Skip to main content
Birth date
1883
Death date
1941
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 51 - 60 of 76
Title Post date Rating Comments
At Daybreak
No votes yet
0
Gifts
No votes yet
0
Under the Hedge
No votes yet
0
Hopeless Love
No votes yet
0
Joy
No votes yet
0
Difference
No votes yet
0
The Protest
No votes yet
0
Mirrors
No votes yet
0
A Charge
No votes yet
0
The Bather
No votes yet
0

Born in 1883, Max Plowman became an established journalist and poet before he joined the Territorial Field Service on Christmas Eve in 1914. He was against war, but felt it his duty to join in the service.

After receiving a concussion at Albert, near the Somme battle ground, from a nearby exploding shell, Plowman was sent back to England to recover. There, at Bowhill Auxiliary, he penned two books: "A Lap Full of Seed" (poetry), and" The Right to Life", published anonymously, a protest against war.

Firmly against the continuation of war, he wrote to the adjutant of his batillion, demanding to leave, on the grounds of his dissaproval. After being arrested and confined to his quarters, Plowman recieved a court-martial in 1918, and was, luckily for him, relieved of service, thus avoiding jail.

Plowman then joined the Peace Pledge Union, founded by Dick Shepard, of which he was secretary from 1937 to 1939. Max Plowman published his book, "A Subtalern on the Somme", in the late 1920's, under the pen name Mark VII. Plowman died in 1941, and was buried at the Langham Chuch, in Essex.