Good-Bye to All That

Good-Bye to All That
Cover of the first edition
AuthorRobert Graves
LanguageEnglish
GenreAutobiography
PublisherJonathan Cape
Publication date
1929
1958 (2nd Edition)
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages368 (paperback)
ISBN0-385-09330-6
OCLC21298973
821/.912 B 20
LC ClassPR6013.R35 Z5 1990

Good-Bye to All That is an autobiography by Robert Graves which first appeared in 1929, when the author was 34 years old. "It was my bitter leave-taking of England," he wrote in a prologue to the revised second edition of 1957, "where I had recently broken a good many conventions".[1] The title may also point to the passing of an old order following the cataclysm of the First World War; the supposed inadequacies of patriotism, the interest of some in atheism, feminism, socialism and pacifism, the changes to traditional married life, and not least the emergence of new styles of literary expression, are all treated in the work, bearing as they did directly on Graves's life. The unsentimental and frequently comic treatment of the banalities and intensities of the life of a British army officer in the First World War gave Graves fame,[1] notoriety and financial security,[1] but the book's subject is also his family history, childhood, schooling and, immediately following the war, early married life; all phases bearing witness to the "particular mode of living and thinking" that constitute a poetic sensibility.[1]

Laura Riding, Graves's lover, is credited with being a "spiritual and intellectual midwife" to the work.[2] Graves, in a 1969 interview, claimed that he "entirely rewrote" the book—"every single sentence"—when it was reissued in the 1950s, suggesting that the process of co-writing The Reader Over Your Shoulder had made him more conscious of, and determined to rectify, deficiencies in his own style.[3]

  1. ^ a b c d Robert Graves (1960). Good-Bye to All That. London: Penguin. p. 7.
  2. ^ Richard Perceval Graves, 'Graves, Robert von Ranke (1895–1985)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004; online edn, October 2006.
  3. ^ "The Art of Poetry XI: Robert Graves," in Conversations with Robert Graves, ed. Frank L. Kersnowski (1989), University Press of Mississippi, p. 101.

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