Richard Aldington

-
Standard Name: Aldington, Richard
Used Form: R. A.

Connections

Connections Author name Sort ascending Excerpt
Textual Production D. H. Lawrence
DHL 's Last Poems were posthumously published, edited by Giuseppe Orioli (publisher of Lady Chatterley's Lover) and Richard Aldington .
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Roberts, Warren. A Bibliography of D.H. Lawrence. Hart-Davis.
141-2
Publishing D. H. Lawrence
DHL 's religious treatise, Apocalypse, was posthumously published with an introduction by Richard Aldington in New York and Florence; a London edition was issued in 1932.
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Roberts, Warren. A Bibliography of D.H. Lawrence. Hart-Davis.
135
Reception D. H. Lawrence
In his introduction to DHL 's Apocalypse, Richard Aldington suggests that the underlying motivation for the book's suppression may have been Lawrence's opposition to the war and his wife 's German nationality.
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Textual Production Storm Jameson
SJ published a novel entitled Farewell to Youth, about the First World War.
This was the year of Edmund Blunden 's war memoir and of the first, pre-war volume of Siegfried Sassoon 's...
Literary responses Violet Hunt
In Ford Madox Ford and the Regiment of Women, 2005, Joseph Wiesenfarth sees Hunt as gripped by the pattern of the adventurous woman becoming the victim of the reckless man.
Wiesenfarth, Joseph. Ford Madox Ford and the Regiment of Women. University of Wisconsin Press.
45-6
This echoes views...
Literary responses Violet Hunt
Author and critic Richard Aldington wrote derisively in The Egoist in January 1914 that VHwrites like a woman better than any other woman and called The Celebrity at Homeas real as Cinderella.
Belford, Barbara. Violet. Simon and Schuster.
219, 323
Fictionalization Violet Hunt
Versions of VH also emerge in the fictions of her lover, Ford Madox Ford . Barbara Belford suggests that she sparked elements of both Leonora Ashburnham and Florence Dowell in his The Good Soldier (1915)...
Friends, Associates Nina Hamnett
The following year NH met Anna Wickham , who took her in when she had flu, with a dangerously high temperature, and did not want to go back to her family. At that time NH
Textual Production H. D.
The major archive of HD's papers is held at Yale University (along with several other deposits of material relevant to her). Eight other collections of some importance are listed by her biographer Barbara Guest ...
Family and Intimate relationships H. D.
With Ezra Pound and her parents as witnesses, H. D. and Richard Aldington were married in London after returning from their European travels.
Aldington, Richard, and H. D. “Introduction and Commentary”. Richard Aldington and H.D.: The Early Years in Letters, edited by Caroline Zilboorg, Indiana University Press, p. Various pages.
15
Health H. D.
H. D. gave birth to her and Richard Aldington 's stillborn daughter.
Aldington, Richard, and H. D. “Introduction and Commentary”. Richard Aldington and H.D.: The Early Years in Letters, edited by Caroline Zilboorg, Indiana University Press, p. Various pages.
20
Friends, Associates H. D.
H. D. and her husband, Richard Aldington , were introduced to D. H. and Frieda Lawrence at a dinner party and poetry reading hosted by Amy Lowell .
Robinson, Janice S. H.D.: The Life and Work of an American Poet. Houghton Mifflin.
92
Family and Intimate relationships H. D.
The divorce between H. D. and Richard Aldington was finalised in London.
Aldington, Richard, and H. D. “Introduction and Commentary”. Richard Aldington and H.D.: The Later Years in Letters, edited by Caroline Zilboorg, Manchester University Press, pp. 1 - 14; various pages.
67
Textual Production H. D.
The Egoist (edited by Harriet Shaw Weaver ) published a special number on Imagism which was in part the result of H. D. 's editorial influence, even before this became official with Richard Aldington 's...
Textual Production H. D.
H. D. assumed (while he was away in the army) the duties of Richard Aldington as literary editor of The Egoist (formerly The New Freewoman, of which Harriet Shaw Weaver was editor).
Aldington, Richard, and H. D. “Introduction and Commentary”. Richard Aldington and H.D.: The Early Years in Letters, edited by Caroline Zilboorg, Indiana University Press, p. Various pages.
28
Marek, Jayne E. Women Editing Modernism: "Little" Magazines & Literary History. University Press of Kentucky.
10

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.