Jameson, Storm. Journey from the North. Harper and Row.
524
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Storm Jameson | Jameson had been approached by the Ministry of Information
once the USA had entered World War II, for suggestions on how to cement Anglo-American relations. Jameson, Storm. Journey from the North. Harper and Row. 524 |
Friends, Associates | Violet Hunt | VH
entertained here frequently: her sometimes piquantly mixed invitation lists included the names of H. D.
, D. H. Lawrence
, Ezra Pound
, Joseph Conrad
, Wyndham Lewis
, Walter de la Mare
... |
Occupation | Eleanor Farjeon | |
Literary responses | Eleanor Farjeon | D. H. Lawrence
thought her a real poet, but criticised her for refusing to fight things out to their last issue. . . . [Y]ou never burn yours to the last fire. . .... |
Literary responses | Eleanor Farjeon | British Book News announced that this book gives Eleanor Farjeon a permanent place of honour between Stevenson
and Walter de la Mare
. British Book News. British Council. (1952): 122 |
Reception | Margiad Evans | Ceridwen Lloyd-Morgan
finds these poems uneven, and regrets the influence on them of W. H. Hudson
and Walter De la Mare
. Lloyd-Morgan, Ceridwen. Margiad Evans. Seren. 95 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Margiad Evans | Several poems in A Candle Ahead invoke ME
's teachers: Milton
, Thomas Traherne
, Walter de la Mare
, and Thomas Hardy
, the theme of whose The Well-Beloved is that of her closing... |
Textual Production | Monica Dickens | MD
joined forces with Rosemary Sutcliff
in 1978 to edit a poetry anthology for young people, entitled Is Anyone There? (from the opening line of Walter de la Mare
's well-known The Traveller). Three... |
Friends, Associates | Frances Cornford | FC
also developed friendships, although not close ones, with Walter de la Mare
, Eric Gill
, Bertrand Russell
, Siegfried Sassoon
, Ralph
and Ursula Vaughan Williams,
and Virginia Woolf
. Cornford, Hugh et al. “Frances Cornford 1886-1960”. Selected Poems, edited by Jane Dowson and Jane Dowson, Enitharmon Press, p. xxvii - xxxvii. xxxv |
Literary responses | Ivy Compton-Burnett | Praised in the Daily Mail and Times Literary Supplement (where the anonymous reviewer was Walter de la Mare
), Dolores was compared to its advantage with works by Ada Leverson
and Arnold Bennett
. ICB |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mary Elizabeth Coleridge | Early in her career, MEC
received support from established writers. When she became an established writer herself, other authors turned to her for advice, among them Kenneth Barnes
and Walter de la Mare
. Coleridge, Mary Elizabeth. “Introduction and Editorial Materials”. The Collected Poems of Mary Coleridge, edited by Theresa Whistler, Rupert Hart-Davis, pp. 21-81. 69 |
Textual Production | Angela Carter | She also wrote introductions to works by various writers and artists, including Walter De la Mare
, Christina Stead
, Gilbert Hernandez
, Frida Kahlo
, and Charlotte Brontë
. Peach, Linden. Angela Carter. St Martin’s Press. 172-3 |
politics | Bryher | H. D.
, Edith Sitwell
, Vita Sackville-West
, Dorothy Wellesley
, T. S. Eliot
, and Walter de la Mare
were among the readers at this event, which also received royal patronage. Collecott, Diana. H.D. and Sapphic Modernism, 1910-1950. Cambridge University Press, http://Rutherford HSS. 235 and n45 |
Literary responses | Marjorie Bowen | MB
was admired in her own day by others who prided themselves on the popular touch in their writing: Mark Twain
, Walter de la Mare
, Compton Mackenzie
, and Hugh Walpole
, who... |
Anthologization | Enid Blyton | It was perhaps EB
's high point as a poet when she had five pieces included in an anthology that also featured work by John Masefield
, Walter de la Mare
, and Rudyard Kipling
. Stoney, Barbara. Enid Blyton. Hodder and Stoughton. 49 |
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