Ivor Gurney : A Biographical outline
Anthony Boden
There is nothing for me, Poetry, who was the
child of joy,
But to work out in verse crazes of my untold pain;
In verse which shall recall the rightness of a former day.
from 'The Last of the Book'
So wrote Ivor Gurney during the last fifteen years
of his life, years spent incarcerated in a mental hospital. His story
was to end in sadness – but Gurney was very much a 'child of joy' – a
man with a zest for life, for friendship and for fun, but in the end, a
helpless victim of mental instability.
Gurney was that rare being: both poet and composer, the first
Englishman to be dually-gifted in these two arts since Thomas Campion
in the reign of Elizabeth I, and his output was prodigious. He left us
around two hundred songs, several chamber and instrumental works, and
over three hundred poems and verse-pieces, the best of which mark
Gurney out as a creative spirit touched by genius.
Since the publication in 1978 of Michael Hurd's excellent biography, The
Ordeal of Ivor Gurney, the facts of Gurney's life have become well
known. He was born in Gloucester on 28th August 1890, the second of
four children. His father, David, was a tailor whose patron, when he was an apprentice, had been Sir Ivor Bertie Guest, 1st Baron Wimborne (1835-1914). Thus David Gurney gave his
younger son the name Ivor Bertie Gurney. 'Bertie' was pronounced
Bartie, which in turn gave rise to Gurney's nickname as a young man,
'Bartholomew'. Ivor's mother, Florence, was a highly-strung, somewhat
unstable woman, and life at home was far from placid or easy; as his
sister, Winifred, recalled:
Happiness revolved around father. As very small children mother certainly did her best to bring us up well, but when we grew to be more independent it seemed too much for her. She possessed us as babies, but couldn't do so later and her iron rule led to nagging. Life for us was something akin to a bed of stinging nettles, and to keep the peace father's efforts had to be applied when and where possible, but taking care to walk warily [...] The pity of it was that mother did not seem to enjoy her children, and so far as I could see she did not win their love. Worse still, Father was not allowed to give us as much love as he had for us [...].
Gurney was baptised on 24th September 1890 at All
Saints Church in Gloucester, where his cousin, Joseph Gurney, was the
organist. The service was thinly attended. Apart from Ivor, his parents
and the vicar, the only other person present was the curate at All
Saints, the Reverend Alfred Cheesman, who, in the absence of any other,
agreed to be the child's Godfather, and this proved to be a stroke of
singular good fortune for Gurney. Cheesman, a bachelor, well known in
Gloucester for his efforts on behalf of underprivileged youngsters,
took his responsibilities as Godfather extremely seriously. As Gurney
grew, Cheesman quickly recognised the boy's artistic sensibilities,
gave him free access to his considerable library, and thus introduced
him to a world of literature and ideas.
Gurney began his schooling at the National School in Gloucester, but it
was Cheesman who encouraged Ivor to try for a choral scholarship at
Gloucester Cathedral, acceptance for which would bring with it both a
place in the cathedral choir and an education at the King's School.
Ivor was successful, and he entered the King's School, where F.W.
Harvey was already a pupil, in the autumn term of 1900.
Gurney was composing music from 1904, encouraged by two sisters, Emily
and Margaret Hunt, family friends who had travelled widely in Europe
and who shared a deep love and understanding of German music of the
nineteenth century. It was also the Hunt sisters who took young Ivor
out of Gloucester to discover for the first time the breathtaking
beauty of the Cotswold Hills.
In 1906 Gurney became articled to the organist of Gloucester Cathedral,
Herbert (later Sir Herbert) Brewer, with whom he studied music
alongside two other young men, Herbert Howells and Ivor Novello, both
of whom, in their very different ways, were to make a considerable
impact on British music. Gurney forged particularly close friendships
with Howells and Harvey, and what Marion Scott, the Registrar of the
Royal College of Music, said of Gurney could apply equally to all
three. 'His education', she said, 'may be said to have begun with the
beauty he saw about him, the lovely countryside, the hills, the Severn
River'.
Although both Gurney and Harvey had attended the same school, it was
not until 1908, when both met on a tram in Gloucester, that their close
friendship began. Harvey was, at this time, articled to a local
solicitor, but his mind was preoccupied by poetry. He took his friend
home to 'The Redlands', a large farmhouse at Minsterworth, close to
Gloucester, and here Gurney found a ready welcome from Harvey's family,
good conversation, companionship, and a grand piano! He also found a
like spirit and a shared love of poetry, music, cricket, football,
table tennis, and of sailing their little boat The Dorothy on the River
Severn. If Alfred Cheesman had opened Ivor's eyes and ears to Kipling,
Tennyson, Housman and other 'moderns', Gurney and Harvey together
discovered the Elizabethans: Fletcher, Nashe, Ben Jonson and, above
all, Shakespeare.
A turning point for both Howells and Gurney was reached in 1910, a year
in which the Three Choirs Festival was held in Gloucester. Howells had
asked Brewer if there was to be any new work in the Festival programme.
'Yes', Brewer replied, 'a queer mad work by an odd fellow from Chelsea
– something to do with Tallis'. The work in question was the Fantasia
on a Theme by Thomas Tallis by Ralph Vaughan Williams, a piece so
essentially English, so different from anything which they had heard
before, that, following the performance, Gurney and Howells spent much
of the night walking about Gloucester, talking excitedly about it. From
that moment both men were determined to become composers.
In 1911 Gurney won an open scholarship to the Royal College of Music,
which he entered in the autumn term of that year. His composition
teacher was Sir Charles Villiers Stanford, who famously said that of
all his students – Vaughan Williams, Arthur Bliss, Gustav Holst, John
Ireland and dozens more – Gurney was potentially 'the biggest of them
all. But the least teachable'! The Secretary of the RCM Union and
editor of the RCM Magazine was Marion Scott, a woman who was to become
the most influential figure in Gurney's life.
Gurney moved into rather shabby rooms in Fulham, and in order to
increase his meagre income took a job as organist at a church in High
Wycombe in Buckinghamshire. Here he was befriended by the churchwarden,
Edward Chapman, who had come to live in High Wycombe in 1914. Chapman
invited Gurney home to lunch every Sunday. Before long, Ivor was
considered very much a part of the Chapman family, enjoying hilarious
games of ping-pong and cricket, walks in the country and songs at the
piano with the four Chapman children, Kitty, Winnie, Arthur and
Marjorie ('Micky'). All four children clearly adored their new friend,
whose sparkling personality, huge sense of fun and energetic enthusiasm
for all their games they found irresistible. Before very long Ivor had
fallen in love with Kitty and proposed marriage, even though she was
still only seventeen years old. It was not to be: she turned him down.
In 1913 Gurney, whose natural exuberance was often blighted by fits of
depression, had found himself close to a nervous breakdown. Obliged to
take time off from the RCM, he returned to Gloucestershire for a few
idyllic weeks, living and working at the Severn-side village of
Framilode. But by July 1914 he was back at college and able to write to
Will Harvey:
Dear Willy,
It's going Willy. It's going. Gradually the cloud passes and Beauty is
a present thing, not merely an abstraction poets feign to honour.
Willy, Willy, I have done 5 of the most delightful and beautiful songs
you ever cast your beaming eyes upon. They are all Elizabethan – the
words – and blister my kidneys, bisurate my magnesia if the music is
not as English, as joyful, as tender as any lyric of all that noble
host. Technique all right, and as to word setting – models.
'Orpheus', 'Tears', 'Under the Greenwood Tree', 'Sleep', and 'Spring'.
How did such an undigested clod as I make them?
But this was 1914, and when war came in August of
that year, Gurney tried to enlist alongside Harvey in the 1/5th
Glosters. He was rejected due to poor eyesight, but in February 1915
was accepted as a Private in the 2/5th Glosters and sent off to
Chelmsford in Essex for basic training.
A month later the men of Gurney's battalion were taken by train to
Tidworth, from where they marched through heavy snow to Park House Camp
on Salisbury Plain. They arrived to find that there were no beds, fires
or electric light. The men slept on the bare floor through a bitterly
cold night of wind and snow. In May he wrote to Herbert Howells:
Dear Howler,
Finis est, or rather, Inceptus est (?). We go tomorrow. Little Howler,
continue in thy path of life, blessing others and being blest, creating
music and joy, never ceasing from the attempt to make English music
what it should be, and calmly scornful-heedless of the critics.
Go on and prosper, and Au revoir.
Howells, medically unfit to serve, was spared the
horrors of the First War. On Gurney's departure for Laventie on the
Somme Howells dedicated his Piano Quartet in A minor: 'To the
Hill at Chosen and Ivor Gurney who knows it'. Chosen Hill in
Gloucestershire had been a favourite walking place for the two men. But
Gurney, far from Chosen Hill, was soon preparing for the terror of
trench warfare in a far flatter landscape. On 25th May 1916 the 2nd/5th
Glosters sailed to Le Havre aboard a troopship, marched towards
Flanders, rested a few miles north of Bethune, and then went into
trenches at Riez Bailleul for a week of instruction under the London
Welsh Regiment.
Through the war and the misery of the trenches, Gurney, who was a
signaller, turned more and more to the writing of verse, opportunities
for musical composition being clearly rare. Many of these early trench
poems reflect his longing for Gloucestershire, many his horror and
hatred of war. But it was a poem by Will Harvey that inspired one of
the few songs that Gurney was able to compose in the trenches. Harvey's
war had begun at Ploegsteert, an experience that drew from him the
poem In Flanders, which Gurney saw in the Glosters Gazette.
'That says everything for me', Gurney wrote to Marion Scott,'it is the
perfect expression of homesickness ... that will be in anthologies
hundreds of years from now surely. Gurney's magnificent setting is
dated 'Crucifix Corner, Thiepval, Christmas Day 1916'.
On the morning of 16th August, 1916, Harvey and Gurney met, shared a
conversation, and Harvey lent Gurney his pocket edition of Robert
Bridges's The Spirit of Man. Later that day Harvey, by now
decorated for bravery and commissioned, went out alone across no-man's
land to reconnoitre the ground in preparation for leading an attack
that night. He did not return. Gurney wrote to Marion Scott:
The thing that fills my mind most is, that Willy Harvey, my best friend, went on patrol a week ago, and never came back. It does not make much difference; for two years I have had only the most fleeting glimpses of him, but we were firm enough in friendship, and I do not look ever for a closer bond, though I live long and am as lucky in friendship as heretofore.
But Harvey's going did make a difference – and
Gurney distilled his thoughts into a perfect poem. Harvey had found
love before the war; he was engaged to marry an Irish nurse, Sarah Anne
Kane, and perhaps Gurney's poem, 'To His Love', was written as much
with her in mind as with his own profound sense of loss.
However, Harvey had not been killed but captured by the Germans and
spent the next two and a half years in seven different prison camps.
March 1917 found Gurney longing for Gloucestershire at war-shattered
Caulaincourt, where he sketched out a sublime and rare song-setting of
one of his own poems, Severn Meadows. The few other songs which
Gurney was able to write whilst in the trenches are, like Severn
Meadows, valedictory in nature. They include Sir Walter Raleigh's
farewell to life Even Such is Time, and a superb setting of
John Masefield's By a Bierside.
Gurney, who always considered himself a composer first and a poet
second, now, through force of circumstances, turned more and more to
verse. Everything he wrote was sent back to Marion Scott, who undertook
to type out every poem; she it was, too, who contacted the publishers
Sidgwick & Jackson, who, amongst others, had brought the poems of
Rupert Brooke and Will Harvey before a wider public in 1916. The result
was the publication in October 1917 of Gurney's first collection of
verse under the title Severn and Somme.
On 7th April 1917 Gurney was shot in the arm, spent some time at a
military hospital in Rouen, and was then transferred to a machine gun
battery at Passchendaele. It perhaps comes as a surprise to discover
that he was a crack shot. One month later, on 17th September, he was
gassed at St. Julien, invalided back to Britain, and admitted to the
Bangour War Hospital, Edinburgh. Clean sheets, good food, comfort and
care must have come as a blissful relief, even though the threat of a
return to Flanders still remained. There was even a lighter touch to
some of the poems that Gurney wrote at Bangour, as in his humorous
recollection of a trench comrade, 'Companion – North-East
Dugout'.
At Bangour, Gurney was nursed by a pretty little V.A.D. nurse, Annie
Nelson Drummond, and promptly fell in love again. But this time he had
every reason to believe that his feelings were fully reciprocated. In a
letter to Howells he wrote: 'Erbert, O Erbert.... I forgot my body
walking with her; a thing that has not happened since ... when? I
really don't know'. By November he was fit enough to leave hospital and
was sent on a signalling course to Seaton Delaval in Northumberland,
where he found life cold and meaningless. Depression began to haunt him
once again, as it had in 1913. In February 1918 he was returned to
hospital, this time in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and from there to
Brancepeth Castle, County Durham. By May his mental condition had
worsened and he was sent to Lord Derby's War Hospital at Warrington for
treatment of a 'nervous breakdown'. At about this time, Annie Nelson
Drummond severed her correspondence with Gurney and his mind turned to
black despair.
On 19th June he wrote a good-bye letter to Sir Hubert Parry, Principal
of the Royal College of Music, and another to Marion Scott: 'I know you
would rather know me dead than mad'. He was found wandering by the
canal at Warrington, but the courage to end his life failed him.
Comradeship, love and hope, seemingly all had deserted him.
On 4th July he was transferred to the Middlesex War Hospital at
Napsbury, and there he remained until his discharge from the Army in
October 1918 with a pension of twelve shillings per week. The war ended
in November.
Back in Gloucester, Gurney faced a seemingly hopeless future:
instability and depression had descended into a profound mental
collapse. Life at home was as fractured as ever, and Ronald Gurney, his
elder brother, was far from sympathetic with Ivor's plight. However,
friends rallied round. Edward Chapman visited; he even offered to adopt
Ivor, a generous gesture that was rejected by the Gurney family. But
gradually the clouds parted. A good pre-war friend, the poet Jack
Haines, took Ivor for a restorative walking holiday in the Black
Mountains; and then in December 1918 he was invited by the novelist and
musician Ethel Voynich to join her and some of her friends on a Cornish
holiday. Whilst walking at Gurnard Head, the creative spirit was
reawakened, resulting in the composition of Desire in Spring, a
joyful setting of a poem by Francis Ledwidge.
In February 1919 Will Harvey at last returned from his long years of
captivity. He was wasted and ill, but nonetheless within four weeks he
and Gurney were able to give a recital together in Stroud, Harvey
singing and Gurney playing the piano. On 10 May 1919, David Gurney,
Ivor's father, died, and Ivor went to stay with the Harveys at 'The
Redlands'. By the autumn he was fit enough to return to the Royal
College of Music where his composition teacher was now Ralph Vaughan
Williams. In 1919, too, a second volume of verse, War's Embers,
was published by Sidgwick and Jackson, and in November of that year the
poet John Masefield, invited Gurney and Harvey to visit him at his
Oxfordshire home. Recognition was beginning to come. Gurney resumed his
post as organist at Christ Church in High Wycombe and with it his close
friendship with the Chapman family, finding with them, as he put it,
'the home-life which is so strong and sweet a stimulant to any sound
art'. 1920 and 1921 proved to be the two most productive years of his
life. Dozens of songs poured from him. 'Words, I want words!', Gurney
told his friends and, inevitably, poems by Jack Haines and Will Harvey
were amongst the many that he set to music.
Throughout the years 1919 to 1922 Gurney was driving himself hard,
physically as well as creatively. We find him walking by night from
London to Gloucestershire. He had been, he once wrote, 'a night-walker
from age sixteen'. In 1921 he took a job on a Gloucestershire farm
(Dryhill Farm), where his labours included digging, delving and felling
trees. It seems that physical exertion was essential to settle his
nerves; to quiet the imagined voices and radio waves with which he now
felt himself to be bombarded. Also, following exertion came
inspiration. In his essay, The Springs of Music, he wrote: 'Visions of
natural fairness were more clearly seen after the excessive bodily
fatigue experienced on a route march, or in some hard fatigue in France
or Flanders - a compensation for so much strain. One found them
serviceable in the accomplishment of the task, and in after-relaxation.
There it was one learnt that the brighter visions brought music; the
fainter, verse, or mere pleasurable emotion.'
As the years passed, however, he found that ever more exertion was
necessary to induce both his visions and his ability to relax. Modern
physiologists would probably explain Gurney's ordeal by pointing out
that the brain releases endorphins in response to exercise, or
pleasurable experiences, such as listening to music. The natural 'high'
that individuals experience from running, for instance, is an example
of endorphin-enhanced pleasure. Gurney seems to have been unwittingly
making use of this naturally induced stimulus, which he had first
noticed during the rigours of army life. Additionally, he was torn
between the discipline and structure of his studies under Vaughan
Williams at the Royal College of Music and his need for the inspiration
that only Gloucestershire could satisfy, for, although Gurney is
undoubtedly a poet and composer of national and international
importance, he knew absolutely that he belonged to and was possessed by
a particular place. Through all of this, between 1919 and 1922, Gurney
made the transition from minor poet to major.
In 1922 Gurney gave up his studies in London and went to live with an
aunt at Longford on the outskirts of Gloucester. He had tried to earn
his living in various ways: church organist, cinema pianist, farm
labourer, tax clerk, but all attempts eventually failed, as did his
relationship with his aunt. He then arrived, uninvited and less than
welcome at his brother's house in Gloucester city, announcing that he
intended to live there. Ronald took Ivor in but the experiment was a
disaster. Ivor continued to live erratically. His eating habits were
dramatically irregular. He would often come into the house at dead of
night following long nocturnal walks and, in searching for candles and
food, disturbing Ronald and his wife Ethel. He would leave mud on their
furniture and alarm them with his terrified conviction that the police
were torturing him, bombarding him with radio waves. Medical help was
sought, and in September 1922 Gurney was certified insane and admitted
to Barnwood House mental hospital in Gloucester. Here he began to write
the first of dozens of letters of appeal to the great and the good, to
the police, to universities, to American States, and to friends and
colleagues, crying out for release or death.
Gurney made a desperate night-time escape from Barnwood, smashing a
window and cutting his hands in the attempt, and running off in his
pyjamas. He was recaptured by the police, but it was now decided that
he must be confined somewhere well away from Gloucestershire. With the
help of Marion Scott and other London friends, including Vaughan
Williams, Walter de la Mare and Arthur Benjamin, arrangements were made
to transfer Ivor to the City of London Mental Hospital at Dartford in
Kent. On admission he pleaded only to be allowed to return to farm work.
Gurney coped with asylum life by blotting it out; his body was
imprisoned but his mind was elsewhere. He received visits from friends:
Marion Scott, Will Harvey, Herbert Howells and Helen Thomas, the widow
of Edward Thomas, among them. Helen Thomas discovered that Ivor refused
to go into the asylum's grounds because 'it was not his idea of the
country at all – the fields, woods, water-meadows and footpaths
he loved so well, and he would have nothing to do with that travesty of
something sacred to him'. His mind inhabited the past. He continued
writing songs until 1926, but their quality diminished; his poetry, on
the other hand, gathered quality and strength. Gurney's best war poems
belong to these asylum years; they have such immediacy it is as if, in
his mind, the war carried on.
Ivor Gurney died of tuberculosis on Boxing Day, 1937. He was 47 years
old. Only then was he permitted to return to his beloved
Gloucestershire to be buried at Twigworth on the last day of the year.
His godfather, Canon Alfred Cheesman, officiated at the service and
Herbert Howells played the organ. Will Harvey, by now a rather shabby
figure, walked from his home in the Forest of Dean; as Ivor's coffin
was lowered into the ground, he dropped a final tribute to his friend
into the grave: a small sprig of rosemary. To it was attached a tiny
card upon which Harvey had written, 'Rosemary for Remembrance'.
However, in the congregation was a young man who was to ensure that
Gurney's reputation did not fade into oblivion. Gerald Finzi had heard
the soprano Elsie Suddaby singing Gurney's song Sleep in 1920 and
felt it to be one of the finest things of its type. With his friend
Howard Ferguson and his wife Joy, Finzi set out to gather Gurney's
poems and songs from every source possible, including, of course, from
Marion Scott's unique collection. Without the immense efforts of these
four, it is unlikely that we would know anything of Gurney's work
today.
© Anthony Boden (2007)
