Skip to main content
Search
Home
The Collections
The Collections
The Edmund Blunden Collection
The Vera Brittain Collection
The Robert Graves Collection
The Ivor Gurney Collection
The David Jones Collection
The Roland Leighton Collection
The Wilfred Owen Collection
The Isaac Rosenberg Collection
The Siegfried Sassoon Collection
The Edward Thomas Collection
The Photographic Collection
The Audio Collection
The Film Collection
Publications of War
The Great War Archive
Education
Education
The Tutorials
An Introduction to WWI Poetry
Seminar Introduction
Seminar Map
Wilfred Owen (1893–1918)
Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967)
Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)
Edward Thomas (1878–1917)
Isaac Rosenberg (1890–1918)
Women's Poetry and Verse
Trench Poetry and Songs
Notes for Teachers and Lecturers
An Introduction to Manuscript Studies
Stage I: Isaac Rosenberg - 'Dead Man's Dump'
Stage II: Compare Manuscripts
Stage III: Create your own edition
Stage III: Compare your edition
Stage I: Wilfred Owen - 'Dulce et Decorum Est'
Stage I: Compare Manuscripts
Stage III: Create your own edition
Stage III: Compare your edition
Stage I: Ivor Gurney - 'Strafe'
Stage II: Compare Manuscripts
Stage III: Create your own edition
Stage III: Compare your edition
Comparing Literature
Initial Considerations
Exercise I
Exercise II: Poems
Exercise III: Nationalities
End of Tutorial
Remembrance
Exercise I
Why do we remember the war in this way?
Exercise II
Shot at Dawn
Poetry and Remembrance
Victory?
Further Reading
Isaac Rosenberg's 'Break of Day in the Trenches'
Break of Day in the Trenches
Contextual Information: Rosenberg's Life
Contextual Information: Rosenberg's Letters
Contextual Information: Analogues
WWI: Chronology and Battles
WWI: The Home Front
WWI: Trench Warfare
Issac Rosenberg: End of Tutorial
Analysing poems using online tools
Word Clouds
Concordancing - exploring words in context
Co-occurrences: Finding patterns
Combining tools
Exploring language
Schools Resources
School Students
Higher Education
Lifelong Learners
About
About
Acknowledgements
Contact Us
Documentation
Enriching the Archive
Friends of the Project
Project Staff
Steering Group
Permitted Use
Browse
Help
Items
of 101
1–50 of 5011
Advanced search
Title
Identifier
Class
Created
Ascending
Descending
Sort
1914
1914
'The City Lights’
1917-11
‘Who is the god of Canongate’
1917-11 1918-01
‘The time was aeon’
1912 1913
‘O world of many worlds . . .’
1912 1914
‘Long ages past in Egypt . . .’
1914-10-31
'When late I viewed . . .'
1913-07 1913-08
‘Unto what pinnacles of desperate heights’
1912-11-06
‘Deep under turfy grass . . .’
1912-10 1913-06
‘Science has looked . . .’
1912-09 1912-11
My Dearest Colin
1911-01-01
‘I saw his round mouth’s crimson...’
1917-11 1917-12
‘O believe that God gives you . . .’
1912-05
‘But It Is Not Enough . . .’
1913-04-20
'Has your soul sipped . . .’
1917-07 1917-08
‘I am the ghost of Shadwell Stair’
1918-01
‘Stunned by their life’s explosion . . .’
1917
‘Sweet is your antique body . . .’
1917-12
'Whereas most women . . .’
1915
‘It was a navy boy . . .’
1915
Documentation: Workflows and Technical Specifications
Exploring Polish Literature Resource Pack
Hedd Wynn Resource Pack
Perhaps Resource Pack
Who's to Blame? Powerpoint
War Poets Mindmap
Women and the First World War Resource Pack
Imperial Troops Resource Pack
How Poetry Works Resource Pack
Trusting Source Material Resource Pack
What do we remember on Remembrance Day? Powerpoint
Poems for analysis
1918 Armistace Day Celebrations, King and Bay Streets Downtown Toronto
Remembrance Tutorial, Exercise I Material
Richard Holmes on remembrance.
Ian Hislop on the need to remember World War One
Documentation: Phase Two
Documentation: Phase One
German prisoners of war
British Tommy sitting in snow
Front of postcard
Reverse of postcard containing Turkish writing
The Chalk-Pit
8th May 1915
Sedge-Warblers
23rd May 1915
The Dark Forest
1st July 1916 - 5th July 1916
The Gallows
3rd July 1916 - 4th July 1916
The Green Roads
28th June 1916
There was a time
23rd June 1916
Bob's Lane
22nd June 1916
It was upon
21st June 1916
of 101
1–50 of 5011