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    Edith Sitwell

    Page 62
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      Sitwell, Edith: prose works 1; Aspects of Modern Poetry 238–44, 245, 248, 313, 336; Bath 217–18, 219, 226; Children’s Tales (From the Russian Ballet) 150–1; ‘Coming to London’ 418; Daily Mail columns 198; ‘Dukes of Troy’ 31; The English Eccentrics 198, 226–8; English Women 287; Fanfare for Elizabeth 287, 331–2, 434; Fanfare for Elizabeth film script 376–81, 386–8, 435; I Live Under a Black Sun 258–62, 274, 319, 337, 367, 440; The Last Party 262; London Mercury review 248–9; Madame X sketches 177; The Map of Love 257; memoir 213–16; New Age columns 160–2, 164; A Notebook on William Shakespeare 345; Poetry and Criticism 178; Pope biography 39, 204–5; The Queens and the Hive 401, 412, 418, 423, 426–7, 434–5; sketches 429–30; ‘Some Notes on my Own Poetry’ 245–6; ‘Spring Torrents’ 286–7; Taken Care Of 36, 69, 160, 171, 193, 216, 287, 380, 429, 430, 443; ‘To the Dark Tower Came’ 262; Trio 258; Victoria of England 238, 244, 245, 246, 249–50, 269; vowel-technique essays 72

      Sitwell, Florence 14, 15–16, 46, 52, 69, 215, 224

      Sitwell, Francis 278, 433–4, 436, 437, 438, 442, 444

      Sitwell, Francis Hurt 13, 44–5

      Sitwell, George 13

      Sitwell, Sir George (1797–1853) 14

      Sitwell, Sir George (1860–1943): marriage 7; relationship with ES 13, 18–19, 39, 47, 63, 87; family background 13–16; education 16; upbringing 16; and spiritualism 16–17; The Barons of Pulford in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries 17; On the Making of Gardens 26; political career 17–18; affair accusation 18; appearance 18; takes over Wood End 23; Renishaw Hall landscaping project 25–6; and Henry Moat 29; and Eliza Davis 30–1; and ES’s curvature of the spine 36; and Sargent family portrait 44–5; cheapness 45, 50, 52; depression 45–6; continental travels 46; and Es’s visits to Berlin 53–5; and ES’s coming out 58, 59; ES’s twenty-first birthday party 62–3; purchase of Castle of Acciaiuoli 64–5; and Lady Ida’s gambling debts 79; visit to Sicily, 1910: 80; Lady Hamner inheritance 80–1; mother’s death 81; visit to Florence 81–2; and the borrowing scandal 84–5, 90–1; and the Blanche Sitwell letters 88; and Lady Sitwell’s trial 92–3; petition to Home Secretary 97; and ES’s war work 102; and ES’s poetry 109; acquires Weston Hall 173; and grandson 187; Christmas, 1927: 195; will 229; wife’s funeral 258; and Helen Rootham’s final illness 263–4; and the Second World War 277; Waugh character sketch 291–2; moves to Switzerland 292–3; death 298; estate 299–302; Stiftung 300–2

      Sitwell, Georgia (née Doble) 179, 187, 235, 251, 258, 278, 290–1, 298, 391, 428–9, 437, 444

      Sitwell, Lady Ida (née Denison): marriage 7; rages 7, 11; family background 8–9; lack of education 9; upbringing 9; and social position 10; relationship with ES 10–11, 13, 39, 47, 202; and blood sports 13; interest in the macabre 24; tuberculosis 46–7, 84; surgery 57; and ES’s coming out 57–8, 59; gambling 63, 79; spending 63; lifestyle 63–4; alcoholism 79, 89; allowance 79; borrowing scandal 82–6, 90–1; default judgment against 83; trial 91–7; conviction 96–7; release from prison 97; and ES’s debut publication 98; memorial service 104; on Wyndham Lewis 159; selfishness 180; on Lawrence 186; Christmas, 1927: 195; health 202; decline 228–9; appearance 229; death 258; grave 444

      Sitwell, Lady Louisa Lucy 14, 22–3, 40, 46, 58, 66, 81, 87

      Sitwell, Osbert 7, 26; childhood 12, 30; on Florence Sitwell 15; on father 18; Left Hand, Right Hand! 18, 28, 69, 226, 250, 291–2; first words 22; on Renishaw Hall 24; attitude to working classes 28; and Henry Moat 29; Before the Bombardment 30; education 31; on Helen Rootham 42; and Sargent family portrait 45; on ES’s visit to Swinburne’s grave 66; on Sickert 69; visit to Sicily, 1910: 80; Lady Hamner inheritance 80–1; spending 82; army career 83–4, 89–90, 96–7, 106–7; and the borrowing scandal 84, 90–1; and mother’s trial 92, 94–5, 96; debut publication 99; photographer’s shop incident 102; exorcism of Renishaw Hall elemental 106; at the Battle of Loos 106–7; heart ailment 107; promotion to captain 107; and the death of Edward Wyndham Tennant 109; poetry 109; Twentieth Century Harlequinade 109–10; Wheels anthology poems 114, 115; ‘The Lament of the Mole-Catcher’ 115; introduction to Sassoon 121; and Gosse 123–4; and T. S. Eliot 125; and Owen 128; and Owen’s poems 129; ‘Alive – Alive O’ 132; and Nichols 132; Armistice celebrations 133; general election, 1918: 134; co-editor Arts and Letters 136; Wheels anthology fifth cycle poems 145–6; and Walton 152; and Façade 155–6, 157; and Coward 169; in Madrid 177; and SS’s marriage 179; and the General Strike 182; friendship with Sassoon 184; and Lawrence 186–7; sexuality 186–7, 192, 394–5, 416; on ‘Gold Coast Customs’ 201; reconciliation with Eliot 216–17; money problems 229; mother’s funeral 258; Northcliffe Lecture 258; Second World war life 271; Reynolds News case 281–2; Bryher’s gifts 290–1; Laughter in the Next Room 291–2, 342; heart disease 295; lifestyle 300; and father’s estate 300–2; and the dropping of the atomic bomb 318; American tour planned 338–9; Sunday Times book prize 342; arrival in New York 345; American tour 348, 350; second American tour suggested 356; coal nationalisation compensation 361; visit to Italy, 1950: 362; Parkinson’s disease diagnosed 363; second American tour 367–8; Waugh’s profile of 377; move to Palm Beach 378; American tour, 1955: 393; health 394; declining health 400, 427; American tour, 1957: 406; Parkinson’s disease 432; frailty 433; and ES’s death 444

      Sitwell, Sir Reresby 14

      Sitwell, Reresby 187, 302, 317

      Sitwell, Sacheverell 1; on mother 9; on Louisa Sitwell 14–15; on Renishaw Hall 24, 24–5; childhood 31; on Helen Rootham 42, 105; on father’s depression 46; Lady Hamner inheritance 80–1; visit to Florence 81–2; and the borrowing scandal 85, 90; 1914: 90; learns of mother’s conviction 96–7; on ES’s debut publication 98; on ES’s war work 102; ES visits at Eton 105; need for affection 105; ‘Li-Tai-Pé Drinks and Drowns’ 114; Wheels anthology poem 114; Army career 121–2; and Owen’s poems 129; Armistice celebrations 133; Wheels anthology fifth cycle poems 146; and Diaghilev 150; and ballet 152; and Walton 152; ‘The Octogenarian’ 152–4; in Madrid 177; marriage 179; Canons of Giant Art 219–20, 238, 244, 303; and Aspects of Modern Poetry 244; Dr Donne and Gargantua 244; ‘Agamemnon’s Tomb’ 256; ‘The Farnese Hercules’ 256; mother’s funeral 258; Northcliffe Lecture 258; and the Second World War 278; Reynolds News case 281; inheritance 301; Splendours and Miseries 302–3; depression 317–18; begins writing poetry again 318; second American tour suggested 356; and ES’s death 444; moves ES’s grave 444

      Sitwell, Sitwell 13–14, 24

      Sitwell, William 13

      ‘Sitwell Edith Sitwell’ (Stein) 177

      Sixth Sense, The (Anrep) 74

      Skeaping, John 137

      ‘Sketches for Sonnets’ (Spender) 297

      Slade School 72, 74, 116, 117, 118, 159

      ‘Sleep in a Nest of Flames’ (C. H. Ford) 330

      Sleeping Beauty, The (E. Sitwell) 170–2, 178, 194, 274, 320

      Sleeping Princess, The (Diaghilev production, 1921) 171

      Smart, Christopher 296, 419, 425

      Smart, Walter 218

      Smith, Lady Eleanor 180, 181

      Smyth, Ethel 70

      Smyth-Pigott, J. H. 197

      Snooty Baronet, The (Lewis) 225

      Soby, James 363

      Society for Twentieth Century Music 374

      Society of Women Musicians 141

      soldier poets 107–8, 109; see also Blunden, Edmund; Graves, Robert; Nichols, Robert; Owen, Wilfred; Sassoon, Siegfried; Sorley, Charles; Tennant, Edward Wyndham

      Solovyev, Vladimir 42

      Song of the Cold, The (E. Sitwell) 320–1, 348, 349

      Songlines, The (Chatwin) 297

      Sorley, Charles 106

      Soskin, William 261

      Sotheby’s 208, 432–3

      South Slavs 143–5

      Southern, Hugo 301, 302

      Southwark, Bishop of 59

      Soviet Union, invasion of 285

      Spanish Civil War 253–4, 357

      Spark, Muriel 18, 71–2, 408; The Girls of Slender Means 396

      Sparrow, John 240–1, 242, 251, 258; S
    ense and Poetry 240

      Spectator 227–8, 339, 385–6

      Spencer, Stanley and Gilbert 116

      Spencer, Professor Theodore 339

      Spender, Matthew 312

      Spender, Natasha 290, 312, 357, 371, 402, 405

      Spender, Stephen 5, 174, 243, 245–6, 248, 249, 282, 290, 297, 306, 312, 323, 357, 358–9, 398, 404–5; ‘Sketches for Sonnets’ 297

      spiritualism 16–17

      Splendours and Miseries (S. Sitwell) 302–3

      Spring-Rice, Tom (later third Baron Monteagle) 59, 81

      Squire, J. C. 158–9, 167, 170; A Book of Women’s Verse 159

      Stanford, Sir Charles 42

      Stapleton, Michael 426–7

      Stein, Gertrude 113, 119, 314; Geography and Plays 30, 174, 180; ES on 174, 180; ES meets 176–7; and ES 177; ‘Sitwell Edith Sitwell’ 177; The Making of Americans 177, 180; lecture tour 183–4; The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas 183, 222; Composition as Explanation 184; introduces ES to Tchelitchew 189; and Tchelitchew 190–1; on Picasso 194; Shakespeare and Company reading 220–2; on Hitler 234

      Steiner, Rudolf 142, 178–9, 380

      Stelloff, Frances 349

      Stevenson, Quentin 398–9, 400, 401–2, 416

      Stone, Marcus 62

      Stonier, G. W. 241–2

      Stonor, Sherman and Jeanne 438

      Strachey, Lytton 74, 133, 249

      Stravinsky, Igor 70, 151, 190, 350; Symphonies d’instruments à vent 145; Petrouchka 151; Le Sacre du Printemps 151

      Street Songs (E. Sitwell) 287–9, 297, 307

      Sudetenland crisis 265– 6

      Sunday Referee 246

      Sunday Times 182, 383, 409, 412

      Sunday Times book prize 342

      Surrealists 190, 239– 40

      Survey of Modernist Poetry, A (Riding and Graves) 194

      Swedenborg, Emanuel 361

      Swinburne, Algernon Charles 66–7, 98, 427; Anactoria 320, 324

      Swinnerton, Frank 130

      Swinton, Elsie (née Ebsworth) 44, 67–71

      Swinton, George 44, 45, 67–8, 71

      Switzerland 292–3, 298, 301, 335–6, 381

      Sydney 438– 9

      Sydney Morning Herald 439

      Symbolist movement 75

      Symons, Julian 312, 443

      Symons, Arthur 76

      Symphonies d’instruments à vent (Stravinsky) 145

      Szymanowski, Karol 70

      Taglioni, Marie 9

      Tait, Archbishop 16

      Taken Care Of (E. Sitwell) 36, 69, 160, 171, 193, 216, 287, 380, 429, 430, 443

      Talbot, Constance 58–9, 60–1, 63–4, 104

      Talking Bronco (Campbell) 357

      Tanner, Allen 190, 192, 208, 222, 230, 244–5

      Tate, Allen 322, 424

      Tate Gallery 74, 160

      Taylor, Basil 320

      Tchelitchew, Choura 240, 277, 294–5, 325–6, 355

      Tchelitchew, Pavel 1, 5, 7, 265; ES first meets 189; background 189–91; sexuality 190, 192, 395; ES’s correspondence with 6, 33, 191, 336; relationship with ES 191–3, 203–4, 231, 235–6, 246–7, 265, 284, 336, 345, 353–5, 427; Hide and Seek 190, 193, 344, 346–7, 441; Phenomena 193, 222, 264, 346, 441; portraits of ES 193, 255–6; relationship with Bowen 203–4; visa application 206–7; in London 207–9; ES visits, 1931: 219; and Stein 220–2; exhibition, 1932: 224–5; visit to Weston Hall 226; relationship with Charles Ford 231, 347–8; and the Surrealists 239–40; American exhibitions 244–5; Tooth’s Gallery exhibition, 1935: 247–8; fear of war 251; leaves Paris 256; and I Live Under a Black Sun 258–9, 260, 262; exhibition, 1938: 264–5; vernissage, 1939: 266–7; flees Paris 268; in America 271–2; and ES’s war poetry 275; and the fall of France 277; receives news of family 294–5; ES intimidated by 305; and ES’s worries about mind 325–6; ES’s American tour planning 338–9; and ES’s honorary doctorates 343–4; mental illness 344, 348, 355, 363; and ES’s American tour 345–8, 350, 351, 353–4; return to Europe 355; Hanover Gallery exhibition 359; health 361; in Italy 362–3; financial security 363; and ES’s second American tour 367, 369; silence 372; and Fini 373; re-establishes contact with ES 388; and Bachelard 390; Hanover Gallery exhibition,1954: 391; final illness 407; death 193, 408–9; Memorial Exhibition 422; ES sketch published 429; paintings sold 432–3; Gallery of Modern Art exhibition 441

      Tennant, Edward Wyndham (‘Bimbo’) 109, 114, 115

      Tennant, Stephen 109, 202–3, 206, 207, 216

      Texas, University of 406, 433

      Theory of the Earth, The (Burnet) 306

      This is Your Life (TV programme) 48, 437

      Thomas, Caitlin 329–30, 373–4, 382

      Thomas, Dylan 240, 248–9, 257, 328–9, 332, 335, 343, 373–4, 374–5, 381–3, 398, 429; Eighteen Poems 248–9; Twenty-Five Poems 257; Deaths and Entrances 328

      Thomas, Edward 114

      Thomas, R. S. 319

      Thomas Aquinas 132, 397

      Thompson, Lewis 359–60; ‘Black Angel’ 360; Black Sun 360

      Through French Windows (Horner) 266

      The Times 99, 121, 141, 258, 269, 318, 321, 409, 434

      Times Literary Supplement 103–4, 135, 172, 227, 242, 279, 287, 288–9, 311–12, 320, 356–7, 410–11, 419, 441–2

      Todd, Dorothy 176

      Toklas, Alice B. 190, 220–1

      Tonks, Henry 72

      Tonny, Kristian 190

      Tooth’s Gallery 222, 226, 247–8, 264– 5

      Tragedy of Lynching, The (Raper) 234

      Transitions 194

      Tree, Herbert Beerbohm 115

      Tree, Iris 115, 118, 120

      Treece, Henry 240

      Trevelyan, Raleigh 215

      Tribute to the Angels (Doolittle) 314– 15

      Trio (E. Sitwell) 258

      Tripoli 82

      Troy 161–2

      Troy House 162

      Troy Park (E. Sitwell) 174–6

      Tubby, Alfred Herbert 36–8, 41, 51, 62, 102

      Turner, Dame Eva 41

      Turner, W. J. 287, 295

      Twentieth Century Harlequinade (E. Sitwell) 109– 10

      Twenty-Five Poems (Thomas) 257

      Tyler, Parker 191, 231, 239, 346, 347, 353, 427

      Tzara, Tristan 240

      Ulysses (Joyce) 161

      Unitary Principle in Physics and Biology, The (Whyte) 354

      United States of America 266; first publication in 172; lynchings 233–4; Tchelitchew in 271–2; literary traditions 311; reading and lecture tour planned 338–9; ES’s arrival in 344, 345–6; ES tours 345–54; Façade performance 350–1; second tour suggested 356; ES returns to 363–4; ES’s second tour 365–9; entry requirements 376; the McCarran Act 376; ES’s time in Hollywood 376–81, 386–8; ES’s 1955 tour 392–6; ES’s 1957 tour 405–7

      V-1 rockets 312–13

      Valéry, Paul 218–19

      Vandervelde, Lalla 124, 133

      Vaughan Williams, Ralph 352

      Vérey, Mademoiselle 48, 50

      Versen, Fräulein von 52, 54

      Vickers, Hugo 185

      Victoria of England (E. Sitwell) 238, 244, 245, 246, 249–50, 269

      Vidal, Gore 371, 402, 429

      View 284, 330

      Villa, José Garcia 342, 356; Have Come, Am Here 342; A Celebration for Edith Sitwell (ed.) 342–3, 348

      Vines, Sherard 120

      Vogue 168, 177

      Wagner, Richard 276–7

      Wain, John 384

      Wake, Sir Herwald Craufurd 76

      Wake, Joan 76–7, 88, 97, 99, 109

      Waley, Arthur 181, 202, 295, 401

      Wallace, Nellie 170

      Walpole, Sir Hugh 282

      Walton, William 4, 168, 177, 181, 202–3, 289, 357, 363, 374, 424, 436; collaboration with ES 152–7, 181–2; Belshazzar’s Feast 219

      Warsaw, siege of 274

      Washington 349, 393, 406

      Waste Land, The (Eliot) 125, 158, 172–3

      Watson, Gordon 374–5, 411–12

      Watson, Peter 224, 272, 359

      Waugh, Evelyn 13, 136, 282–
    3, 291–2, 377, 396, 398–9, 408, 425, 444; Men At Arms 28; Brideshead Revisited 30, 143, 291; The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold 408

     


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