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词条 Ronald Arthur Hopwood
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Military career

  3. Later work

  4. The Laws of the Navy

     First and last stanzas  Mis-attributed stanzas 

  5. Secret Orders

  6. Personal life

  7. Published works

  8. Notes

  9. References

  10. Bibliography

     Books  Newspapers and magazines  Journals  Web 

  11. External links

{{Infobox military person
|honorific_prefix=
|name = Ronald Arthur Hopwood
|honorific_suffix= CB
|native_name =
|native_name_lang=
|image =
|caption =
|birth_date = {{Birth date|1868|12|07|df=yes}}
|death_date = {{Death date and age|1949|12|28|1868|12|07|df=yes}}
|birth_place = London, England
|death_place = London, England
|placeofburial=
|placeofburial_label=
|placeofburial_coordinates=
|nickname =
|birth_name =
|allegiance ={{flag|United Kingdom}}
|branch ={{navy|United Kingdom}}
|serviceyears=1882–1919
|rank =Rear admiral
|servicenumber=
|unit =
|commands = {{Plainlist|
  • {{HMS|Grafton|1892|6}}
  • {{HMS|Revenge|1892|6}}
  • {{HMS|Gibraltar|1892|6}}

}}
|battles = First World War
|battles_label=
|awards = Companion of the Order of the Bath
|relations =
|laterwork = Poet, lecturer, author
|signature = HopwoodSignature.jpg
|signature_size = 250px
}}

Rear Admiral Ronald Arthur Hopwood, CB (1868–1949) was a British naval officer and poet. He began his career in 1882 with the Royal Navy as a gunnery officer, completed it in 1919 as a rear admiral, and was acclaimed in 1941 as poet laureate of the Royal Navy by Time.[1] As an author, Admiral Hopwood's first work was his poem The Laws of the Navy, published in 1896[2] when he was a lieutenant. With its good-natured military advice making it popular within both the Royal and U.S. navies,[3] Time gives it "precedence among Navy men even over Kipling's If" and goes on to quote Hopwood's new poem Secret Orders in its entirety.[1] The last lines of Secret Orders, written in appreciation of the Destroyers for Bases Agreement (a predecessor to Lend Lease), harken to the Second World War bond between the two navies.

Early life

Hopwood was born on 7 December 1868 as the third son of John Turner Hopwood and he was educated at Cheam School.[3]

Military career

Hopwood entered the Royal Navy on board {{HMS|Prince of Wales|1860|6}} as a naval cadet in 1882, and became a lieutenant in 1890. After serving in the gunboat {{HMS|Sparrow|1889|2}} on the Cape and West Africa Station, he joined {{HMS|Excellent|shore establishment|6}} in 1891 to specialize in gunnery, and on qualifying in 1893 was appointed to the junior staff in the HM Gunnery School, HMNB Devonport. He was gunnery officer of the cruiser {{HMS|Blake|1889|2}} in the English Channel, and then from 27 March 1900 he was 1st and gunnery lieutenant of the battleship {{HMS|Goliath|1898|2}} on her first commission, to the China station.[4] Hopwood returned to the Gunnery School, joining the senior staff.[3]

Promoted to commander on 26 June 1902,[5] he was second-in-command of {{HMS|Glory|1899|6}}, flagship in China, and later of the cruiser {{HMS|Duke of Edinburgh||2}}. He advanced to captain in 1907. After commanding {{HMS|Grafton|1892|2}} and {{HMS|Revenge|1892|2}}, he reattached to {{HMS|Excellent|shore establishment|6}} in charge of gunnery training ships. Hopwood was flag captain from 1910 to 1912 to Vice-Admiral Jellicoe in {{HMS|Prince of Wales|1902|2}} and {{HMS|Hercules|1910|2}}. From 1913 until after the start of the First World War in 1914, Hopwood commanded the cruiser {{HMS|Gibraltar|1892|2}}. He was appointed in December 1914, to membership in the Ordnance Committee, becoming its vice-president in 1917. He served as such until January 1919, when he retired on promotion to rear admiral.[3]

Later work

He was made a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) on 1 January 1919.{{#Tag:Ref|HOPWOOD Ronald A N/E Captain RN 86V168—Vice President Ordnance Committee N/E 01.01.19 Gazetted—Admiralty CB(C)—For services as Vice President Ordnance Committee, Admiralty.[7]|group=upper-alpha}} From 1919 to 1922 he was general secretary of the Navy League, the charity that supported the Royal Navy and the oldest such organization worldwide. His subsequent advancements to vice-admiral in 1924 and admiral in 1928 were on the retired list.[3]

Late in his military career, Admiral Hopwood wrote Our Fathers,{{#Tag:Ref|Appearing in the Naval and Military Record, 15 October 1913.[7]|group=upper-alpha}} The Old Way,{{#Tag:Ref|Appearing in Times (London), 16 September 1916.[7]|group=upper-alpha}} as well as The Secret of the Ships, and The New Navy, "all of which were steeped in the tradition of the Service."[3] Thirty nine of Hopwood's poems, including Secret Orders, are collected in The Laws of the Navy and Other Poems, an expanded edition published in 1951.[8] In his foreword, Alfred Noyes, acclaimed The Laws... as a book

of permanent value to our literature; and there is no other book of sea poetry quite like it. Ships and the ocean-sea are the main burden throughout. The manner is of the author's own generation, and the matter is timeless. Steeped in the history of the British Navy through the centuries, they speak of something which may be called, quite simply, the soul of England, something that has saved her from a thousand perils in the past and is her only safeguard for the future.

—Alfred Noyes
C.B.E, D.Litt[9]

Of less renown, Hopwood was an authority on Horatio Nelson's ships. On 21 October 1925, 120 years after the Battle of Trafalgar, Hopwood appeared before the Royal United Services Institution to lecture on "The Ancestry of Nelson's Ships."[10]{{#Tag:Ref|Vice Admiral Hopwood's introduction was an "inside-the-navy joke." Hopwood was introduced by Vice-Chairman H. H. Bruce with these words: "Ladies and Gentlemen, it is my pleasing duty to introduce to you the lecturer, Admiral Hopwood, who is known in the Navy and elsewhere as a deep student of Naval History and Naval Law. One of his works "The Laws of the Navy" is a Naval Classic." Emphasis added. Admiral Sir Henry Harvey Bruce, KCB, MVO, knew well Hopwood's Naval Law.[10]|group=upper-alpha}} In 1921, he wrote an article entitled The Saving Grace that appeared in The Quarterly Review 467. Hopwood wrote strongly of this opinion:

The only criticism of a ship which I have never heard questioned, is that she is a compromise. That is to say, no ship has ever been endowed with the speed, armament, protection, range of action, etc., which the particular specialist admitted to be in accordance with his ideals. It follows that there are sufficient joints in her harness to offer targets enough to provide for the efforts of the most prolific inventor.
—Ronald A. Hopwood[11]

The Laws of the Navy

The 23 July 1896 issue of the British Army and Navy Gazette presented a poem that was destined to become one of the Naval World's literary classics. Hopwood's work, entitled The Laws of the Navy, set forth what might safely be termed the "wisdom of the ages" for all who seek to make their way in large, hierarchical organizations, with special emphasis on the seagoing versions. During the Great War era, Lieutenant Rowland Langmaid, R.N.,{{#Tag:Ref|Rowland Langmaid joined the RN in 1910 and after service in the War retired in 1922 to paint professionally. He re-joined in 1939 as an official war artist.|group=upper-alpha}} made a series of drawings to accompany the poem, which was published in the version illustrated here.[2] The writer Eeyore Smith in The Naval Review remarked "that The Laws of the Navy has had a considerable influence upon the careers of many naval officers who have served during the last half century. The commonsense, the mild cynicism ("there be those who have risen thereby"), the jingling metre, accentuated by the illustrations of [Langmaid],{{#Tag:Ref|Smith mis-wrote and credited the illustrations to W L Wyllie. Wyllie had collaborated with Hopwood to produce a similar set of graphics and poetry for Hopwood's Our Fathers.|group=upper-alpha}} have left their marks upon the memories of those who have come across the twin frames which hang upon the bulkheads and walls of ships and naval establishments."[12]

By the mid-1920s, the virtues of The Laws of the Navy crossed from the Royal Navy and penetrated the consciousness of the United States Navy. The poem began to appear in the U.S. Naval Academy's Reef Points, a handbook presented to freshmen (called "Plebes") for their edification and guidance. It has been featured in the annual editions of this publication to the present day, and many a former Plebe can recite its words by heart, having been made to memorize them as an essential part of the educational process.[2]

Starting in the early 1970s, Reef Points provided a brief introduction to The Laws of the Navy, which is quoted here (as printed in the 1998–1999 edition):

As a word of advice, we include 'The Laws of the Navy' by Admiral R.A. Hopwood, R.N.(ret.). These twenty-seven laws contain words of wisdom that few of you will appreciate fully now, words which you may wish you had heeded twenty years from now. Read these laws, then apply them. See how those above you apply these rules--and how they sometimes disregard them--and the consequences. Be alert to learn from others; only through experience will your understanding of others broaden. You will become a richer and fuller person, a better naval officer.[2]

First and last stanzas

The Laws of the Navy
To My Comrades in the Service

Now these are Laws of the Navy,

Unwritten and varied they be;

And he that is wise will observe them,

Going down in his ship to the sea;

...

As the wave rises clear to the hawse pipe,

Washes aft, and is lost in the wake,

So shall ye drop astern all unheeded,

Such time as the law ye forsake.[13]

Mis-attributed stanzas

Two stanzas are often quoted[7] that are not part of Langmaid's art or Hopwood's poetry.[2][13] They appear at the end, set-off with Hopwood's last stanza as the moral to the poem.

Take heed in your manner of speaking

That the language ye use may be sound,

In the list of the words of your choosing

"Impossible" may not be found.

Now these are the Laws of the Navy

And many and mighty are they,

But the hull and the deck and keel

And the truck of the law is - OBEY!

While their appendage is an unsourced tribute to Hopwood's appeal, their meter is not quite Hopwood's.

Secret Orders

The title of the 1941 Time article ("World War: Debutantes Celebrated") is unusual for a discussion of the Second World War. Its inspiration comes from the metaphor in the fifth stanza of "Secret Orders":

That even while Goering was spinning his webs,

Ere Goebbels consigned the flotilla to flames,

As trim and excited as so many debs

The fifty were bound for the Court of St. James,

Displaying the emblems that none can mistake

Their feathers—of steam, and the trains—in their wake.[1]

The fifty are the fifty retired ("mothballed") destroyers transferred from the U.S. Navy to Great Britain in exchange for land rights on British possessions (i.e. the destroyers-for-bases agreement). The destroyers became the Town class, and were renamed for cities common to both the United States and Great Britain, or for rivers bordering the United States and Canada.[14]

While the U.S. Navy considered the destroyers obsolescent, British naval officers were publicly "agreeably surprised" at their good condition as they debuted in the Royal Navy.[8]{{#Tag:Ref|"These ships are not only very practical symbols of American sympathy, but their good condition has been a most agreeable surprise to the British naval officers who took charge of them."[15]|group=upper-alpha}} Though the fifty in truth were not much liked by their new crews,[14] Hopwood was moved to poetry by the image of old ships returning to duty:

When orders arrive, irrespective of man,

To waken for service as fast as [they] can!

...

The mothers of pilgrims brought up over there

Are waiting with pride to convey them to Court,

As daughters of Freedom presenting their claim

To champion her cause in the family name![1]

Personal life

On 26 June 1915, Hopwood married Gladys Wolryche-Whitmore[16]{{#Tag:Ref|References disagree about surviving family members. One[3] has Mrs. Hopwood surviving. Another says Gladys Hopwood died 28 November 1949, predeceasing her husband by exactly one month.[16]|group=upper-alpha}} of Thedden Grange, Alton, Hampshire, England. They had two daughters.[3]

A keen sailor, his love of his profession was one of the dominating factors of his life, and, as is well known, it found expression in the many memorable poems he wrote about the Navy, of which perhaps The Laws of the Navy, Our Fathers, and The Old Way are the best known. ...After his retirement, and as long as his health allowed he took a keen interest in many naval institutions, among them being the Queen Adelaide Naval Fund,{{#Tag:Ref|For the relief of Orphan Daughters of Naval and Marine Officers[17]|group=upper-alpha}} the Royal Humane Society, the Royal Sailors' Daughters' School and Home[18]{{#Tag:Ref|Originally the Sailor’s Orphan Girls’ School and Home, it was later renamed as the Royal Sailors’ Daughters’ School and Home. In Hampstead since 1862, now defunct.[18]|group=upper-alpha}} at Hampstead, and the Chelsea Branch of the R.N.L.I.

—Admiral Sir Richard Webb, RN
KCMG, CB[19]

Hopwood has two portraits in the National Portrait Gallery, London, by Walter Stoneman.[20]

Published works

  • {{cite book |url=https://archive.org/stream/oldwayotherpoems00hopwiala#page//n5/mode/2up |title=The Old Way and Other Poems |location=London |publisher=John Murray |year=1916 |accessdate= 17 May 2012}} at Internet Archive
  • The Muse in Arms [https://archive.org/details/museinarmscollec00osbouoft The Muse in Arms - a collection of war poems, for the most part written in the field of action (1917)] (Internet Archive)
  • {{cite book |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= The Laws of the Navy and Other Poems |publisher= John Murray |series= |volume= |edition= |year= 1919 |location= London |pages= |url= http://www.inquirewithin.biz/laws/lawsindex.htm |doi= |id= |isbn= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= |accessdate= 17 May 2012}}
  • {{cite book |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= The New Navy and Other Poems |publisher= John Murray |series= |volume= |edition= |year= 1919 |location= London |pages= |url= http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/008960202|doi= |id= |isbn= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= |accessdate= 9 September 2013}}
  • {{cite book |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= The Secret of the Ships |publisher= John Murray |series= |volume= |edition= |year= 1918 |location= London |pages= |url= https://books.google.com/books/about/The_secret_of_the_ships.html?id=L_oqAAAAYAAJ |doi= |id= |isbn= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= |accessdate= 17 May 2012}}

Notes

1. ^{{cite news |publisher=Time |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,765140,00.html |title= World War: Debutantes Celebrated |date= 6 January 1941 |accessdate= 19 May 2012}}
2. ^US Naval History & Heritage Command (2005).
3. ^Times (London, 1950).
4. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Naval & Military intelligence|day_of_week=Wednesday |date=7 March 1900 |page_number=10 |issue=36083| }}
5. ^{{London Gazette |issue=27448 |supp=y |date=26 June 1902 |page=4198}}
6. ^The Hopwood-Sims Letter, p. 1.
7. ^{{Cite web |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= Rear Admiral Ronald Arthur Hopwood |year= 2009 |url= http://www.worldnavalships.com/forums/showthread.php?t=5219 |publisher=World Naval Ships Forums}}
8. ^Mayes, John (2009).
9. ^{{Citation |last= Noyes |first= Alfred |author-link= Alfred Noyes |title= The Laws of the Navy... |year= 1951 |chapter= Foreword}}
10. ^{{cite journal|title=The Ancestry of Nelson's Ships |journal= Journal of the Royal United Service Institution |year= 1925 |volume= 70 |issue= 480}}
11. ^{{Citation |last= Hopwood |first= Ronald A. |author-link= |last2= |first2= |author2-link= |title= The Saving Grace |journal= The Quarterly Review |volume= 467 |issue= |pages= 225 |year= 1921 |origyear= |month= |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=puQxAQAAMAAJ&q=never+heard+questioned#v=snippet&q=never%20heard%20questioned&f=false |jstor= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |doi= |id= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= }}
12. ^{{cite journal |last= Smith |first= Eeyore |title=The Laws of the Navy and Other Poems|journal= The Naval Review |volume= 39 |issue= 4 |page= 448 |year= 1951}}
13. ^{{cite book |last= Hopwood |first= Ronald A. |title= The Old Way... |year= 1916}}
14. ^{{cite book | last =Snow | first =Richard | title =A Measureless Peril: America in the Fight for the Atlantic, the Longest Battle of World War II | publisher =Scribner | year = 2010 | location =New York, London, Toronto, Sydney | pages = 96 | isbn =978-1-4165-9110-8 }}
15. ^Daily Telegraph, 15 October 1940. Quoted in Mayes
16. ^{{cite web |title= Adm Ronald Arthur Hopwood |publisher= The Douglas Archives |year= 2010|url=http://www.douglashistory.co.uk/famgen/getperson.php?personID=I26836&tree=tree1|accessdate=9 September 2013}}
17. ^Nautical Magazine 38: 683.
18. ^{{cite web |title= 'H' is for Highgate and for Hampstead |publisher= SilverTiger Blog |year= 2011|url=http://tigergrowl.wordpress.com/2011/03/20/h-is-for-highgate-and-for-hampstead/|accessdate=9 September 2013}}
19. ^{{cite journal |author= The Editor |title=Admiral R. A. Hopwood| journal= Naval Review |volume= 38 |issue= 1 |pages= 1, 9–10 |year= 1950}}
20. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp78373/ronald-arthur-hopwood |title= Ronald Arthur Hopwood |work= |publisher= National Portrait Gallery, London |year= 1918 |accessdate= 18 May 2012}}

References

{{NHC}}

{{Reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

Books

  • {{cite book |last= Hopwood |first= Ronald A., Captain, R.N.|url=https://archive.org/stream/oldwayotherpoems00hopwiala#page//n5/mode/2up |title=The Old Way and Other Poems |location=London |publisher=John Murray |year=1916 |accessdate= 18 May 2012}} at Internet Archive
  • {{Cite book |last= Hopwood |first= Ronald A., Rear-Admiral, C.B. |author-link= |last2= Noyes |first2= Alfred |author2-link= Alfred Noyes |title= The Laws of the Navy and Other Poems |place= London |publisher= John Murray |series= |volume= |origyear= 1919 |year= 1951 |month= |edition= Second |chapter= Foreword |page= |pages= |url= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |doi= |id= |isbn= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= }}

Newspapers and magazines

  • {{Citation |last= |first= |title= World War: Debutantes Celebrated |pages= |newspaper= Time |location= |date= 6 January 1941 |url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,765140,00.html |archiveurl= |archivedate= }}
  • {{cite news |last= |first= |title= Obituary ADML. R. A. Hopwood: Gunner and Poet |pages= |newspaper= Times |location= London |date= 2 January 1950 |url= http://www.worldnavalships.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=59825&d=1256394549}} Also quoted in Naval Review 38 (1): 9–10.

Journals

  • {{cite journal |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |journal= Journal of the Royal United Service Institution |volume= 70 |issue= 480 |pages= |publisher= |location= |date= November 1925 |url= |jstor= |issn= |doi =10.1080/03071842509426073 |id= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= |title=The Ancestry of Nelson's Ships }}
  • {{cite journal |last= The Editor |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= ADMIRAL R. A. HOPWOOD |journal= The Naval Review |volume= 38 |issue= 1 |pages= 1, 9–10 |publisher= |location= |date= February 1950 |url= |jstor= |issn= |doi= |id= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= |accessdate= }}
  • {{cite journal |last= Smith |first= Eeyore |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= THE LAWS OF THE NAVY AND OTHER POEMS |journal= The Naval Review |volume= 39 |issue= 4 |page= 448 |publisher= |location= |date= November 1951 |url= |format= |jstor= |issn= |doi= |id= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= |accessdate= }}
  • {{Cite journal |last= |first= |author-link= |last2= |first2= |author2-link= |title= The Queen Adelaide Naval Fund |journal= Nautical Magazine |volume= 38 |issue= |page= 683 |year= 1869 |origyear= |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=GRUAAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA683&dq=Queen+Adelaide+Naval+Fund&hl=en&sa=X&ei=7zK5T7jYN4yd6AHp95zNCg&ved=0CDkQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Queen%20Adelaide%20Naval%20Fund&f=false |jstor= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |doi= |id= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= }}
  • {{Cite journal|last= Hopwood |first= Ronald A. |author-link= |last2= |first2= |author2-link= |title= The Saving Grace |journal= The Quarterly Review |volume= 467 |issue= |pages=221–233 |origyear= |date=April 1921 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=puQxAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA221&lpg=PA221&dq=quarterly+review+april+1921+hopwood&source=bl&ots=5CS0B7I9un&sig=LY2D9SYE6ffLLIAamyCKW_H8MhI&hl=en&sa=X&ei=H0m6T9_6GJL3gAfdmLy6Cg&ved=0CEYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false |jstor= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |doi= |id= |mr= |zbl= |jfm= }}

Web

  • {{cite web |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= Adm Ronald Arthur Hopwood, C.B., R.N |work= |publisher= The Douglas Archives |date= 11 September 2010 |url= http://www.douglashistory.co.uk/famgen/getperson.php?personID=I26836&tree=tree1 |doi= |accessdate= 9 September 2013}}
  • {{cite web |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= ‘H’ is for Highgate and for Hampstead |work= |publisher= SilverTiger Blog |date= 20 March 2011 |url= http://tigergrowl.wordpress.com/2011/03/20/h-is-for-highgate-and-for-hampstead/ |format= |doi= |accessdate= 16 May 2012}}
  • {{cite web |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= Ronald Arthur Hopwood (1868-1949), Admiral |work= |publisher= National Portrait Gallery, London |year= 1918 |url= http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp78373/ronald-arthur-hopwood |format= |doi= |accessdate= 19 May 2012}}
  • {{Cite web |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= The Laws of the Navy |work= |publisher= U.S. Naval History & Heritage Command |date= 28 November 2005 |url= http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/arttopic/titles/law-navy.htm |doi= |accessdate= 15 May 2012}}
  • {{Cite web |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= Rear Admiral Ronald Arthur Hopwood |work= |publisher= World Naval Ships Forums |date= 24 October 2009 |url= http://www.worldnavalships.com/forums/showthread.php?t=5219 |doi= |accessdate= 15 May 2012}}
  • {{Cite web |last= Mayes |first= John |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= Index to Poetry by Admiral Ronald Hopwood, C.B. - in the Great Naval Traditions of England |work= |publisher= InquireWithin |year= 2009 |url= http://www.inquirewithin.biz/laws/lawsindex.htm |doi= |accessdate= 15 May 2012}}
  • {{Cite web |last= Hopwood |first= Ronald A. |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= The Hopwood-Sims Letter |work= |publisher= |date= 19 December 1919 |url= http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HopwoodSimsLetter_00003.jpg |format= |doi= |accessdate= 20 May 2012}}
  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=BukNAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA2-PA100&dq The Navy List, Corrected to The 20th September, 1885], p. 100. (made midshipman 15 Jan 1884, serving 352)
  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=aO8XAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA93&dq The Navy List], p. 93. (made lieutenant)

External links

  • National Portrait Gallery images of Admiral Hopwood, taken 1918
  • The Hopwood/Langmaid collaboration
  • The Hopwood/Wyllie collaboration
  • The Naval Review 38 (1)
  • The Naval Review 39 (4)
  • Langmaid, Plate I, Plate II, Plate III, Plate IV
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2011}}{{Use British English|date=May 2012}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Hopwood, Ronald Arthur}}

7 : 1868 births|1949 deaths|People educated at Cheam School|Royal Navy personnel of World War I|Companions of the Order of the Bath|Writers from London|English male poets

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