Anne Ridler

Anne Barbara Ridler OBE (née Bradby) (30 July 1912 – 15 October 2001) was a British poet and Faber and Faber editor, selecting the Faber A Little Book of Modern Verse with T. S. Eliot (1941). Her Collected Poems (Carcanet Press) were published in 1994. She turned to libretto work and verse plays; it was later in life that she earned official recognition, receiving an OBE in 2001.[1]

Anne Ridler

OBE
Born
Anne Barbara Bradby

30 July 1912
Rugby, Warwickshire, England, United Kingdom
Died15 October 2001 (aged 88)
EducationDowne House School, Kings College, London
OccupationPoet, playwright/dramatist, and editor
Spouse(s)Vivian Ridler
Family

Early life

Ridler was the daughter of Henry Bradby, housemaster at Rugby School in Rugby, Warwickshire, England, where she was born. Her mother, Violet Bradby, born Milford, wrote popular children's stories and was the sister of Humphrey S. Milford, Publisher to the University of Oxford.[2] One of her great-grandfathers was Charles Richard Sumner, Bishop of Winchester, a brother of John Bird Sumner, Archbishop of Canterbury. Her uncle, G. F. Bradby, was the author of The Lanchester Tradition (1919), while her aunt Barbara Bradby was the joint author of The Village Labourer (1911). Her cousins included Letitia Chitty, structural analytical engineer and first female fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society,[3] composer Robin Milford and the Rev. Dick Milford, vicar of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, Oxford.[4]

Life

Anne Bradby was educated at Downe House School and later published a biography of her headmistress, Olive Willis. After six months in Florence and Rome, she took a diploma in journalism at King's College London.

In 1938, she married Vivian Ridler, the future Printer to Oxford University (1958–78), but then the manager of the Bunhill Press, London, and they had two daughters and two sons.

She edited Charles Williams: The Image of the City and other Essays (1958) and Charles Williams: Selected Writings (1961). A Christian and friend and correspondent of C. S. Lewis, she was on the edge of the Inklings group. Also closely associated with T. S. Eliot, she wrote a short but powerful poem, "I Who am Here Dissembled", full of allusions to images in Eliot's own poems, for the anthology T. S. Eliot: A Symposium in honour of his sixtieth birthday.[5]

For a short time in the 1940s, Ridler was also a successful verse dramatist, writing such plays as Cain (1943) and Shadow Factory: A Nativity Play (1945).

Poetry: A Magazine of Verse awarded her in 1954 the Oscar Blumenthal Prize and in 1955 the Union League Civic and Arts Poetry Prize. In 1998 she was one of four poets who received the Cholmondeley Award from the Society of Authors.[6]

References

  1. "No. 56237". The London Gazette (1st supplement). 16 June 2001. p. 12.
  2. "Ridler, Anne Barbara [née Bradby] (1912–2001), poet and writer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/76404. Retrieved 27 September 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. Barrett, Anne (2018). "Chitty, Letitia (1897–1982), mathematician and civil engineer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. doi:10.1093/odnb/9780198614128.013.70068. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  4. Ridler, Anne (2004). Memoirs. Oxford: Perpetua Press. ISBN 9781870882187
  5. Ridler, Anne (1948). "I Who am Here Dissembled". In March, Richard and Tambimuttu (ed.). T. S. Eliot: A Symposium. London: Editions Poetry. p. 189.
  6. James Persoon; Robert R. Watson (22 April 2015). Encyclopedia of British Poetry: 1900 to the Present (2nd ed.). Infobase Learning. p. 1119. ISBN 978-1-4381-4074-2.
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