19 Quotes & Sayings By Vera Brittain

Vera Brittain was born in London on July 20, 1913. Her father was a doctor and her mother a social worker. She attended Somerville College, Oxford University, where she read classics and obtained a degree in English literature. Brittain was one of the few women to enlist for service during World War II and served as a Wren (the female equivalent of the Air Force) in the Royal Air Force Read more

While serving as a Wren, she wrote letters home to her parents that discussed her experiences during the war and expressed her belief that she would never marry. In 1946, she married Roland Leighton Brittain, who was twenty-five years older than she was. They had two children: Christopher and Rachel.

During their marriage, Vera and Roland were both involved in different social movements. Roland was a philosopher and activist who spent most of his life working with organizations like Amnesty International and Save The Children. Vera became increasingly involved in international efforts to end poverty and prevent war and worked with organizations like Amnesty International and Save The Children.

She also established the Vera Brittain Foundation, which has issued many books about women's issues including Women at War (1962), Life as We Have Known It (1965), A Change of Heart (1973), Life Without War (1974), Women Talking (1975), No More Silence (1979), The Long Shadow of Ill Health (1990), The Making of a Saint: A Portrait of Vera Brittain (1993) – all of which have been published by Penguin Books – as well as The Island: A Memoir of War Experience (2000). In 1976, Brittain wrote Testament of Youth: An Autobiographical Account of the Years 1914–1918, which was published by Penguin Books in 1979 . In 1995 , Warner Books published The View from Sunset Hill: A Memoir .

In 1996 , Penguin Books published All for Love: A Biography . In 2007 , Penguin Books published Blood Red Roses: A Memoir

How fortunate we were who still had hope I did...
1
How fortunate we were who still had hope I did not then realise; I could not know how soon the time would come when we should have no more hope, and yet be unable to die Vera Brittain
2
Perhaps .. To R.A.L.Perhaps some day the sun will shine again, And I shall see that still the skies are blue, And feel one more I do not live in vain, Although bereft of you. Perhaps the golden meadows at my feet, Will make the sunny hours of spring seem gay, And I shall find the white May-blossoms sweet, Though You have passed away. Perhaps the summer woods will shimmer bright, And crimson roses once again be fair, And autumn harvest fields a rich delight, Although You are not there. But though kind Time may many joys renew, There is one greatest joy I shall not know Again, because my heart for loss of YouWas broken, long ago. Vera Brittain
3
Only, I felt, by some such attempt to write history in terms of personal life could I rescue something that might be of value, some element of truth and hope and usefulness, from the smashing up of my own youth by the war. Vera Brittain
4
When the sound of victorious guns burst over London at 11 a.m. on November 11th, 1918, the men and women who looked incredulously into each other's faces did not cry jubilantly: " We've won the war! " They only said: " The War is over. Vera Brittain
5
It is, I think, this glamour, this magic, this incomparable keying up of the spirit in a time of mortal conflict, which constitute the pacifist's real problem--a problem still incompletely imagined and still quite unsolved. The causes of war are always falsely represented; its honour is dishonest and its glory meretricious, but the challenge to spiritual endurance, the intense sharpening of all the senses, the vitalising consciousness of common peril for a common end, remain to allure those boys and girls who have just reached the age when love and friendship and adventure call more persistently than at any later time. The glamour may be the mere delirium of fever, which as soon as war is over dies out and shows itself for the will-o'-the-wisp that it is, but while it lasts, no emotion known to man seems as yet to have quite the compelling power of this enlarged vitality. Vera Brittain
When the Great War broke out, it came to me...
6
When the Great War broke out, it came to me not as a superlative tragedy, but as an interruption of the most exasperating kind to my personal plans. Vera Brittain
7
I found it not inappropriate that the years of frustration and grief and loss, of work and conflict and painful resurrection, should have led me through their dark and devious ways to this new beginning. Vera Brittain
I joined the Pass Mods. class and studied the cyropaedia...
8
I joined the Pass Mods. class and studied the cyropaedia and Livy's Wars with a resentful feeling that there was quite enough war in the world without having to read about it in Latin Vera Brittain
9
...if only the comfortable prosperity of the Victorian age hadn't lulled us into a false conviction of individual security and made us believe that what was going on outside our homes didn't matter to us, the Great War might never have happened. Vera Brittain
10
The fact that, within ten years, I lost one world, and after a time rose again, as it were, from spiritual death to find another, seems to me one of the strongest arguments against suicide that life can provide. There may not be - I believe that there is not - resurrection after death, but nothing could prove more conclusively than my own brief but eventful history the fact that resurrection is possible within our limited span of earthly time. Vera Brittain
11
Tired as I was of conflict, I felt that I must not shrink from the fight, nor abandon in cowardice the attempt to prove, as no theories could ever satisfactorily prove without examples, that marriage and motherhood need never tame the mind, nor swamp and undermine ability and training, nor trammel and domesticise political perception and social judgement. Today, as never before, it was urgent for individual women to show that life was enriched, mentally and spiritually as well as physically and socially, by marriage and children; that these experiences rendered the woman who accepted them the more and not the less able to take the world's pulse, to estimate its tendencies, to play some definite, hard-headed, hard-working part in furthering the constructive ends of a political civilisation . Vera Brittain
12
That's the worst of sorrow .. . it's always a vicious circle. It makes one tense and hard and disagreeable, and this means that one repels and antagonises people, and then they dislike and avoid one--and that means more isolation and still more sorrow. Vera Brittain
13
People talked so foolishly, I thought, about the ennobling effects of suffering. No doubt the philosophy that tells you your soul grows through grief and sorrow is right--ultimately. But I don't think this is the case at first. At first, pain beyond a certain point merely makes you lifeless, and apathetic to everything but itself. Vera Brittain
14
I am less blindly confident than I once was, for I have been learning a truer estimate of myself, my failings and limitations, in these dark days. I have learnt to hope that if there be a Judgment Day of some kind, God will not see us with our own eyes, nor judge us as we judge ourselves. Vera Brittain
15
Why, I wondered, do people who at one time or another have all been young themselves, who ought therefore to know better, generalize so suavely and so mendaciously about the golden hours of youth--that period of life when every sorrow seems permanent and every setback insuperable? Vera Brittain
16
When I was a girl . I imagined that life was individual, one's own affair; that the events happening in the world outside were important enough in their own way, but were personally quite irrelevant. Now, like the rest of my generation, I have had to learn again and again the terrible truth . . that no life is really private, or isolated, or self-sufficient. People's lives were entirely their own, perhaps--and more justifiably--when the world seemed enormous, and all its comings and goings were slow and deliberate. But this is so no longer, and never will be again, since man's inventions have eliminated so much of distance and time; for better, for worse, we are now each of us part of the surge and swell of great economic and political movements, and whatever we do, as individuals or as nations, deeply affects everyone else. Vera Brittain
17
However deep our devotion may be to parents or to children it is our contemporaries alone with whom understanding is instinctive and entire. Vera Brittain
18
I know one husband and wife who, whatever the official reasons given to the court for the break up of their marriage, were really divorced because the husband believed that nobody ought to read while he was talking and the wife that nobody ought to talk while she was reading. Vera Brittain