Ripon pays tribute to Great War poet Owen

Ripon Cathedral is to mark centenary of war poet Wilfred Owen's last birthday with readings and a pilgrimage trail.

Some of his finest finest work is to be recited in the Cathedral exactly 100 years since he spent his 25th and last birthday there.

They will be the focus of an evening service of poetry and music on Passion Sunday, March 18, at 3.30pm, which will be followed by the launch of a pilgrimage trail around the cathedral based on his life and poems.

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The trail includes the Chapel of Justice and Peace where words from his ‘pity of war’ preface to a book of poems he was intending to publish are carved in a stone tablet.

The Very Rev John Dobson, Dean of Ripon, said: “We are proud to mark the cathedral’s connection with Wilfred Owen 100 years to the day that he spent time here on his last birthday and, given the sombre nature of his work, it is very fitting that we should be doing this on Passion Sunday as we prepare for Holy Week.”

Four of his poems, all written in Ripon, will be recited from memory by Sam Gray, vice chairman of the Wilfred Owen Association, during evensong.

The association’s secretary, Yvonne Morris, will read from letters written to his mother.

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He records in a letter to his mother how he spent time sitting quietly in the cathedral on the afternoon of his birthday less than a week after being posted to an army camp in the city to regain his fitness after he had been sent back to England suffering from shell shock.

Second Lieutenant Owen lived in the camp where he did military training and exercises but he enjoyed visiting Fountains Abbey, the Roman remains at Aldborough and swimming in the Ure.

He looked for somewhere quiet to concentrate on his writing. He was interested in the tower on Howe Hill, an 18th Century folly on the site of a medieval building overlooking Fountains, but eventually settled on a cottage in Borrage Lane in Ripon.

He could have stayed on home duty indefinitely after regaining his fitness but chose to return to the front line much against the advice of his friend and fellow war poet Siegfried Sassoon who said he would “stab him in the leg” if he went back.

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His mother wrote later: “Oh, how he hated war and all its horrors but he felt he must go out and share it with his boys. His nature never changed.”

Back in France, he led units of the 2nd Manchester Regiment in storming enemy lines at Joncourt when he took over after his commander was injured, resisting a heavy counter attack and behaving, it is recorded, “most gallantly”.

On November 4 he was killed leading a unit over the Sambre-Oise Canal and awarded the Military Cross for his gallantry at Joncourt and promoted to Lieutenant shortly afterwards.

Sam Gray commented: “The Wilfred Owen Association is delighted to have been asked to participate in evensong and the launch of the pilgrimage.

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“We have recited his poems and letters at other places and Ripon is the final stop in my centenary tribute to recite all his poems in the places they were written. I have visited the cottage in Borrage Lane and have erected a blue plaque to record that he wrote there.”

It will be followed by tea, when a priest’s portable altar from the First World War brought by Mr Gray and owned by his father, will be on display. Mr Gray’s father was a priest who trained in Ripon and served in France at the same time as Wilfrid Owen.

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