Joan Adeney Easdale

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Joan Adeney Easdale (23 January 1913 – 10 June 1998) was an English poet from Sevenoaks, Kent. Her mother was the author Gladys Ellen Easdale, née Adeney (1885–1970).[1] Her father, Robert Carse Easdale, left her mother during the First World War.[2][3] Virginia Woolf discerned some "real merit" in her early work.[4]

In January 1930, Easdale's mother Gladys sent examples of her daughter's poetry to the Hogarth Press.[5] Virginia Woolf described receiving "piles of dirty copy books written in a scrawl without any spelling, but I was taken aback to find, as I thought, some real merit... it may be a kind of infantile phosphorescence.... Very odd."[4] The Woolfs nevertheless took up publishing her books, despite opposition from John Lehmann.[6]

A Collection of Poems (1931) appeared as No. 19 in the series Hogarth Living Poets.[3] It delves into love, sadness, broken relationships and family life. Hugh Walpole described her work as "astonishingly adroit, acute, accomplished".[4] The title poem of her second book, Clemence and Clare (1932), addresses Woolf herself.[2] This slim volume also appeared in the Hogarth Living Poets series, as No. 23.[3] The 60-page mystical narrative poem Amber Innocent was published by the Woolfs in 1939.[7]

Life and family

Further reading

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