Roland Aubrey Leighton (27 March 1895 – 23 December 1915), was a British poet and soldier, immortalised in
Vera Brittain's memoir,
Testament of Youth.
His parents, Robert Leighton and Marie Connor, were both writers. Leighton was a pupil at
Uppingham School, where he became a close friend of Vera Brittain's brother, Edward. Leaving Uppingham in July 1914, Roland was awarded the
Classical Postmastership at
Merton College, Oxford but the War broke out before he took his place. He obtained a
commission in the
Norfolk Regiment and served with the
Worcestershire Regiment in France. He died of wounds on 23 December 1915 at the age of twenty (although his gravestone incorrectly states that he was 19), having been shot by a sniper through the stomach while inspecting wire in front of a trench, and is buried in the
military cemetery at
Louvencourt, near
Doullens,
France. Although Leighton never took up his place at Merton College, his name is on the war memorial there.
Vera Brittain, who had accepted his proposal of marriage four months before his death, was to portray him, and quote some of his work, in her writing at the time, and later in
Testament of Youth; many of Leighton's letters are included in
Letters from a Lost Generation, a compilation of her wartime letters, edited by Alan Bishop and
Mark Bostridge, that was published in 1998. His mother anonymously published a memoir of him called
Boy of My Heart in 1916.
In the 1979 TV adaptation of
Testament of Youth, Roland was...
Read More