Agnes Romilly White Explained

Agnes Romilly White
Birth Date:1872
Birth Place:County Tyrone, Ireland
Death Date:1945
Occupation:Writer
Nationality:Irish

Agnes Romilly White (1872–1945) was an Irish novelist who wrote about the poverty, bereavement and comedy that she saw around her.

Life and work

White was the born to Rev. Robert White and his wife Anna Maria in Tyrone.[1] Her father was the rector of St. Elizabeth's Church of Ireland and was based in Dundonald, from 1890 to 1912.[2] [3] White made the small village and the cottages famous in her books.[4] White had at least 2 sisters and 2 brothers. One of her brothers was Herbert Martin Oliver White, a lecturer at Queen's University was appointed to the Chair of English at Trinity College Dublin over the poet Austin Clarke.[5]

She was thought to be an excellent observer of people and criticism of her appeared in Punch and The Observer:[6] ‘The lilt of the dialogue goes to one's head like wine: the spell is laid upon one as soon as any character chose to open his mount.

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Residents of a house 21 in Ballyregan (Dundonald, Down) . The National Archives of Ireland . Census of Ireland 1911 . 15 September 2020.
  2. Book: John Wilson Foster. The Cambridge Companion to the Irish Novel. 14 December 2006. Cambridge University Press. 978-1-139-82788-1. 156–.
  3. Web site: Dundonald Railway Station, Then and Now... DUNDONALD VILLAGE . Dundonaldrail.co.uk . 7 November 2016.
  4. Book: Aidan Campbell. Belfast Through Time. 15 April 2016. Amberley Publishing Limited. 978-1-4456-3660-3. 19–.
  5. Book: Norman Vance. Irish Literature Since 1800. 11 June 2014. Routledge. 978-1-317-87050-0. 173–.
  6. Web site: Agnes Romilly White . Ricorso.net . 7 November 2016.