Collis, Maurice. Somerville and Ross: A Biography. Faber and Faber, 1968.
162, 252, 265
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Edith Somerville | Other friends of Somerville's later years included W. B. Yeats and Augusta, Lady Gregory. In the 1940s Somerville exchanged letters with Maurice Baring. Collis, Maurice. Somerville and Ross: A Biography. Faber and Faber, 1968. 162, 252, 265 |
Friends, Associates | Ethel Smyth | ES's many other friends included writer Maurice Baring, Lady Ponsonby, the Empress Eugénie of France, Vernon Lee, and Vita Sackville-West. Collis, Louise. Impetuous Heart: The Story of Ethel Smyth. William Kimber, 1984. 57, 65, 174, 200 St John, Christopher. Ethel Smyth. Longmans, Green, 1959. 117-18 |
Friends, Associates | Vernon Lee | VL also became friendly with Ottoline Morrell, Maurice Baring, and many Italian artists, critics, and aristocrats. Colby, Vineta. Vernon Lee: A Literary Biography. University of Virginia Press, 2003. 133-4, 172 |
Friends, Associates | Constance Lytton | Another good friend was Maurice Baring. Lytton, Constance. Letters of Constance Lytton. Editor Balfour, Elizabeth Edith, Countess of, Heinemann, 1925. 61 |
Friends, Associates | Lady Cynthia Asquith | LCA's mother invited to Stanway a wide variety of guests: Arthur Balfour, Walter Raleigh, George Wyndham, Harry Cust, Charles Whibley, H. G. Wells, Evan Charteris, Hugh Cecil |
Friends, Associates | Blanche Warre Cornish | BWC was a friend of Margaret Oliphant, and later of Maurice Baring (as were her children). Her tea-table was frequented by minor literary men like Oscar Browning and Joseph Henry Shorthouse, while Mary Elizabeth Coleridge |
Friends, Associates | Edith Somerville | ES first met Ethel Smyth (and also Maurice Baring), on the way to Lady Kenmare's, Killarney House, County Kerry. Collis, Maurice. Somerville and Ross: A Biography. Faber and Faber, 1968. 188 |
Textual Production | Ethel Smyth | During the onset of her deafness ES composed some late works: the ballet Fête Galante, 1922 (based on a short story by Maurice Baring), and the opera Entente Cordiale, 1925. Sadie, Julie Anne, and Rhian Samuel, editors. The New Grove Dictionary of Women Composers. Macmillan, 1994. 431 |
Textual Production | Ethel Smyth | |
Textual Production | Vernon Lee | This text was later to spark her friendship with Maurice Baring, as well as the creation of the collection For Maurice, 1927. Baring had loved the story of The Prince as a child. Colby, Vineta. Vernon Lee: A Literary Biography. University of Virginia Press, 2003. 224 |
Textual Production | Vernon Lee | VL also produced a novella-length supernatural fiction—A Phantom Lover, A FantasyStory (1886), her only ghost story set in England, it was later anthologized as Oke of Okehurst—and two more collections, Pope Jacynth... |
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