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Hodgson Meets His Doom at Ypres

On this date in 1918, William Hope Hodgson met his fate in the blood-soaked, shambolic trenches of northern France, well-nigh disintegrated by a German mortar round. He was forty-one years old. England and the world lost a weird fiction author possessed of rare gifts on that spring day.

In 1916, Hodgson had been seriously injured at the front. Rather than taking the easy out, WHH rehabilitated himself and was back in France by October, 1917. There is no doubt that he held within himself deep wells of patriotism, cold courage and iron resolve. I would also speculate that he could not countenance leaving his fellow British soldiers to face the German onslaught.

World War I was the Mother of All Wasteful Wars, but losing people like Hodgson really drives the point home.

Sam Gafford runs an excellent website devoted to Hodgson. He has written a fine article commemorating WHH's final days here:

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