posted on 2024-05-01, 14:50authored byFirst World War Poetry Digital Archive Project Team
<p dir="ltr">Manuscript in pen in Edmund Blunden's hand. This is a recollection of Arthur G. A. Vidler, Blunden's friend and fellow student at Christ's Hospital. Also one of the officers present at the 'Feast of Five', described in 'Undertones of War' (1928). The title is not, as far as is known, a reference to the poem with the same name. The final page does not appear to be related to the narrative. It contains various references to music, a reference to a ghost of a soldier, and sketches of a bishop and a Japanese man. |</p><p>File descriptions(s):</p><p>
Manuscript in pen in Edmund Blunden's hand. This is a recollection of Arthur G. A. Vidler, Blunden's friend and fellow student at Christ's Hospital. Also one of the officers present at the 'Feast of Five', described in 'Undertones of War' (1928). The title is not, as far as is known, a reference to the poem with the same name. The final page does not appear to be related to the narrative. It contains various references to music, a reference to a ghost of a soldier, and sketches of a bishop and a Japanese man.<br>Manuscript in pen in Edmund Blunden's hand. This is a recollection of Arthur G. A. Vidler, Edmund's friend and fellow student at Christ's Hospital. Also one of the officers present at the 'Feast of Five', described in 'Undertones of War' (1928). The title is not, as far as is known, a reference to the poem with the same name. The final page does not appear to be related to the narrative. It contains various references to music, a reference to a ghost of a soldier, and sketches of a bishop and a Japanese man.<br>Manuscript in pen in Edmund Blunden's hand. This is a recollection of Arthur G. A. Vidler, Edmund's friend and fellow student at Christ's Hospital. Also one of the officers present at the 'Feast of Five', described in 'Undertones of War' (1928). The title is not, as far as is known, a reference to the poem with the same title. The final page does not appear to be related to the narrative. It contains various references to music, a reference to a ghost of a soldier, and sketches of a bishop and a Japanese man.</p>
The Harry Ransom Center / The Edmund Blunden Literary Estate
Collection ID
The Edmund C. Blunden Collection | The Edmund C. Blunden Collection | The Edmund C. Blunden Collection | The Edmund C. Blunden Collection | The Edmund C. Blunden Collection
Repository Name
The Harry Ransom Center
Repository Address
The University of Texas at Austin, 21st and Guadalupe Streets, Austin, Texas, 78712, USA