A widow named Nell Golightly recalls her relationship with Rupert Brooke when a young Tahitian woman claiming to be the daughter of the poet writes to ask Nell what her father was like.
"A widow named Nell Golightly recalls her relationship with Rupert Brooke when a young Tahitian woman claiming to be the daughter of the poet writes to ask Nell what her father was like."@en
"In her old age, Nell Golightly receives a strange letter. A Tahitian woman, claiming to be the daughter of the poet Rupert Brooke, writes to ask her to describe him. And to explain why all of England remembered him. Turning her mind to the summer of 1909, Nell relives her first encounter with the young poet. She was sixteen, the new housemaid at the Orchard Tea Rooms in Grantchester, and he was the new tenant. Nell soon realises that everyone he meets falls in love with him, while he remains flippant and flirtatious and, apparently, loves no one but himself. Worst of all, despite her good sense, even she seems to be falling under his spell..."
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