Wallach, Janet. Desert Queen. Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, 1996, .
223, 229
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Marguerite Gardiner Countess of Blessington | The Conversations established Marguerite Blessington's literary popularity, and has remained the work for which she is remembered. It has been praised by modern writers on Byron, among them Harold Nicolson
, André Maurois
, Iris Origo |
politics | Lady Cynthia Asquith | LCA
tried to remain oblivious of the increasingly threatening situation during the 1930s of international politics. When war was declared she felt that the two decades intervening since the previous world war had been merely... |
Friends, Associates | Gertrude Bell | GB
met Harold Nicolson
and Vita Sackville-West
in Paris. Wallach, Janet. Desert Queen. Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, 1996, . 223, 229 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Caroline Blackwood | Through her father, CB
was descended from the writer Frances Sheridan
, though the Sheridan blood was thought of in the family as bad blood, and CB
's biographer seems to associate it solely... |
Friends, Associates | Edith Craig | In the early 1930s—when the persecution of lesbians in general and Radclyffe Hall
in particular was raging in the wake of The Well of Loneliness trial—EC
, Christopher St John
, and Clare Atwood |
Textual Production | Rosita Forbes | In her first volume of autobiography RF
describes (in a paragraph which also says that all her writing and public speaking during the 1920s was with the hope of interpreting the Arabs to the Anglo-Saxon... |
Dedications | Nina Hamnett | She dedicated it, in September 1931, to Harold Nicolson
and Douglas Goldring
, without whose kindness and encouragement, she says, she would never have written it. Hamnett, Nina. Laughing Torso. Ray Long & Richard R. Smith, Inc., 1932. prelims |
Friends, Associates | F. Tennyson Jesse | There they spent time with journalists broadcasters, actors, and writers like Alexander Woollcott
, Greta Garbo
, Alfred Lunt
, Lynn Fontanne
, Noël Coward
, Vita Sackville-West
and Harold Nicolson
, Sam Behrman
,... |
politics | Rosamond Lehmann | Through all the unwelcome publicity, many friends continued to offer support and sympathy to the Lehmanns—among them author and diplomat Harold Nicolson
. Spender's friendship with John Lehmann was restored in time, as were relations... |
Textual Production | Penelope Mortimer | Besides reviewing television, PM
wrote both plays and screenplays for the small screen. She adapted for television both Colette
's Ripening Seed (a novel, translated into English by Roger Senhouse
, about a teenage boy's... |
death | Eleanor Rathbone | ER
posthumously received tributes from colleagues and some of those who had benefitted from her programmes. Harold Nicolson
gave high praise to her character and activities in the 11 January issue of The Spectator... |
Friends, Associates | Dora Russell | Sylvia Pankhurst
enrolled her son as a day-boy at Beacon Hill, and lived nearby while writing The Suffragette Movement; Beatrice
and Sidney Webb
, and G. B. Shaw
also visited. The school hosted annual... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Vita Sackville-West | VSW
, talking intimately to Harold Nicolson
at a ball, felt convinced that she would marry him, though she refrained from telling him she loved him. Glendinning, Victoria. Vita. Penguin, 1984. 43-4 |
Textual Production | Vita Sackville-West | VSW
had written these poems during her affair with Mary Campbell
. Glendinning, Victoria. Vita. Penguin, 1984. 220 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Vita Sackville-West | Against the wishes of her parents, VSW
married Harold Nicolson
, a diplomat, at Knole Chapel in Kent. Nicolson, Nigel, and Vita Sackville-West. Portrait of a Marriage. Futura, 1974. 58 |