Hope Mirrlees | |
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Born | Helen Hope Mirrlees 8 April 1887 Chislehurst, Kent |
Died | 1 August 1978 Thames Bank, Goring, Oxfordshire | (aged 91)
Education | |
Literary movement | Literary modernism |
Notable works |
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(Helen) Hope Mirrlees (8 April 1887 – 1 August 1978) was a British poet, novelist and translator. She is best known for the 1926 Lud-in-the-Mist, an influential fantasy novel,[1] and for Paris: A Poem (1920), an experimental poem published by Virginia and Leonard Woolf's Hogarth Press, which critic Julia Briggs deemed "modernism's lost masterpiece, a work of extraordinary energy and intensity, scope and ambition."[2]