{"id":1642,"date":"2019-04-15T13:37:28","date_gmt":"2019-04-15T13:37:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/?p=1642"},"modified":"2019-11-13T15:02:06","modified_gmt":"2019-11-13T15:02:06","slug":"john-cornford-the-tragedy-of-a-faithful-communist","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/2019\/04\/john-cornford-the-tragedy-of-a-faithful-communist.html","title":{"rendered":"John Cornford, the tragedy of a faithful communist"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><strong><br><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Understand the Weapon, Understand the Wound: Collected Writings<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Edited by Jonathan Galassi<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Fyfield Books, Carcanet, 238pp., $14.99<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\">The Spanish parliament voted in September 2018 to exhume the remains of Francisco Franco, and to remove the remains of the fascist dictator from the site of the giant mausoleum at the Valley of the Fallen, near Madrid, which also contains the bodies of tens of thirty-four thousand victims of the 1936-39 civil war. Only two graves are named, Franco\u2019s own, and that of Primo de Rivera, who founded the Falangist party. The grimmest aspect of the whole business is that the other bodies were disinterred from graveyards all over Spain; they were supposed to be those of both republicans and nationalists, united finally in a grisly gesture of reconciliation. The site is surmounted by a 150-metre high cross, and was built 60 years ago, during the reign of El Caudillo, partly by captured republicans and political prisoners. The families of the tens of thousands other dead combatants hope that DNA testing will allow them to identify their loved ones, so that they can be reinterred in the churchyards from which they were dug up.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u200bIt is not obvious that all these old bones will qualify for re-burial in Spain, for some are the remains of members of the various International Brigades; and many of them were not fighting for Spain at all, but for an ideology represented by one of the sides in the conflict. I was struck recently by a comment by Sir Max Hastings, who was speaking about his new book,&nbsp;<em>Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy, 1945-75.&nbsp;<\/em>When the National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam morphed into the Viet Cong, this force was no longer fighting a patriotic war for love of country, but for a cause \u2013 communism. This is precisely what motivated some of the volunteers in the Spanish Civil War. They knew little about Spain, some did not even speak the language, and they were not fighting for love of Spain, patriotism, or admiration of its culture. They were fighting in Spain because the communist parties of their home countries urged them to do so. John Cornford is a chilling example.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>John Cornford was a prodigy in everything \u2013 even his death. Although his name rings few bells today, his brief life made him a hero to a generation of left-leaning people in the English-speaking world. The exact date and manner of his death in the Spanish Civil War isn\u2019t known (his body was never found), but he perished in the battle for Lopera on, or the day following, his twenty-first birthday, December 27, 1936. He got a First Class degree in history at Trinity College Cambridge at eighteen, at nineteen fathered a child, and at twenty, was the \u201cfirst Englishman to enlist against Franco,\u201d says poet, novelist, translator and publisher Jonathan Galassi<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn1\">[1]<\/a>&nbsp;in the introduction to his new edition of Cornford\u2019s collected writings. Its title, \u201cUnderstand the Weapon, Understand the Wound,\u201d is taken from one of his handful of poems. Poet and polemicist, lover and soldier, Cornford was both a great-grandson of Charles Darwin and a doctrinaire communist.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter is-resized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/i2.wp.com\/paullevy.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/04\/Unknown.jpeg?resize=173%2C291&amp;ssl=1\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-341\" width=\"311\" height=\"523\"\/><figcaption><strong>Cornford&#8217;s apparent expression of vanity was to dress badly<\/strong><\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p>Born to privilege, Cornford ardently embraced the dictatorship of the proletariat he believed he was witnessing in Catalonia (like George Orwell, he was charmed by the abandonment of \u201cSe\u00f1or\u201d and other titles of respect). Tall, with dark, rugged good looks emphasized by pronounced cheekbones, his apparent expression of vanity was to dress badly. A self-conscious class-warrior, he nonetheless broke with Ray Peters, the Welsh working-class mother of his son, and took up instead with Margot Heinemann (1913-1992), who, though of German Jewish descent, was, like him, born into Britain\u2019s intellectual upper-middle class. Galassi sees this short life of contradictions as providing \u201call the necessary raw material for the forging of a myth,\u201d adding, \u201cas the protagonist of several different sagas, Cornford has served the dramatic needs of a number of ideologies.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In one, he\u2019s the re-embodiment of Rupert Brooke (for whom he was named \u2013Rupert John Cornford discarded his first name as soon as he could). This quixotic version has him dashing off to Spain to defend freedom with his own father\u2019s WWI revolver. Cornford\u2019s contemporaries who celebrated him as a latter-day Brooke weren\u2019t aware of, or didn\u2019t mention, the furious hatred Brooke felt for his erstwhile, anti-War, conscientious objector, gay Bloomsbury friends \u2013 stemming largely from Brooke\u2019s own confused sexuality. Nor the snobbery that led Brooke to court the Asquiths in Downing Street, while abandoning the woman he\u2019d made pregnant (Ka Cox, 1887-1938) and the actress (Cathleen Nesbitt, 1888-1982) who loved him and told me that though they never had sex, she had hoped to marry him.<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn2\">[2]<\/a>&nbsp;The fable fudges the fact that Brooke never saw battle, but died from an infected fly-bite suffered aboard a ship moored off the island of Skyros during the Gallipoli campaign; and it cloaks the plan\u2014involving Churchill, who wrote the&nbsp;<em>Times<\/em>&nbsp;obituary of Brooke, and his private secretary, Eddie Marsh, who adored Brooke, his much younger fellow-Cambridge Apostle \u2013 to make the embittered versifier appear to have been a war hero.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter is-resized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/paullevy.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/04\/Unknown-1.jpeg?resize=180%2C189&amp;ssl=1\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-343\" width=\"376\" height=\"394\"\/><figcaption><strong>Rupert John Cornford, named in homage to Rupert Brooke<\/strong><\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p>A second, \u201cliberal left\u201d Cornford story, saw him as epitomizing \u201cthe spirit of all advanced and progressive mankind.\u201d This view, held by people formerly comfortable with the idea that communism was both benign and inevitable, vanished with the revelations about Stalinism that, says Galassi quoting Hannah Arendt, \u201cforced them \u2018to give up all belief in history as the ultimate judge of human affairs\u2019.\u201d<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn3\">[3]<\/a>&nbsp;A truer version of the Cornford myth emphasized his loyalty to the Party, holding that he\u2019d been one of \u201cthe most dedicated, brilliant and unswerving of Party members, whose death seriously retarded the development of Communism in Britain.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There\u2019s a nod to this last in the attitude of Bernard Knox (1914-2010), the great classicist, a war hero on the American side who later took U.S. citizenship. He went to Spain because his friend Cornford \u201chad come back from a first foray into Spain to recruit fellow Communist students at Cambridge and Oxford to follow him into the war against Franco\u2019s fascists.\u201d Knox told Garry Wills this, adding that \u201cCornford, a poet and charismatic leader, was \u2018the most extraordinary person I have ever known\u2026. Perhaps it was the fierce single-mindedness of his thought and action that compelled admiration\u2019.\u201d&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn4\">[4<\/a>]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The myth-making began soon after his death.&nbsp;<em>John Cornford: A Memoir&nbsp;<\/em>(1938), edited by Party stalwart, Pat Sloan, featured recollections by Cornford\u2019s father and brother, and by Knox, along with some alarmingly prodigious schoolboy essays, letters to friends and to Margot Heinemann, plus some poems. Moreover, it contains Cornford\u2019s essay \u201cThe Situation in Catalonia&nbsp;<em>(Hitherto Unpublished)<\/em>,\u201d which agrees with Orwell\u2019s account in&nbsp;<em>Homage to Catalonia<\/em>&nbsp;in its details of the Spanish Republic\u2019s utopian dictatorship of the proletariat \u2013 in everything except Orwell\u2019s disillusionment. Cornford died before what Orwell saw as the game-changer, the \u201cMay days\u201d of 1937 battle for Barcelona\u2019s telephone exchange, which separated the anarchist sheep from the Stalinist goats, and has kept Trotskyists arguing fissiparously ever since.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1966 Peter Stansky and William Abrahams published&nbsp;<em>Journey to the Frontier: Two Roads to the Spanish Civil War,<\/em>&nbsp;their careful double biography of two much-mourned Cambridge men killed in the conflict: Cornford, and the Bloomsbury-related, elder by seven years, Julian Bell (1908-1937). In the case of Cornford, this fastidious account is probably the only biography of him that will ever be needed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In his own introduction (his new edition also has contributions by Richard Baxell and Jane Bernal, Margot Heinemann\u2019s daughter), Galassi comments that Sloan\u2019s compilation itself \u201chelped to foster the \u2018liberal\u2019 myth about its subject,\u201d remained silent on some matters, such as Ray and his illegitimate son, and was on the whole \u201ceulogizing.\u201d He acknowledges Stansky and Abrahams\u2019 \u201cimpeccable reliance on detail,\u201d but is critical of their interest in their subjects\u2019 supposed heroism, as it makes their narrative \u201cfundamentally romantic.\u201d This he thinks is inevitable, because of John Cornford\u2019s \u201creputation as a poet.\u201d Stansky and Abrahams were well aware of the trap, and say that almost as soon as they began their research, \u201cit became evident that in our phrasing of the question\u201d of why young men such as these went to Spain to fight, \u201cwe had been misled by legend, which has tended ever since 1939 to overpopulate the Spanish conflict with poets, especially young English poets\u2026\u201d They say eighty per cent of the English volunteers for the International Brigades were working-class, often unemployed and certainly not poets (though the writers Ralph Fox, Christopher Caudwell were another pair of communist casualties in Spain.)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From our longer viewpoint, the answer to why they fought in Spain seems obvious: their Communist Party membership. The Comintern urged British and American members to go to Spain, and there to pursue coalition with the Republican forces, and shun the \u201cdirect revolutionary tactics\u201d favoured by the anarchists and Trotskyists.<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn5\">[5]<\/a>&nbsp;Readers of Orwell will remember that it took him some time to work out the implications of this.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Of course there was a justified&nbsp;<em>casus belli<\/em>: the legitimately elected, left-wing, Second Spanish Republican government, formed following the departure of King Alfonso XIII, was subjected to a coup, ultimately led by General Franco, with the support of military groups, especially from the Spanish protectorate in Morocco, and with supplies, munitions and even troops from the German Nazis and Italian Fascists.<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn6\">[6]<\/a>&nbsp;The Republican side was aided solely by the Soviet Union, while the UK, French and Americans maintained an official policy of non-intervention. Though there were atrocities committed by some on the Republican side, in some cases enthusiastically by Communists, even including some on the same side in the conflict, it was the Nationalist rebels whose murder-squad victims included many non-combatants.<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn7\">[7<\/a>]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What would have become of Cornford, had he lived? Would he have remained a dogmatic Communist? The 21-year-old could not conceive of leaving the party: \u201cThough Communism was my waking time, Always before the lights of home\/Shone clear and steady and full in view\/Here, if you fall, there\u2019s help for you\/Now, with my Party, I stand all alone.\u201d<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn8\">[8<\/a>]<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Home was Cambridge, where his mother Frances Darwin (1886-1960), was a much-published poet. She wrote what became her close friend Rupert Brooke\u2019s gaudiest epitaph: \u201cA young Apollo, golden-haired,\/Stands dreaming on the verge of strife.\/Magnificently unprepared\/For the long littleness of life\u201d, as well as the much-anthologized \u201cTo a Fat Lady Seen from the Train,\u201d with its couplet, \u201cO fat white woman whom nobody loves, \/Why do you walk through the fields in gloves?\u201d His father, also named Francis (1874-1943), was a distinguished Cambridge classicist and author of the still-funny satire on academic life and politics,&nbsp;<em>Microcosmographia Academica<\/em>&nbsp;(1908), with its \u201cdoctrine of unripeness of time\u201d (\u201cpeople should not do at the present moment what they think right at that moment, because the moment at which they think it right has not yet arrived\u201d) and the \u201cPrinciple of Dangerous Precedent\u201d (\u201cEvery public action which is not customary, either is wrong, or, if it is right, is a dangerous precedent. It follows that nothing should ever be done for the first time.\u201d)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>John, an older and younger sister and two younger brothers, lived in a comfortable Trinity College house, Conduit Head, in a Cambridge well supplied with Darwin cousins. Stansky and Abrahams speculate that, at the time of John\u2019s birth in December 1915, because the father, an expert shot, had been safely \u201cassigned to train recruits\u201d at Grantham, only 60 miles away, \u201cMrs Cornford gave to her children, and to John in particular, a much more concentrated, undivided, continuous love and attention that would ordinarily have been the case.\u201d<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn9\">[9]<\/a>\u00a0(The Cornfords were not exceptionally virtuous. Galassi prints Frances\u2019s anti-Semitic riff of 2 December 1932 on the theme of \u201cit is also a tragedy that Marx should be a Jew.\u201d)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Somehow instead of making him a spoiled brat, the consequence of such intense maternal affection was John\u2019s remarkable self-confidence. Only 15 years old, and a boarder at Stowe School, he wrote comparing Frances\u2019s latest poems: \u201cDear Mumma, I have just finished reading the \u2018Tapestry Song\u2019 which I did not like in the least. I did not think it one-tenth as good as the \u2018Autumn Fantasia,\u2019 which I nearly liked.\u201d In a letter to Sidney Schiff (1868-1944, the translator of the last volume of Proust and, as \u201cStephen Hudson,\u201d author of several novels) we gasp at the patronizing tone of the 15-year-old to the 25-year-old: \u201cI sympathize with you about your work. I too am in something of the same position: several times this term I have had a poem utterly ruined by not being able to write it down at once\u201d. To Frances, Schiff wrote about her adolescent son (16 April 1932): \u201cThe austerity of his intellect is quite outside of my experience of youth and the only na\u00efvet\u00e9 I have so far perceived in him is in his apparent unconsciousness of his own apartness and in his ignorance of (innocence) the limits of his own consciousness.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In September 1931, Cornford argued to his mother that he should be allowed to leave Stowe, and return home to study independently, as \u201cI think that I should be able to learn as much or more than I do now in less time: and would leave myself a great deal more spare time to read and write what I wanted to. Also I might be able to make a certain amount of money from journalism of some kind.\u201d You have to remind yourself that the writer of this letter was three months short of his sixteenth birthday. In the same letter he complains that the 10 o\u2019clock bedtime \u201cmeans altogether 9 hours in bed, [and] since I need so little sleep I have to waste about two hours a day doing absolutely nothing, not even sleeping.\u201d (His mother responded that Dostoevsky \u201cthought out the plots of 4 entire novels\u201d in similar circumstances \u2013 when he was \u201cin prison in Siberia.\u201d) Worse, \u201cI am distinctly bored by almost every one this term. I miss the intelligent people more than I had expected because I find that only by talking with them or writing can I ever really find out what I think about anything\u201d. Yet he is not actually arrogant: he humbly tells his mother he has read three plays by Chekhov: \u201cI am at present so puzzled by them that I am perfectly ready to believe I have misunderstood them from beginning to end.\u201d The next month, Frances chides John for the hasty \u201csmall scrawly writing\u201d that he has adopted because he thinks it \u201cmuch more adult\u201d: \u201cI know you &amp; I both have a certain amount of Darwin hand-clumsiness to contend with.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On November 27 of the same year, Frances told her over-developed son a home truth: \u201cSurely nobody at 15 can hope to be doing really original work?\u2026 All one can do is to react originally.\u201d She gives an example: \u201cWhen you were quite a small boy &amp; I asked you what you were thinking about &amp; you said: \u2013 \u2018Whether Cromwell was really sincere\u2019 or that you were wondering what Napoleon could have done for France if he\u2019d cared more about France than himself \u2013 these were really original reactions.\u201d But she suspects the pressure comes from the Darwin genes: \u201cI feel you are wanting something too soon. This seems to me to fit into what I wrote about the unconscious demanding-too-muchness of all of us in this family.\u201d And in this letter we learn that he is already flirting with Communism. Frances says her son is \u201ca born generous person,\u201d tolerant and forgiving to all other people. Why, she muses, is he so capable of being \u201cugly &amp; cold blooded about only criticizing destructively\u201d institutions, such as Stowe? She ends her letter: \u201cI often wonder why Communism, which means giving so much&nbsp;<em>more<\/em>&nbsp;(far more than I can envisage doing) to an institution attracts you so much?\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Six months later (10 July 1932), he presents himself to his mother as a fully-fledged revolutionary: \u201cThe need for a revolution with fighting. I think all that is needed is enough force to hold up communications \u2013 telegraph besides roads and rails \u2013 and get wireless stations and newspaper offices. Army must be managed with fairly clever moderate propaganda\u2026an election-organised party could never do it.\u201d In September, still at Stowe: \u201cI have bought myself a&nbsp;<em>Kapital<\/em>and a good deal of commentary on it\u2026 Also the&nbsp;<em>Communist Manifesto<\/em>, with which I was a little disappointed, though part of it was an extremely remarkable prophecy.\u201d The 16-year-old was capable of reading critically, arguing to his mother that Marx \u201cwent wrong in applying terms like the class struggle (which is a legitimate abbreviation of what actually happens) as the whole and simple truth.\u201d More flexible in his adherence to the party line than he was to become, he notes in this letter that Rajani Palme Dutt (1882-1957) later a leading theorist of the Communist Party of Great Britain, and for a time during Second War, its General Secretary \u201cis extraordinarily intelligent but almost equally bitter.\u201d He follows this with an announcement: \u201cI have found it a great relief to stop pretending to be an artist.\u201d How can we read this as anything but brattish pretension? Do we make a special concession for this teenager because we already know how his story will end?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When he entered Cambridge, still sixteen, Cornford instantly emerges as a strikingly mature student-journalist, with pieces such as \u201cArt and the Class-Struggle,\u201d \u201cThe Class Front of Modern Art,\u201d (which show that his wide reading included not only Pound, Eliot, Auden and Spender, but also Rilke, Proust, Thomas Mann and Hermann Hesse, Joyce, D.H. Lawrence and Louis Aragon). He also penned non-literary, increasingly doctrinaire pieces such as \u201cThe Struggle for Power in Western Europe,\u201d and the purely polemical \u201cWhat Communism Stands For,\u201d in which he rehearses all the standard&nbsp;<em>a priori&nbsp;<\/em>arguments for Communism, and then denies them in his conclusion: \u201cCommunism is not a scheme of social revolution according to an abstract scheme of what seems desirable, but according to existing realities, which are the realities of capitalism.\u201d He\u2019s self-aware, though: \u201cIf there are certain assertions without sufficient factual material behind them, that is not because Communists in general are dogmatic, but because there is not space here for a comprehensive study.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As a student-journalist Cornford got into a scrap with Julian Bell. Though both these young lives were to end in Spain, there was a curious difference in their Cambridge careers, as \u201cComrade\u201d Bell had been elected to the elite secret society, the Apostles. Though Bell went to China for a year to teach, he became more and more convinced that it was his duty to fight fascism in Spain. He described himself as a Marxist, but found most Communists had \u201ca hysterical and quite unrealistic notion about violent methods\u201d.<a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/#_ftn10\">[10]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Why were John Cornford, and his equally clever friend and house-mate, James Klugmann (for whom Cornford\u2019s son was named) not elected to the then-largely-Marxist Apostles? We know (from Klugmann\u2019s biography by Geoff Andrews,&nbsp;<em>The Shadow Man<\/em>&nbsp;[2015], in which he says that this Communist Party theoretician was involved in a little light espionage) they came to the attention of Apostles such as the Soviet spies Guy Burgess, Anthony Blunt and Alister Watson, and can be fairly confident that they knew the leftist Michael Straight and the communists Eric Hobsbawm and Hugh Sykes Davies. Both, I\u2019ve no doubt, were vetted and considered \u201cembryos,\u201d potential members. Perhaps Cornford and Klugmann\u2019s Communism was non-Apostolic, having too much in common with narrow religious faith; Cornford was thoroughly heterosexual, which would have been regarded by some Apostles as a disqualification.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In a long letter (written as a diary entry, 1-30 August 1936) to Heinemann, Cornford avers: \u201cI am beginning to find out how much the Party and the International have become flesh and blood to me. Even when I can put forward no rational argument, I feel that to cut adrift from the Party is the beginning of political suicide.\u201d This was prompted when four Spaniard soldiers left the Party because \u201cthey genuinely believe\u201d that the Communist International \u201chas deserted the revolution.\u201d While it is admirable that this twenty-year-old boy-soldier has the grace to admit that his lack of Spanish means he cannot really argue with or completely understand them, an earlier passage in this document chills: \u201cThe party was my only other love. Until I see you again, bless you my love, my strength. Be happy. I worked for the party with all my strength, and loved you as much as I was capable of.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>1 Galassi (my own publisher) originally assembled this collection of Cornford\u2019s work when he was at Cambridge himself in 1976, having made a social connection with the family.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>2&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/2011\/08\/what-i-remember-about-rupert-b.html\">http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/2011\/08\/what-i-remember-about-rupert-b.html<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>3 Galassi, p.xii, Arendt,&nbsp;<em>The New Yorker<\/em>, 20 Jan 1975<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>4&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.nybooks.com\/articles\/2010\/09\/30\/bernard-knox-1914-2010\/;\">http:\/\/www.nybooks.com\/articles\/2010\/09\/30\/bernard-knox-1914-2010\/;<\/a>&nbsp;in Stansky and Abrahams he is disguised as \u201cAndrew Knight\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>5 Galassi, xvii.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>6 There was \u201ca large contingent of Italian troops\u201d in the battle of Guadalajara, and the German Condor Legion was involved in the bombing of Guernica. Paul Preston,&nbsp;<em>The Last Days of the Spanish Republic<\/em>, 2016, pp.12-13.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>7 See Adam Hochschild,&nbsp;<em>Spain in Our Hearts: Americans in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939&nbsp;<\/em>(2016); Paul Preston,&nbsp;<em>The Last Days of the Spanish Republic<\/em>&nbsp;(2016); Jeremy Treglown,&nbsp;<em>Franco\u2019s Crypt: Spanish Culture and Memory Since 1936<\/em>&nbsp;(2014).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>8 Section 3 of his most often quoted poem written in Spain in 1936, \u201cFull Moon at Tierz: Before the Storming of Huesca.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>9 Galassi, p. 142<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>10 Stansky and Abrahams, p. 301<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Recent Posts<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\"><li><a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/04\/15\/john-cornford-collected-writings\/\">John Cornford : Collected Writings<\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"https:\/\/paullevy.com\/index.php\/2019\/01\/11\/close-cousins-to-sculpture-stephen-buckleys-work-needs-all-three-dimensions\/\">Close Cousins to Sculpture?<\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Understand the Weapon, Understand the Wound: Collected Writings Edited by Jonathan Galassi Fyfield Books, Carcanet, 238pp., $14.99 The Spanish parliament voted in September 2018 to exhume the remains of Francisco Franco, and to remove the remains of the fascist dictator from the site of the giant mausoleum at the Valley of the Fallen, near Madrid, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_genesis_hide_title":false,"_genesis_hide_breadcrumbs":false,"_genesis_hide_singular_image":false,"_genesis_hide_footer_widgets":false,"_genesis_custom_body_class":"","_genesis_custom_post_class":"","_genesis_layout":"","jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-1642","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","6":"category-uncategorized","7":"entry"},"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/pbv6zV-qu","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1642","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1642"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1642\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1722,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1642\/revisions\/1722"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1642"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1642"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/plainenglish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1642"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}