Edwards, Dorothy
Dorothy Edwards was born near Cardiff in 1903, the only child of Edward Edwards, a headmaster and committed socialist. She was brought up to believe in equality and in the coming revolution, reciting stirring verses at left-wing rallies for Keir Hardie and others. She was educated at her father's boys school and then at Howells School in Cardiff, going on to read Greek and philosophy at University College Cardiff. She was an excellent linguist and on graduation went to Europe, spending six months in Vienna and nine months in Florence before returning to Cardiff to live with her widowed mother, determined to make a living as a writer.
By now she had added Welsh Nationalism (although she did not speak Welsh) to the causes to which she was passionately devoted but none of this passion, or much of her experience of life except her love of music, appeared in the short stories she was writing in a cool, mannered style. However in 1927 a collection of her short stories from English and American magazines Rhapsody was published and hailed by critics as the work of a genius. After the publication of her second book, the novel Winter Sonata, in 1928 she was taken up by the London literary set and in particular by David Garnett who introduced her to the Bloomsbury Group, including the artist Dora Carrington.
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2016-08-11 05:08:59 am |
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2016-08-11 05:08:59 am |
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