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Ethel Smyth was a prolific author, including volumes of
autobiographical writing, and was herself the subject of biography.
After a brief introduction to the family and social context of the
letters, this volume therefore can focus on the relationship and
exchange of ideas between 'ES' and Elizabeth Williamson, the
grand-daughter of Ethel's eldest sister Mary Hunter. In part thanks
to her great-aunt, Elizabeth's Edwardian childhood led not to
marriage but to a degree, work at the University of London
Observatory, and the freedom to continue her studies in classical
Greek. In their correspondence the two women talk about books,
theatre, travel, current affairs and personal philosophies, as well
as friendships and family life with all their problems and
rivalries and, of course, dogs. All against the backdrop of an
interleaving aristocratic, political, academic, literary and
business world. The letters themselves, clearly valued by
Elizabeth, almost perished three times - including once after the
editor of the collection had herself inherited them. This volume is
a selection, with the bulk of the collection now in the Beinecke
Library at Yale.
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