307:, who had befriended Oliver and Diana in Virginia during the Second World War. Diana changed her name back to Lodge in 1966 when she and Kohr separated. Lodge's will guaranteed his widow a sizeable income until she remarried, which was thus an obstacle to her eventual marriage with Kohr, as she explained in a 1993 television documentary about her life.
222:). She asked him if he liked poetry – he replied that poetry was his life. After their marriage in 1932 they moved to a country cottage called Tanleather in Forest Green, Surrey, on the estate of Oliver's friend
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After Lodge's death in 1955, his widow Diana Lodge changed her name by deed poll to Diana Kohr, taking the name of the
Austrian economist and political scientist
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Lodge married twice and had four children: Oliver (1922–2009) by his first marriage, to
Winifred Atkinson, known always as Wynlane; and Belinda (1933–1996),
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Ten years later Diana
Uppington arrived on his doorstep answering his advertisement for a nude model (she had already modelled for both
50:. His five brothers all qualified as engineers, so that he was the only one of the boys with literary leanings, although their uncle
176:(1936–2012) and Colin (1944–2006) by his marriage, secondly, to the Welsh painter Diana Violet Irene Mabel Uppington (1906–1998).
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Lodge returned to
England and then took his young family first to Canada, during which period Oliver and Diana got to know well
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Some 200 letters written by O. W. F. Lodge to his father between 1908 and 1940 are held in the
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in the United States. Here Lodge taught
English literature at various institutions including
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Marrying after a 12-year courtship, Lodge and his wife
Wynlane settled at Upper Holcombe near
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Inner
Journeys : a television documentary about Diana Lodge, by Jonathan Stedall, 1993
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for some years, but otherwise lived on a private income provided by his father.
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366:‘Love's Wine Corked; a poem in twenty-four measures’, Gloucester, 1948
351:‘Love in the Mist’, E. F. Millard, Painswick, 1921 (a book of verse)
46:, and his wife Mary (née Marshall), who had studied painting at the
348:‘The Schooling of Trimalchio’, 1920 (a tragi-comedy in three acts)
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17 April 1955), was a poet and author; he was the eldest son of
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both became distinguished academic historians. They grew up in
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French painter
Charles Geoffroy-Dechaume and their families.
372:‘The Things People Do’, published privately, London, 1966
137:(1911), a collection of stories, prose poems and fables;
336:‘The End of an Age’, Cornish Brothers, Birmingham, 1912
333:‘The Labyrinth: a tragedy in one act’, David Nutt, 1911
345:‘Six Englishmen’, Cornish Brothers, Birmingham, 1915
330:‘Summer Stories’, Cornish Brothers, Birmingham, 1911
360:‘What Art Is', Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1927
292:On returning to England in 1946 Lodge settled near
277:. In Virginia, they first lived at "Bay Cottage",
314:archives, part of the Papers of Sir Oliver Lodge.
143:Love's Wine Corked; a poem in twenty-four measures
369:‘The Betrayer and other poems’, Gloucester, 1950
183:, Gloucestershire, in a farmhouse belonging to
354:‘The Pindar of Wakefield’, 1921 (one-act play)
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357:‘The Case is Altered’, 1921 (one-act comedy)
342:‘Poems’, Cornish Brothers, Birmingham, 1915
339:‘Spurgeon Arrives’, 1912 (a one-act comedy)
195:, painting and writing, and frequented the
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509:University of Paris alumni
241:After the outbreak of the
323:‘A Song of Working Men’,
199:and the Catholic artists
312:University of Birmingham
514:Ursinus College faculty
443:obituary, 25 April 1955
56:Eleanor Constance Lodge
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207:and Sydney Sheppard.
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151:The Things People Do
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220:Tiller Girls
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149:(1950); and
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169:) in 1911.
103:What Art Is
96:Detmar Blow
64:Sefton Park
62:, close to
36:Cirencester
463:Categories
377:References
287:Gloucester
236:anglophile
232:Valmondois
440:The Times
402:The Times
294:Painswick
283:Elmington
234:with the
212:Eric Gill
201:Eric Gill
181:Painswick
141:(210pp);
127:Swinburne
60:Liverpool
44:physicist
255:Virginia
251:Maryland
145:(1948);
105:(1927);
90:and the
433:Sources
193:Chelsea
119:Shelley
111:Marlowe
279:Naxera
115:Jonson
30:(born
139:Poems
123:Keats
48:Slade
214:and
129:and
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161:by
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