315:
I am confident that if a man surrenders his conscience to his idea of community, or to his Fuhrer, it doesn't must matter whether he calls himself
Communist or Fascist-he has foresworn the element in himself which alone can keep society human. And for want of that element, society must and will
247:. Plowman later got to know Orwell better through Mabel Fierz. Orwell described Plowman as "pugnacious", and although one writer has suggested that Orwell was still in agreement with Plowman's pacifism in early 1938, another has pointed out that Orwell supported the
311:. He was the first General Secretary of the Peace Pledge Union 1937–1938. Murry, to whom Plowman was now close, became a pacifist after a diversion into communism. Plowman emphasised the importance of the individual conscience in an age of totalitarianism:
105:, inveighing against the kind of society that made war inevitable. Having been granted a further month's home service in January 1918, he wrote to his battalion adjutant asking to be relieved of his commission on the grounds of religious
186:, 1927–30); Rees edited it from 1930 to 1936, when he withdrew on account of Murry's commitment to pacifism, which increasingly became the magazine's theme; Murry resumed editorship until 1938, when Plowman took on the role.
270:
bought by
Middleton Murry. Short-lived in its original conception, it ran a Summer School in August 1936 that was stellar: Orwell spoke on "An Outsider Sees the Distressed Areas" on 4 August, with
320:
Plowman was a member of the "Forethought
Committee" in the PPU, which emphasised rural community living and humanitarian service as a means of coping with the war; other members included Murry,
293:
Through it he also met the pacifist dramatist
Richard Heron Ward, who from 1936 became a close friend. Ward formed the 'Adelphi Players' in 1941, who used the Adelphi Centre for rehearsals.
119:. Having been dismissed from the Army, albeit without punishment, he was on 29 June 1918 served with notice of call-up as a conscript, but successfully applied to Hampstead
426:
57:
Plowman felt morally opposed to the fighting – "insane and unmitigated filth" – but on
Christmas Eve 1914 he reluctantly volunteered for enlistment in the
50:. He left school at 16, and worked for a decade in his father's brick business. He became a journalist and poet. In 1914 he married Dorothy Lloyd Sulman.
725:
278:, Grace Rogers, J. Hampden Jackson, N. A. Holdaway (a Marxist theorist and schoolmaster, and a Director of the Centre), Geoffrey Sainsbury,
251:
in Spain and "was often rude about pacifists he had good friends who were pacifists". Later that year
Plowman introduced Orwell to
836:
143:
798:
147:
461:
559:
58:
263:
765:
722:
625:(ed.) Orwell's essays, journalism and letters, in letter to Peace Pledge Union, 4 December 1995, PPU Archives
173:
308:
841:
243:
an article. Plowman sent Orwell books to review, founding an important friendship; and Rees was Orwell's
74:
39:
831:
287:
622:
120:
846:
191:
62:
223:
106:
634:
548:
124:
248:
198:
worked for it as circulation promoter and assistant editor in the 1930s. In addition to the
826:
821:
793:
784:
169:
789:
780:
255:, and set up a secret gift of £300 from Myers so that Orwell and his wife could travel to
8:
650:
301:
271:
178:
138:. It was in response to a request in a letter from Plowman that Sassoon campaigned for
66:
761:
244:
94:
296:
By 1937 the commune had collapsed, and the house, 'The Oaks', was turned over to 64
431:
329:
279:
113:
on 5 April 1918 for refusing to return to his unit, his trial being covered in the
443:
806:
729:
321:
86:
54:
435:
267:
228:
139:
65:, 4th Field Ambulance. He later accepted a commission in the 10th Battalion,
815:
325:
297:
236:
115:
110:
82:
70:
182:
as a socialist monthly; Murry had founded it in 1923 as a literary journal (
283:
275:
90:
89:, although he did not meet either of Rivers' two most celebrated patients,
77:, he suffered concussion from an exploding shell. Deemed to be affected by
537:
790:
Report at the first Annual
General Meeting of the Peace Pledge Union 1938
702:
Theatres of
Conscience 1939–53: A Study of Four Touring British Community
307:
Plowman was attracted into organising for pacifism in the later 1930s by
204:
195:
78:
262:
Plowman co-founded in 1934 and ran the
Adelphi Centre. It was an early
210:
400:, Peace & Change, Volume 27 Issue 1, January 2002, pp. 20–36
252:
47:
43:
316:
inevitably grow more and more barbarous. You can see it happening.
81:, he was sent home to convalesce at Bowhill Auxiliary, a branch of
27:
256:
549:
Peter
Sedgwick: George Orwell – International Socialist? (1969)
758:
Pacifism in Britain, 1914–1945 : The Defining of a Faith
26:, (1 September 1883 – 3 June 1941) was a British writer and
487:
A War of Individuals: Bloomsbury Attitudes to the Great War
157:
was published in 1928, under the pseudonym "Mark VII".
651:
First World War.com – Prose & Poetry – Max Plowman
474:
The Richest Vein: Eastern Tradition And Modern Thought
405:
Max Plowman and the Literature of the First World War
97:. While recovering, he produced a poetry collection,
743:, February 5th, 1938.Reprinted in "Ten Years Ago",
380:(1944) collected letters, edited by Dorothy Plowman
130:In July 1918 Plowman gave a positive review in the
407:, Cambridge Quarterly (2004); 33: pp. 217–243
134:to Siegfried Sassoon's anti-war poetry collection
663:Utopian England: Community Experiments, 1900–1945
424:Storey, Richard A. "Plowman, Mark (1883–1941)".
813:
462:AIM25: University College London: Plowman Papers
578:, Volume 27 Issue 1, January 2002, pp. 20–36 .
500:Bridge into the Future, Letters of Max Plowman
392:Bridge into the Future, Letters of Max Plowman
274:in the chair. Other speakers were Steve Shaw,
676:George Orwell: A Kind of Compulsion 1903–1936
430:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
689:The Adelphi Players: The Theatre of Persons
300:refugee children under the auspices of the
202:, Plowman also wrote for the publications
109:to all war. He was arrested and tried by
760:. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1980.
427:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
390:Dorothy Lloyd Plowman (editor) (1944),
814:
69:, and serving at Albert, close to the
747:, No. 606. February 6th, 1948 (p.4).
587:Peter Stansky and William Abrahams,
457:
455:
453:
783:Max Plowman Pamphlet (1936) at the
13:
423:
360:Introduction to the Study of Blake
14:
858:
774:
723:Langham Basque Colony, Colchester
450:
560:Archives Hub: Jack Common Papers
837:British conscientious objectors
750:
734:
716:
707:
694:
681:
668:
655:
644:
628:
616:
607:
594:
581:
564:
553:
33:
542:
531:
518:
505:
492:
479:
466:
417:
259:, to restore Orwell's health.
160:
148:December 1918 General Election
1:
384:
190:was closely aligned with the
101:, and an anonymous pamphlet,
792:Max Plowman Pamphlet at the
444:UK public library membership
354:War and the Creative Impulse
309:Hugh Richard Lawrie Sheppard
304:; they remained until 1939.
7:
526:Siegfried Sassoon 1918–1967
513:Siegfried Sassoon 1886–1918
16:British writer and pacifist
10:
863:
807:Page on the Adelphi Centre
502:, Dakers, 1944, pp 125-130
85:, where he was treated by
53:From the beginning of the
781:Should A Christian Fight?
700:Peter Billingham (2002),
372:The Faith Called Pacifism
350:(1917) anonymous pamphlet
121:Military Service Tribunal
728:22 December 2007 at the
674:Peter Davison (editor),
411:
366:A Subaltern on the Somme
335:
192:Independent Labour Party
155:A Subaltern on the Somme
63:Royal Army Medical Corps
524:Jean Moorcroft Wilson,
511:Jean Moorcroft Wilson,
168:In 1930 Plowman joined
107:conscientious objection
687:Cecil William Davies,
572:Max Plowman's Pacifism
498:Dorothy Plowman (Ed),
436:10.1093/ref:odnb/39714
398:Max Plowman's Pacifism
378:Bridge into the Future
318:
290:, Plowman and Common.
153:His memoir of the war
125:conscientious objector
313:
266:, based on a farm in
249:International Brigade
22:, generally known as
794:Peace Palace Library
785:Peace Palace Library
170:John Middleton Murry
123:for exemption as a
40:Northumberland Park
842:English socialists
641:(2003), pp. 240–2.
589:The Unknown Orwell
538:Magazine Data File
368:(1928) as Mark VII
342:A Lap Full of Seed
302:Peace Pledge Union
272:Rayner Heppenstall
99:A Lap Full of Seed
67:Yorkshire Regiment
832:British pacifists
442:(Subscription or
403:Malcolm Pittock,
348:The Right to Live
332:and Mary Gamble.
245:literary executor
216:Twentieth Century
103:The Right to Live
95:Siegfried Sassoon
854:
769:
756:Martin Ceadel,
754:
748:
738:
732:
720:
714:
711:
705:
698:
692:
685:
679:
672:
666:
659:
653:
648:
642:
632:
626:
620:
614:
611:
605:
600:Jeffrey Meyers,
598:
592:
585:
579:
576:Peace and Change
570:Mike Tyldesley,
568:
562:
557:
551:
546:
540:
535:
529:
522:
516:
509:
503:
496:
490:
485:Jonathan Atkin,
483:
477:
470:
464:
459:
448:
447:
439:
421:
396:Mike Tyldesley,
280:Reinhold Niebuhr
59:Territorial Army
862:
861:
857:
856:
855:
853:
852:
851:
847:English writers
812:
811:
777:
772:
755:
751:
739:
735:
730:Wayback Machine
721:
717:
712:
708:
704:(2002), p. 143.
699:
695:
691:(2002), p. xvi.
686:
682:
678:(1998), p. 493.
673:
669:
660:
656:
649:
645:
633:
629:
621:
617:
612:
608:
599:
595:
591:(1972), p. 224.
586:
582:
569:
565:
558:
554:
547:
543:
536:
532:
523:
519:
515:(1998), p. 467.
510:
506:
497:
493:
489:(2002), p. 108.
484:
480:
476:(2005), p. 128.
471:
467:
460:
451:
441:
422:
418:
414:
387:
338:
322:Wilfred Wellock
241:The New Adelphi
184:The New Adelphi
166:
87:W. H. R. Rivers
55:First World War
38:He was born in
36:
17:
12:
11:
5:
860:
850:
849:
844:
839:
834:
829:
824:
810:
809:
804:
796:
787:
776:
775:External links
773:
771:
770:
749:
733:
715:
706:
693:
680:
667:
665:(2002), p. 42.
661:Dennis Hardy,
654:
643:
627:
615:
613:Meyers, p. 181
606:
604:(2000), p. 93.
593:
580:
563:
552:
541:
530:
528:(2003), p. 30.
517:
504:
491:
478:
465:
449:
415:
413:
410:
409:
408:
401:
394:
386:
383:
382:
381:
375:
369:
363:
357:
351:
345:
337:
334:
268:Langham, Essex
229:The Aryan Path
176:in developing
165:
159:
140:Philip Snowden
136:Counter-Attack
35:
32:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
859:
848:
845:
843:
840:
838:
835:
833:
830:
828:
825:
823:
820:
819:
817:
808:
805:
803:
801:
797:
795:
791:
788:
786:
782:
779:
778:
767:
763:
759:
753:
746:
742:
737:
731:
727:
724:
719:
713:Davies, p. 3.
710:
703:
697:
690:
684:
677:
671:
664:
658:
652:
647:
640:
639:George Orwell
636:
635:Gordon Bowker
631:
624:
623:Peter Davison
619:
610:
603:
597:
590:
584:
577:
573:
567:
561:
556:
550:
545:
539:
534:
527:
521:
514:
508:
501:
495:
488:
482:
475:
469:
463:
458:
456:
454:
445:
437:
433:
429:
428:
420:
416:
406:
402:
399:
395:
393:
389:
388:
379:
376:
373:
370:
367:
364:
361:
358:
355:
352:
349:
346:
343:
340:
339:
333:
331:
330:Charles Raven
327:
326:Vera Brittain
323:
317:
312:
310:
305:
303:
299:
294:
291:
289:
288:John Strachey
285:
281:
277:
273:
269:
265:
260:
258:
254:
250:
246:
242:
238:
237:George Orwell
233:
231:
230:
225:
221:
217:
213:
212:
207:
206:
201:
197:
193:
189:
185:
181:
180:
175:
171:
164:
158:
156:
151:
149:
145:
141:
137:
133:
132:Labour Leader
128:
126:
122:
118:
117:
116:Labour Leader
112:
111:court martial
108:
104:
100:
96:
92:
88:
84:
83:Craiglockhart
80:
76:
75:Western Front
72:
68:
64:
60:
56:
51:
49:
45:
41:
31:
29:
25:
21:
799:
768:(pp.295–96).
757:
752:
744:
740:
736:
718:
709:
701:
696:
688:
683:
675:
670:
662:
657:
646:
638:
630:
618:
609:
601:
596:
588:
583:
575:
571:
566:
555:
544:
533:
525:
520:
512:
507:
499:
494:
486:
481:
473:
468:
425:
419:
404:
397:
391:
377:
371:
365:
359:
353:
347:
344:(1917) poems
341:
319:
314:
306:
295:
292:
284:Karl Polanyi
276:Herbert Read
261:
240:
234:
227:
224:Theosophical
220:Now and Then
219:
215:
209:
203:
199:
187:
183:
177:
174:Richard Rees
167:
162:
154:
152:
135:
131:
129:
114:
102:
98:
91:Wilfred Owen
52:
37:
34:Life to 1918
23:
20:Mark Plowman
19:
18:
827:1941 deaths
822:1883 births
472:Gai Eaton,
205:The New Age
196:Jack Common
188:The Adelphi
179:The Adelphi
79:shell shock
24:Max Plowman
816:Categories
800:Sassoonery
766:0198218826
745:Peace News
741:Peace News
446:required.)
385:References
211:Peace News
253:Leo Myers
239:had sent
226:journal
146:, in the
144:Blackburn
48:Middlesex
44:Tottenham
726:Archived
328:, Canon
235:In 1929
222:and the
28:pacifist
264:commune
257:Morocco
163:Adelphi
73:on the
764:
602:Orwell
440:
374:(1936)
362:(1927)
356:(1919)
298:Basque
200:Alephi
412:Notes
336:Works
71:Somme
802:page
762:ISBN
172:and
161:The
93:and
432:doi
142:in
818::
637:,
574:,
452:^
324:,
286:,
282:,
232:.
218:,
214:,
208:,
194:;
150:.
127:.
61:,
46:,
42:,
30:.
438:.
434::
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.