翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Roderick Ferguson
・ Roderick Finlayson
・ Roderick Firth
・ Roderick Flanagan
・ Roderick Floud
・ Roderick Flower
・ Roderick Galdes
・ Roderick Gielisse
・ Roderick Gilchrist
・ Roderick Gill
・ Roderick Glossop
・ Roderick Gordon
・ Roderick Gradidge
・ Roderick Green
・ Roderick Green (athlete)
Roderick Haig-Brown
・ Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
・ Roderick Haig-Brown Regional Prize
・ Roderick Hietbrink
・ Roderick Hood
・ Roderick Hudson
・ Roderick Hunt
・ Roderick Island
・ Roderick J. McDavis
・ Roderick Jones
・ Roderick Jones (baritone)
・ Roderick Kabwe
・ Roderick Kedward
・ Roderick Kedward (politician)
・ Roderick Kingsley


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Roderick Haig-Brown : ウィキペディア英語版
Roderick Haig-Brown

Roderick Langmere Haig-Brown (February 21, 1908 — October 9, 1976) was a Canadian writer and conservationist.
==Early life==

Haig-Brown was born in Lancing, Sussex, England. His father, Alan Haig-Brown, was a teacher and a prolific writer, the author of hundreds of articles and poems on sports, the military, and educational issues in various periodicals. His paternal grandfather, William, was headmaster of the Charterhouse School for thirty-three years. Alan was also an officer in the British Army during World War I. In 1918 he was killed in action in France. Roderick had a high regard for his father and describes him in an essay entitled “Alan Roderick Haig Brown” as “an Edwardian: one of the young, the strong, the brave and the fair who had faith in their nation, their world and themselves” (27).
His mother, Violet Mary Pope, was one of fifteen children of Alfred Pope, a wealthy Dorset brewer. After the war ended Roderick, his mother and his two sisters went to live with her family. His grandfather Pope was an industrious man with very strong Victorian values of “service, fair play, decency and acceptance of the obligations that follow with the privilege of class and education” (Robertson 6). He was a friend of Thomas Hardy and took young Roderick to tea there on at least one occasion. Roderick later noted in his essay “Hardy’s Dorset” that he regretted not having elicited more information from Hardy about being a writer, but he was sixteen then and was passionate about fishing and shooting. Life on his grandfather's country estate on the Frome River was more fascinating to him than “the past or its old men” (“Hardy’s Dorset” 43). His many uncles loved sport and taught him to fish and shoot, but it was a family friend, Major Greenhill, who served as Roderick’s sporting mentor and taught him both the skills and the ethics of sportsmanship. The estate's gamekeepers, particularly "Old Fox", introduced him to the importance of conservation and the complexity of the environment. In 1921 Roderick entered Charterhouse where his grandfather Haig-Brown had been headmaster.
His physical and social childhood environment contributed, according to biographer Anthony Robertson, to Roderick’s code of conduct. Throughout his life he adhered to an ideal balanced between reason and passion, an ideal infused with knowledge and tempered by responsibility, decency and fair play. This code “invoke() a mental and physical discipline that () beyond making a successful catch or kill; its central virtue () knowledge, intimate and thorough, transcending pursuit” (8).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Roderick Haig-Brown」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.