Dollie Radford

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Woodcut of Dollie Radford by Robert Bryden.jpg

Caroline Maitland (1858–1920) was an English poet and writer. She worked under the name "Dollie Radford" after she married Ernest Radford.

Life[]

Maitland was born in 1858 and in 1880 she met her future husband in the British Museum Reading Room and they continued to meet at Karl Marx's house.[1] She married Ernest Radford in 1883, and wrote as Dollie Radford. They had three children, one being the doctor and writer Maitland Radford.[2] Her grandchildren include the town and park planner Ann MacEwen.[1]

Her friends included her sister in law Ada Wallas[3] and the socialist Eleanor Marx, whom she knew through a Shakespeare reading group attended by Karl Marx, and Amy Levy. Her papers are housed at the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library at UCLA[4] and at the British Library.[5] Many of the British Library manuscripts have been digitized and can be viewed at Europeana.[6]

Her husband was a member of the Rhymers' Club, but Maitland could not join because of sexual discrimination.[7]

Works[]

  • A Light Load (1891)
  • Songs for Somebody (1893)
  • Good Night (1895)
  • Songs and Other Verses (1895)
  • One Way of Love: an Idyll (1898)
  • The Poet’s Larder and Other Stories (1904)
  • The Young Gardeners’ Kalendar (1904)
  • Sea-Thrift (1904)
  • In Summer Time (1905)
  • Shadow-Rabbit, with Gertrude M. Bradley (1906)
  • A Ballad of Victory and other poems (1907)
  • Poems (1910)

References[]

  1. ^ a b Ann MacEwan, Chris Hall, 2008, The Guardian, Retrieved 14 February 2017
  2. ^ Diana Baynes Jansen (1 August 2003). Jung's Apprentice: A Biography of Helton Godwin Baynes. Daimon. p. 36. ISBN 978-3-85630-626-7. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  3. ^ Sutherland, Gillian (April 2016). "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford University Press. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
  4. ^ "Register of the Dollie Radford Papers: A Collection of Papers Relating to Dollie Radford, Her Family and Circle of Friends, 1880-1920" http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf8b69p1zw
  5. ^ Radford archive http://searcharchives.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?fn=search&ct=search&initialSearch=true&mode=Basic&tab=local&indx=1&dum=true&srt=rank&vid=IAMS_VU2&frbg=&vl%28freeText0%29=radford&scp.scps=scope%3A%28BL%29
  6. ^ Dollie Radford manuscripts at Europeana https://www.europeana.eu/portal/en/search?q=dollie+radford/
  7. ^ Adams, Jad. "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford University Press. Retrieved 14 February 2017.

Further reading[]

  • Alford, Norman (1994), The Rhymers' Club: Poets of the Tragic Generation, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-0312123413
  • Brandon, Ruth (1990), The New Women and the Old Men: Love, Sex, and the Woman Question, Secker & Warburg, ISBN 978-0436067228
  • Garnett, David (1960), The Golden Echo, Harcourt, Brace, ASIN B0000CKQUL
  • Kapp, Yvonne (1977), Eleanor Marx, vol. 1, Pantheon Books, ISBN 978-0394734569
  • Kapp, Yvonne (1977), Eleanor Marx, vol. 2, Pantheon Books, ISBN 978-0394734576
  • Lawrence, David Herbert (1981), The Letters of D. H. Lawrence; Volume II, 1913-16, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0521231114
  • Lawrence, David Herbert (1981), The Letters of D. H. Lawrence: Volume 3, October 1916-June 1921, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0521231121
  • Livesey, Ruth (2006), Socialism, Sex, and the Culture of Aestheticism in Britain, 1880–1914, British Academy, ISBN 978-0197263983
  • Livesey, Ruth (2006), "Dollie Radford and the Ethical Aesthetics of "Fin-de-Siecle" Poetry", Victorian Literature and Culture, 34 (2), pp. 495–517, doi:10.1017/S1060150306051291, S2CID 162470742
  • Lyon Mix, Katherine (1960), A Study in Yellow: The Yellow Book and Its Contributors, University Press of Kansas, ASIN B0000CKQUL
  • Radford, Maitland (1945), Poems by Maitland Radford: With a Memoir by Some of his Friends, Allen & Unwin, ASIN B0006DCPFY
  • Richardson, LeeAnne (2000), "Naturally Radical: The Subversive Poetics of Dollie Radford", Victorian Poetry (published 2006), 38 (1), pp. 109–124, doi:10.1353/vp.2000.0008
  • Schaffer, Talia (2000), The Forgotten Female Aesthetes: Literary Culture in Late Victorian England, University of Virginia Press, ISBN 978-0813919379

External links[]

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