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Poetry Canadian

Unforgetting Private Charles Smith

by (author) Jonathan Locke Hart

Publisher
Athabasca University Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2019
Category
Canadian, World War I
Recommended Age
15 to 18
Recommended Grade
10 to 12
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781771992558
    Publish Date
    Apr 2019
    List Price
    $19.99
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781771992534
    Publish Date
    Apr 2019
    List Price
    $19.99

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Where to buy it

Description

Private Charles Smith had been dead for close to a century when Jonathan Hart discovered the soldier’s small diary in the Baldwin Collection at the Toronto Public Library. The diary’s first entry was marked 28 June 1915. After some research, Hart discovered that Charles Smith was an Anglo-Canadian, born in Kent, and that this diary was almost all that remained of this forgotten man, who like so many soldiers from ordinary families had lost his life in the First World War. In reading the diary, Hart discovered a voice full of life, and the presence of a rhythm, a cadence that urged him to bring forth the poetry in Smith’s words. Unforgetting Private Charles Smith is the poetic setting of the words in Smith’s diary, work undertaken by Hart with the intention of remembering Smith’s life rather than commemorating his death.

About the author

Jonathan Locke Hart is a Canadian poet and professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. His recent work in comparative literature includes The Poetics of Otherness, a study of the literature of war.

Jonathan Locke Hart's profile page

Excerpt: Unforgetting Private Charles Smith (by (author) Jonathan Locke Hart)

We went joyfully to Bailleul
Only six miles to take a bath
in a Lunatic Asylum

 

In a pool sixteen times sixteen
And four and a half feet deep
Only about six hundred had been

 

Before us. In all, we had three baths
One going, one there, one coming back.
Two were in sweat. Weather wet.

Editorial Reviews

“Through Smith’s mundane descriptions of the weather and of daily life in the trenches, a remarkable, moving portrait emerges in tribute to the particular life of one ordinary soldier.”

Mariianne Mays Wiebe

"Hart documents Private Smith's diary in poetic style, stark and sad and funny, from his departure for the Western Front to the last entry on May 31, 1916: 'Back at 11 am.'"

Holly Doan

"Succinct, compact, candid."

Chengru He