[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fxDT9DK-nyQlgo3t1x4Ij57C-VgkKlRgtMcb2Qha7MFE":3,"$fCyYWfA5bf4R2HTfZDCTWShR8i-HLsa1aafsUoKOfa_o":18},{"author":4,"tags":13},{"author_id":5,"author_name":6,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"bio":9,"short_bio":10,"slug":11,"image_url":12},4111,"Siegfried Sassoon","S",74,"Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, published in 1928, is the opening volume of Sassoon's three-part fictionalised autobiography — a work that draws on his own life to trace a young English gentleman's passage from rural leisure into the upheaval of war.\n\nSassoon was born on 8 September 1886 in the United Kingdom and educated at New Beacon School, Marlborough College, and Clare College, Cambridge. He went on to serve as a military officer and, in July 1917, issued a written protest known as the \"Soldier's Declaration,\" in which he publicly refused to return to active service. Rather than face a court martial, the authorities sent him to Craiglockhart War Hospital in Edinburgh. It was there that he met the poet Wilfred Owen, and the two formed a friendship. That same year, 1917, Sassoon had already published his poetry collection The Old Huntsman. He eventually completed the fictionalised autobiography as a three-volume set — the Sherston trilogy — comprising Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, Memoirs of an Infantry Officer, and Sherston's Progress.\n\nOver the course of his career, Sassoon received a number of honours, including the Military Cross, the Hawthornden Prize, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, the King's Gold Medal for Poetry, and appointment as Commander of the Order of the British Empire. He died on 1 September 1967, just days before what would have been his eighty-first birthday.","Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, published in 1928, is the opening volume of Sassoon's three-part fictionalised autobiography — a work that draws on his own life to trace a young English gentleman's passage from rural leisure into the upheaval of war.","siegfried-sassoon",null,[14],{"tag_id":15,"tag_name":16,"tag_count":17},496,"war",7,{"quotes":19,"pagination":82},[20,27,34,40,46,52,58,64,70,76],{"id":21,"quote_text":22,"author_id":5,"source_id":17,"has_image":23,"author":24,"source":25,"quote_tag":26,"commentary":12},3944055,"I am making this statement as an act of wilful defiance of military authority, because I believe that the War is being deliberately prolonged by those who have the power to end it.",false,{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":28,"quote_text":29,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":31,"source":32,"quote_tag":33,"commentary":12},3431884,"In war-time the word patriotism means suppression of truth.",6,{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":35,"quote_text":36,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":37,"source":38,"quote_tag":39,"commentary":12},3431878,"As regards being dead, however, one of my main consolations has always been that I have the strongest intention of being an extremely active ghost. Let nobody make any mistake about that.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":41,"quote_text":42,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":43,"source":44,"quote_tag":45,"commentary":12},3431871,"All this, I suspect, has been little more than the operation known as the pilgrimage from the cradle to the grave, but I have had a comfortable feeling that, however ordinary my enterprises may have been, they had at any rate the advantage of containing, for me, an element of sustained unfamiliarity. I am one of those persons who begin life by exclaiming they’ve “never seen anything like this before” and die in the hope that they may say the same of heaven.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":47,"quote_text":48,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":49,"source":50,"quote_tag":51,"commentary":12},3431866,"Alone he staggered on until he found Dawn’s ghost that filtered down a shafted stair To the dazed, muttering creatures underground Who hear the boom of shells in muffled sound. At last, with sweat of horror in his hair, He climbed through darkness to the twilight air, Unloading hell behind him step by step.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":53,"quote_text":54,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":55,"source":56,"quote_tag":57,"commentary":12},3431860,"If I ever thought of myself as a man of thirty-five it was a visualization of dreary decrepitude.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":59,"quote_text":60,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":61,"source":62,"quote_tag":63,"commentary":12},3431850,"We were carrying something in our heads which belonged to us alone, and to those we had left behind us in the battle.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":65,"quote_text":66,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":67,"source":68,"quote_tag":69,"commentary":12},3431846,"To him, as to me, the War was inevitable and justifiable. Courage remained a virtue. And that exploitation of courage, if I may be allowed to say a thing so obvious, was the essential tragedy of the War, which, as everyone now agrees, was a crime against humanity.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":71,"quote_text":72,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":73,"source":74,"quote_tag":75,"commentary":12},3431839,"Rambling among woods and meadows, I could ‘take sweet counsel’ with the country-side; sitting on a grassy bank and lifting my face to the sun, I could feel an intensity of thankfulness such as I’d never known before the War; listening to the little brook that bubbled out of a copse and across a rushy field, I could discard my personal relationship with the military machine and its ant-like armies. On.",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"id":77,"quote_text":78,"author_id":5,"source_id":30,"has_image":23,"author":79,"source":80,"quote_tag":81,"commentary":12},3431832,"Winged lovely moments, can I call you home?",{"id":5,"author_name":6,"slug":11,"author_name_first_letter":7,"article_count":8,"image_url":12},{},[],{"currentPage":83,"totalPages":84,"totalItems":8,"itemsPerPage":85},1,8,10]