[Front cover to] 'Four Etched Plates by W L Wyllie, R.A. Illustrating The Poem Our Fathers by Captain Ronald A. Hopwood, RN'
Text in English on reverse.; Mounted with PAF2158 and part of a set comprising PAF2157-PAF2161. Inscribed in ink at the bottom 'Wardroom of H.M.S. "Temeraire" 1918', with the initials 'GB' at bottom right. The cover illustration shows what appear to be mid-17th-century English warships, the three-decker flagship on the right flying St George's flags rather than unions.
Captain (later Rear-Admiral) Ronald Arthur Hopwood (1868–1949) was a naval officer and writer of verse. He began his naval career in 1882, became a gunnery specialist, retired in 1919 as a rear-admiral, and was acclaimed in 1941 as poet laureate of the Royal Navy by 'Time' magazine. As an author, his first and still best-known work was his poem 'The Laws of the Navy' - a tract of good-humoured 'words to the wise', written when he was a lieutenant and originally published in the 'Army and Navy Gazette' in 1896. This became popular in both the British and American fleets. Despite its dedication (see PAF2158) 'To the Memory of the Nameless Killed and Wounded' , 'Our Fathers' was in fact written during naval manouevres of 1913 and was included in Hopwood's 'The Old Ways and other poems' (1916). However, in its form and layout, this separate undated edition, illustrated by Wyllie, exactly mirrors the republication of 'The Laws of the Navy', as also separately reissued during the war with etched illustrations by Lieutenant Rowland Langmaid RN (another well-known marine artist), but which came first remains to be clarified. Hopwood published several other books of verse, was also a considerable authority on sailing warships, and continued writing into the Second World War. [PvdM 1/13]
Captain (later Rear-Admiral) Ronald Arthur Hopwood (1868–1949) was a naval officer and writer of verse. He began his naval career in 1882, became a gunnery specialist, retired in 1919 as a rear-admiral, and was acclaimed in 1941 as poet laureate of the Royal Navy by 'Time' magazine. As an author, his first and still best-known work was his poem 'The Laws of the Navy' - a tract of good-humoured 'words to the wise', written when he was a lieutenant and originally published in the 'Army and Navy Gazette' in 1896. This became popular in both the British and American fleets. Despite its dedication (see PAF2158) 'To the Memory of the Nameless Killed and Wounded' , 'Our Fathers' was in fact written during naval manouevres of 1913 and was included in Hopwood's 'The Old Ways and other poems' (1916). However, in its form and layout, this separate undated edition, illustrated by Wyllie, exactly mirrors the republication of 'The Laws of the Navy', as also separately reissued during the war with etched illustrations by Lieutenant Rowland Langmaid RN (another well-known marine artist), but which came first remains to be clarified. Hopwood published several other books of verse, was also a considerable authority on sailing warships, and continued writing into the Second World War. [PvdM 1/13]
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Object Details
ID: | PAF2157 |
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Type: | |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Dunthorne, Robert; Wyllie, William Lionel |
Date made: | circa 1917 |
People: | Barrett, G. G. |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | Sheet: 166 x 128 mm; Mount: 557 mm x 405 mm |