Edith Louisa Sitwell
The first child of Sir George Sitwell and Lady Ida Sitwell, Edith Sitwell became famous both as poet and bohemian. Reacting against what she called the "dim bucolics" of the Georgians, she and her brothers Osbert and Sacheverell constituted a kind of aristocratic bohemian vanguard after World War I. Sergei Diaghilev's (see Vol. 3) Russian Ballet joined T. S. Eliot and, improbably, Alexander Pope among the early influences on her work. A skilled publicist as well as poet, Sitwell exploited her up
The first child of Sir George Sitwell and Lady Ida Sitwell, Edith Sitwell became famous both as poet and bohemian. Reacting against what she called the "dim bucolics" of the Georgians, she and her brothers Osbert and Sacheverell constituted a kind of aristocratic bohemian vanguard after World War I. Sergei Diaghilev's (see Vol. 3) Russian Ballet joined T. S. Eliot and, improbably, Alexander Pope among the early influences on her work. A skilled publicist as well as poet, Sitwell exploited her up See less
Edith Louisa Sitwell's Featured Books
Edith Louisa Sitwell book reviews
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I Live Under a Black Sun
A Certain Charm
by sgregory, Aug 23, 2008
Edith Sitwell's I Live Under a Black Sun, loosely based on the life of Johathan Swift and incorporating brief passages of his famous prose, is unarguably a period piece. Flaunting all of the ... Read More