Laura Riding letters, 1938-1978.

ArchivalResource

Laura Riding letters, 1938-1978.

The collection consists of three letters, including: two typed, signed letters to Raymond Anderson, of Cassell and Co., April 1938, about publication details for her Collected Poems, including the poem, Life of the Dead; also, handwritten letter to Daniel M.J. Stokes, 14 June 1978, thanking him for inviting her to contribute to his journal, and promising to consider the possibility.

3 items.

Related Entities

There are 4 Entities related to this resource.

Riding, Laura, 1901-1991

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w60k2k7m (person)

Laura Riding, American writer, was born in New York and educated at Brooklyn High and Cornell Univ. She began writing poetry while in college and her early poems appeared in, The fugitive (edited by Allen Tate and Robert Warren), as well as Harriet Monroe's, Poetry (a magazine). In 1926, she published her first volume of poetry, The close chaplet. Riding has written and published criticism, essays, a journal, poetry, novels and short stories. She also ran the Seizin Press for some time. Her Coll...

Anderson, Raymond K. (Raymond Kemp), 1933-

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sq9g63 (person)

Stokes, Daniel M. J., 1950-

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hm926m (person)

Riding, Laura, 1901-1991

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6zp48gh (person)

Laura (Riding) Jackson (1901-1991) spent her life in pursuit of truth through poetry and her language work. At the beginning of her career, she associated with the Fugitives, a group of Southern poets and critics, who supported and encouraged her poetry; later she became a close collaborator and intimate of the British poet Robert Graves. But her desire to express absolute truth led her to renounce poetry and turn instead to the study of language. Because of her compulsive individualism, Laura b...