consciously
academic apparatus or defensive mechanisms removed. Most readers may find the
doctoral apparatus an obstacle that disrupts the otherwise intriguing analysis.
Very importantly, for
all Gravesians, is the new 24 volume edition of Graves' works that is being
prepared by various editors for Carcanet Press under the supervision of Patrick
Quinn. Seven volumes, including the three volume Complete Poems (edited
by Beryl Graves and Dunstan Ward) have already appeared.
Other indispensable
sources for primary research include the two volume collection of letters: In
Broken Images and Between Moon and Moon published in 1982 by Moyer
Bell (edited by Paul O'Prey). Since 1982, many new letters have been discovered
and previously unknown correspondents have surfaced. The first two volumes of
letters will continue to stand as 'firsts' in the Gravesian canon but a new
more complete collection is crucial if Graves studies are to be furthered
significantly.
Two of Graves' children
William and Lucia have published autobiographical accounts of their years with
Robert. William's Wild Olives is more immediately about his father than
is Lucia's A Woman Unknown: Voices from a Spanish Life. Both books are
riveting and titillating; however, the latter is more self-consciously
autobiographical. William's book doesn't hesitate to reveal his father's
unpleasant characteristics while Lucia's book shows, quite naturally, that
Robert Graves was not the centre of everyone's world. Lucia's father passes in
and out of her story and is a dramatic presence only where an event is dramatic
to Lucia. Both are crucial reading for anyone who wants, first of all a good
read, but also wants to be able to see through something of the myth of the
legend of Robert Graves.
Finally, during the
1970s, a journal called 'Focus' was founded to provide a forum for the findings
of Gravesian researchers. In the 1980s the journal was raised from the
proverbial ashes by Patrick Quinn and retitled Focus on Robert Graves and
His Contemporaries. The second Focus, unfortunately, also all-but folded,
not having produced a new issue since 1996 and that being a 'best of'. However,
a new journal was founded by Patrick Quinn and myself with the support of
William Graves and the Robert Graves Trust following the centenary conferences
at St John's and in Majorca in 1995.
The new journal, Gravesiana, is set-up on firm
editorial and financial principles with a strong circulation and subscription
basis. Now preparing its sixth number, it has also provided a focal point for
the organisation of a Graves Society.
Toward the end of the
St John's conference, Dr Robert Davis suggested that Graves Studies were
becoming big enough that a society should be founded that would benefit both
the members of the society and scholars outside the immediate and obvious
community. Indeed, these web pages and the mailbase discussion group as well as
the journal association with the society are examples of how Dr Davis' advice
and initiative have seen fruition.
It should also be
noted, for those who are considering subscription or article submission to
Gravesiana, that the journal is peer-reviewed and that it publishes the results
of the latest research and reviews the latest books about Robert Graves and his
circle. The index to the journal can be found on-line and back issues and
off-prints are available by contacting: Dr Ian Firla.
Part Four -
Works Cited and Acknowledgements
Graves, Lucia. A
Woman Unknown: Voices from a Spanish Life, London: Virago, 1999.
Graves, Richard
Perceval. The Assault Heroic 1895-1926, London:Weidenfeld, 1995.
..... The Years
With Laura 1926-1940, London: Weidenfeld, 1995.
..... Robert Graves
and the White Goddess 1940-1985, London: Weidenfeld, 1995.
Graves, Robert. Goodbye
to All That, Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1960.
Graves, William. Wild
Olives, London: Pimlico, 1996.
Seymour, Miranda. Robert
Graves: Life on the Edge, London: Doubleday, 1995.
Seymour-Smith, Martin. Robert
Graves: His Life and Work, London: Abacus, 1983.
http://www.robertgraves.org/bio.php