Poetry of Mary Webb

£2.29

Poetry of Mary Webb

“We are tomorrow's past.”

Author: Mary Webb

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Language: English

Published by: Portable Poetry

Published on: 1st March 2021

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 25 pages

ISBN: 9781839678776


Birth and Early Life

Mary Gladys Meredith was born on 25th March 1881 at Leighton Lodge in the village of Leighton, near Shrewsbury in Shropshire.

Mary was home-schooled by her father before being sent to a finishing school in Southport in 1895. Her long walks in the countryside helped her develop a heightened sense of observation and description, of both people and places, which later infused both her poetry and prose.

Health and Early Writing

When she was 20 she developed symptoms of Graves' disease, a thyroid disorder that caused bulging protuberant eyes and throat goitre. This caused life-long ill health and was a possible contributor to her early death.

Mary was first published as a teenager when her brother sent to a local newspaper her poem on a recent rail accident. Mary, who was in the habit of destroying her work, was appalled though placated when she discovered that it had received some positive appreciation in readers' letters.

Marriage and Literary Career

1912 brought marriage to Henry Bertram Law Webb, a teacher. He supported her literary work which in 1917 resulted in the publication of her novel The Golden Arrow.

A few years later they acquired a property in London where, it was hoped, recognition of her literary talents would be more easily recognised.

Her 1924 novel, Precious Bane, won the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse, the prestigious French literary prize awarded by an all-female jury.

Most of her poetry and various other works were only published after her death.

Later Life and Death

By 1927 her health was deteriorating and her marriage failing.

Mary Webb died on 8th October 1927 at St Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex. She was 46.

It was only after her death that she received commercial success when at a dinner of the Royal Literary Fund in 1928 the Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin, referred to her as a neglected genius.

In 1950 the celebrated filmmakers Powell and Pressburger filmed her 1916 novel Gone to Earth.

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