British Book News. British Council.
(1958): 820
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Eleanor Farjeon | Oxford University Press
published Edward Thomas
, The Last Four Years. Book One of the Memoirs of Eleanor Farjeon. British Book News. British Council. (1958): 820 |
Textual Production | Eleanor Farjeon | EF
published First and Second Love: Sonnets, written in 1911-18 about her enduring, unreciprocated love for Edward Thomas
, who died in the First World War. British Book News. British Council. (1959): 551 |
Textual Production | Eleanor Farjeon | Her biographer Annabel Farjeon
believes that a sequence of thirteen sonnets from the same time, which remained unpublished, were a product of EF
's actual, undocumented first love. A couple of years later EF
said... |
Textual Production | Sarah Kane | The first number of Frontline Intelligence, 1993, also edited by Pamela Edwardes
, included work by April de Angelis
, Declan Hughes
, Judith Johnson
, and Edward Thomas
. British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo. OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999. |
Textual Production | Sylvia Kantaris | This book has an epigraph from Old Man by Edward Thomas
. Kantaris, Sylvia. Lad’s Love. Bloodaxe Books. prelims |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Jennings | As befits the allusion in its title, this volume contains poems about bleak, parched seasons of life. A group of them depict old age: Old People's Nursing Home, My Mother at 73, Elegy... |
Textual Features | Lilian Bowes Lyon | The influence of Edward Thomas
has been discerned in her war poetry. Day, James Wentworth. The Queen Mother’s Family Story. Robert Hale. 122 |
Textual Features | Flora Thompson | Two characteristic stories by FT
, published in 1913, exemplify her range. In this year The Ladies Companion carried The Nut Brown Maiden, whose gipsy heroine is based on the author's own early memories... |
Textual Features | Carol Ann Duffy | Many poems here feature women answering back to canonical male voices: Liz Lochhead
to Donne
, Jenny Joseph
to W. S. Gilbert
, U. A. Fanthorpe
to Walt Whitman
, Wendy Cope
to A. E. Housman |
Literary responses | Eleanor Farjeon | In fact, critics and scholars were fooled, and took the poems seriously, though Edward Thomas
later implied that the metre in one piece ought to have given the game away. |
Literary responses | Eleanor Farjeon | Edward Thomas
found it unreadable, but as late as 1959, when long out of print, it brought EF
some admiring letters. Farjeon, Annabel. Morning has Broken: A Biography of Eleanor Farjeon. Julia MacRae. 88, 291 |
Literary responses | Rose Macaulay | Edward Thomas
, reviewing The Two Blind Countries for The Bookman, compared her poetry to de la Mare
's. Babington Smith, Constance. Rose Macaulay. Collins. 67-71 |
Literary responses | Gillian Clarke | This volume won a Welsh Arts Council
poetry prize. The reviewer for the Irish Times likened GC
to Edward Thomas
. “Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC. Gillian Clarke. http://gillianclarke.co.uk/home.htm. |
Literary responses | Lady Margaret Sackville | Whitney Womack
has recently written that LMS
's war poetry should be read alongside the war poetry of Rupert Brooke
, Edward Thomas
, Wilfred Owen
, Siegfried Sassoon
, and Isaac Rosenberg
, as... |
Literary responses | Mary Elizabeth Coleridge |
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