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Kathleen Raine

Kathleen Jessie Raine CBE (14 June 1908 – 6 July 2003) was a British poet, critic and scholar, writing in particular on William Blake, W. B. Yeats and Thomas Taylor. Known for her interest in various forms of spirituality, most prominently Platonism and Neoplatonism, she was a founding member of the Temenos Academy.[1]

Kathleen Raine
Raine in 1991
Born
Kathleen Jessie Raine

(1908-06-14)14 June 1908
Died6 July 2003(2003-07-06) (aged 95)
London
Alma materGirton College, Cambridge
Occupationpoet
Spouses
Children2
Awards

Life edit

Kathleen Raine was born in Ilford, Essex, the only child of schoolmaster and Methodist lay preacher George Raine, from Wingate, County Durham, and Jessie (née Wilkie), a Scot who spoke Scots as her first language.[2] The Raines had met as students at Armstrong College in Newcastle upon Tyne. Raine spent part of World War I, 'a few short years', with her Aunty Peggy Black at the manse in Great Bavington, Northumberland. She commented, "I loved everything about it". For her it was an idyllic world and is the declared foundation of all her poetry. Raine always remembered Northumberland as Eden: "In Northumberland I knew myself in my own place; and I never 'adjusted' myself to any other or forgot what I had so briefly but clearly seen and understood and experienced." This period is described in the first book of her autobiography, Farewell Happy Fields (1973).[3]

Raine noted that poetry was deeply ingrained in the daily lives of her maternal ancestors: "On my mother's side I inherited Scotland's songs and ballads…sung or recited by my mother, aunts and grandmothers, who had learnt it from their mothers and grandmothers… Poetry was the very essence of life."[3] Raine heard and read the Bible daily at home and at school, coming to know much of it by heart.[3] Her father was an English master at County High School in Ilford. He had studied the poetry of Wordsworth for his M.Litt. thesis and had a passion for Shakespeare and Raine saw many Shakespearean plays as a child. From her father she gained a love of etymology and the literary aspect of poetry, the counterpart to her immersion in the poetic oral traditions. She wrote that for her poetry was "not something invented but given…Brought up as I was in a household where poets were so regarded it naturally became my ambition to be a poet". She confided her ambition to her father who was sceptical of the plan. "To my father" she wrote "poets belonged to a higher world, to another plane; to say one wished to become a poet was to him something like saying one wished to write the fifth gospel".[4] Her mother encouraged Raine's poetry from infancy.[citation needed]

Raine was educated at County High School, Ilford, and then read natural sciences, including botany and zoology, on an Exhibition at Girton College, Cambridge, receiving her master's degree in 1929.[4] While in Cambridge she met Jacob Bronowski, William Empson,[4] Humphrey Jennings and Malcolm Lowry.[5] In later life she was a friend and colleague of the kabbalist author and teacher, Z'ev ben Shimon Halevi.

Raine married Hugh Sykes Davies in 1930. She left Davies for Charles Madge and they had two children together, but their marriage also broke up as a result of Charles' affair with Inez Pearn, at that time married to the poet Stephen Spender.[6] She also held an unrequited passion for Gavin Maxwell. The title of Maxwell's most famous book Ring of Bright Water, subsequently made into a film of the same name starring Bill Travers and Virginia McKenna, was taken from a line in Raine's poem "The Marriage of Psyche". The relationship with Maxwell ended in 1956 when Raine lost his pet otter, Mijbil, indirectly causing the animal's death. Raine held herself responsible, not only for losing Mijbil but for a curse she had uttered shortly beforehand, frustrated by Maxwell's homosexuality: "Let Gavin suffer in this place as I am suffering now." Raine blamed herself thereafter for all Maxwell's misfortunes, beginning with Mijbil's death and ending with the cancer from which he died in 1969.[7] From 1939 to 1941, Raine and her children shared a house at 49a Wordsworth Street in Penrith with Janet Adam Smith and Michael Roberts and later lived in Martindale. She was a friend of Winifred Nicholson.

Raine's two children were Anna Hopwell Madge (born 1934) and James Wolf Madge (1936–2006). In 1959, James married Jennifer Alliston, the daughter of Jane Drew and James Alliston - Raine's friends, both of whom were architects. James Wolf Madge then went on to marry Victoria Watson, another architect.

At the time of her death, following an accident, Raine lived in London. She died of pneumonia after being knocked over by a reversing car after having posted a letter.[8]

Works edit

Her first book of poetry, Stone And Flower (1943), was published by Tambimuttu, and illustrated by Barbara Hepworth. In 1946 the collection, Living in Time, was released, followed by The Pythoness in 1949. Her Collected Poems (2000) drew from eleven previous volumes of poetry. Her classics include Who Are We? There were many subsequent prose and poetry works, including her scholarly masterwork, the two-volume Blake and Tradition that was published in 1969 and derived from the A.W. Mellon Lectures that she delivered at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C in 1968.[9] Raine was the first woman lecturer in the history of the series[10] and her research demonstrated the antiquity, coherence and integrity of William Blake's philosophy, refuting T S Eliot's assertion to the contrary (Collected Essays, 1932).[11]

The story of her life is told in a three-volume autobiography notable for the author's attempts to impose a structure on her memories that is quasi mythical, thus relating her own life to a larger pattern. This reflects patterns in her poetry, influenced by W. B. Yeats. The three books were originally published separately and later brought together in a single volume, entitled Autobiographies (in conscious imitation of Yeats), edited by Lucien Jenkins.

Raine made translations of Honoré de Balzac's Cousine Bette (Cousin Bette, 1948) and Illusions perdues (Lost Illusions, 1951).

She was a frequent contributor to the quarterly journal Studies in Comparative Religion, which dealt with religious symbolism and the Traditionalist perspective. With Keith Critchlow, Brian Keeble and Philip Sherrard she co-founded, in 1981, Temenos, a periodical, and later, in 1990, the Temenos Academy of Integral Studies, a teaching academy that stressed a multi-stranded universalist philosophy, and in support of her generally Platonist and Neoplatonist views on poetry and culture. She studied Thomas Taylor and published a selection of his works.[12]

Raine was a research fellow at Girton College from 1955 to 1961. She taught at Harvard for at least one course about Myth and Literature offered to teachers and professors in the summer. She also spoke on Yeats and Blake and other topics at the Yeats School in Sligo, Ireland in the summer of 1974. A professor at Cambridge and the author of a number of scholarly books, she was an expert on Coleridge, Blake,[13] and Yeats.

The contemporary composer David Matthews has written a song-cycle, The Golden Kingdom, on some of Raine's poems. Richard Rodney Bennett's Spells (1974–75), a work for soprano, chorus, and large orchestra, is set to texts by Raine.

Honours edit

Raine received honorary doctorates from universities in the United Kingdom, France and the United States and won numerous awards and honors, including the Edna St. Vincent Millay Prize from the American Poetry Society (date unknown), and also:

Bibliography edit

Poetry collections edit

  • Stone and Flower, Nicholson and Watson, 1943
  • Living in Time, Editions Poetry London, 1946
  • The Pythoness, and other poems, H. Hamilton, 1949
  • The Year One: Poems, H. Hamilton, 1952
  • Collected poems, H. Hamilton, 1956
  • The Hollow Hill: and other poems, 1960–1964, H. Hamilton, 1965
  • Six Dreams, and other poems, Enitharmon, 1968
  • Penguin Modern Poets 17 (David Gascoyne, W.S. Graham, Kathleen Raine), Penguin, 1970
  • Lost Country, Dolmen Press, 1971
  • On a Deserted Shore, Dolmen Press, 1973. En una desierta orilla Trad. de R. Martínez Nadal. M., Hiperión, 1981.
  • The Oval Portrait, and other poems, Enitharmon Press, 1977
  • The Oracle in the Heart, and other poems, 1975–1978, Dolmen Press/G. Allen & Unwin, 1980
  • Collected poems, 1935–1980, Allen & Unwin, 1981
  • The Presence: Poems, 1984–87, Golgonooza Press, 1987
  • Selected Poems, Golgonooza Press, 1988
  • Living with Mystery: Poems 1987-91, Golgonooza Press, 1992
  • The Collected Poems of Kathleen Raine, Golgonooza Press, 2000
  • The Collected Poems of Kathleen Raine, Faber and Faber, 2019 (pbk.)

Prose edit

  • Defending Ancient Springs, 1967
  • Thomas Taylor the Platonist. Selected Writings, Raine, K. and Harper, G.M., eds., Bollingen Series 88, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1969 (also pub. Princeton University, USA)
  • Blake and Tradition, 2 Volumes, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1969
  • William Blake, The World of Art Library - Artists, Arts Book Society, Thames and Hudson, London, 1970 (216 pp, 156 illustrations)
  • Yeats, the Tarot and the Golden Dawn, Dolmen Press, 1973
  • The Inner Journey of the Poet, Golgonooza Press, 1976
  • Cecil Collins: Painter of Paradise, Golgonooza Press, 1979
  • From Blake to a Vision, Dolmen Press, 1979
  • Blake and the New Age, George Allen and Unwin, 1979
  • Blake and Antiquity, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979 (an abbreviation of the 1969 Blake and Tradition; republished in 2002 by Routledge Classics with a new introduction by Raine)
  • The Human Face of God: William Blake and the Book of Job, Thames and Hudson, 1982
  • The Inner Journey of the Poet, and other papers, ed. Brian Keeble, Allen & Unwin, 1982
  • Yeats the Initiate, George Allen & Unwin, 1987
  • W.B. Yeats and the Learning of the Imagination, Golgonooza Press, 1999.
  • Seeing God Everywhere: Essays on Nature and the Sacred, World Wisdom, 2004 (contributed essay)
  • The Betrayal of Tradition: Essays on the Spiritual Crisis of Modernity, World Wisdom, 2005 (contributed essay)
  • That Wondrous Pattern: Essays on Poetry and Poets, Counterpoint Press, 2017
  • These Bright Shadows: The Poetry of Kathleen Raine, by Brian Keeble. A pioneering study of the poetic imagination of Kathleen Raine. (Angelico Press, 2020)

Autobiography edit

  • Farewell Happy Fields, Hamilton/G. Braziller, 1974
  • The Land Unknown, Hamilton/G. Braziller, 1975
  • The Lion's Mouth, Hamilton/G. Braziller, 1977. autob.
  • India Seen Afar, Green Books/G. Braziller, 1990
  • Autobiographies, ed. Lucien Jenkins, Skoob Books, 1991

Biography edit

No End to Snowdrops, Philippa Bernard. Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd, 2009, ISBN 978-0-85683-268-0

Adaptations edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Couzyn, Jeni (1985) Contemporary Women Poets. Bloodaxe, p. 56.
  2. ^ Fletcher, Christopher (2007). "Raine, Kathleen Jessie (1908–2003), poet and literary scholar". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/92258. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ a b c Couzyn, Jeni (1985) Contemporary Women Poets. Bloodaxe, p. 57
  4. ^ a b c Couzyn, Jeni (1985) Contemporary Women Poets. Bloodaxe, p. 58
  5. ^ "Dr Kathleen Raine". Temenos Academy.
  6. ^ Elizabeth Lake (2019). Spanish Portrait (with an afterword by Vicky Randall). The Clapton Press, London. p. 226. ISBN 978-1-9996543-2-0.
  7. ^ "Obituary: Kathleen Raine". The Guardian. 8 July 2003.
  8. ^ "Obituaries: Kathleen Raine". The Scotsman. 17 July 2003. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
  9. ^ "A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts". www.nga.gov. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  10. ^ MacQuarrie, Kirsten (16 August 2023). "As woman is, so she sees: winding the golden string of Dr Kathleen Raine's William Blake scholarship". Bluestocking Oxford. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  11. ^ Eliot wrote that "genius required, and what it sadly lacked, was a framework of accepted and traditional ideas which would have prevented him from indulging in a philosophy of his own." Collected Essays, 1932.
  12. ^ Thomas Taylor the Platonist: Selected Writings, Raine, K. and Harper, G.M., eds., Bollingen Series 88, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1969 (also pub. Princeton University, USA).
  13. ^ Lighting a Candle: Kathleen Raine and Temenos, Temenos Academy Papers, no. 25, pub. Temenos Academy, 2008, p. 92
  14. ^ Raine, Kathleen (1977). "Waste Land, Holy Land" (PDF). Proceedings of the British Academy. 62: 379–397.
  15. ^ Premiere: Jeremy Huw Williams, baritone with Nigel Foster, piano, St David's Hall, Cardiff, 29 January 2013. (Temenos Conference, Oxford, 13–15 September 2012). Listing: Cardiff Violins Ltd. 2 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine Published by Ricordi.
  16. ^ Creation, A. Spell For. "A Spell For Creation by Kathleen Raine". allpoetry.com.
  17. ^ "The Space Movie 1979". Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 – via www.youtube.com.

Further reading edit

  • Lighting a Candle: Kathleen Raine and Temenos, Temenos Academy Papers, no. 25, pub. Temenos Academy, 2008.

External links edit

  • Guide to the Kathleen Raine Papers. Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
  • Guardian Unlimited obituary
  • Telegraph obituary
  • Temenos Academy
  • Profile of Raine at Temenos Academy
  • "Archival material relating to Kathleen Raine". UK National Archives.  
  • Kathleen Raine collection at University of Victoria, Special Collections
  • Lengthy interview of Raine by Naim Attallah
  • Kathleen Raine Papers at the British Library

kathleen, raine, kathleen, jessie, raine, june, 1908, july, 2003, british, poet, critic, scholar, writing, particular, william, blake, yeats, thomas, taylor, known, interest, various, forms, spirituality, most, prominently, platonism, neoplatonism, founding, m. Kathleen Jessie Raine CBE 14 June 1908 6 July 2003 was a British poet critic and scholar writing in particular on William Blake W B Yeats and Thomas Taylor Known for her interest in various forms of spirituality most prominently Platonism and Neoplatonism she was a founding member of the Temenos Academy 1 Kathleen RaineCBERaine in 1991BornKathleen Jessie Raine 1908 06 14 14 June 1908Ilford EssexDied6 July 2003 2003 07 06 aged 95 LondonAlma materGirton College CambridgeOccupationpoetSpousesHugh Sykes DaviesCharles MadgeChildren2Awards1970 Cholmondeley Award1992 Queen s Gold Medal for Poetry2000 CBE2000 Commandeurs of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres Contents 1 Life 2 Works 3 Honours 4 Bibliography 4 1 Poetry collections 4 2 Prose 4 3 Autobiography 4 4 Biography 5 Adaptations 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife editKathleen Raine was born in Ilford Essex the only child of schoolmaster and Methodist lay preacher George Raine from Wingate County Durham and Jessie nee Wilkie a Scot who spoke Scots as her first language 2 The Raines had met as students at Armstrong College in Newcastle upon Tyne Raine spent part of World War I a few short years with her Aunty Peggy Black at the manse in Great Bavington Northumberland She commented I loved everything about it For her it was an idyllic world and is the declared foundation of all her poetry Raine always remembered Northumberland as Eden In Northumberland I knew myself in my own place and I never adjusted myself to any other or forgot what I had so briefly but clearly seen and understood and experienced This period is described in the first book of her autobiography Farewell Happy Fields 1973 3 Raine noted that poetry was deeply ingrained in the daily lives of her maternal ancestors On my mother s side I inherited Scotland s songs and ballads sung or recited by my mother aunts and grandmothers who had learnt it from their mothers and grandmothers Poetry was the very essence of life 3 Raine heard and read the Bible daily at home and at school coming to know much of it by heart 3 Her father was an English master at County High School in Ilford He had studied the poetry of Wordsworth for his M Litt thesis and had a passion for Shakespeare and Raine saw many Shakespearean plays as a child From her father she gained a love of etymology and the literary aspect of poetry the counterpart to her immersion in the poetic oral traditions She wrote that for her poetry was not something invented but given Brought up as I was in a household where poets were so regarded it naturally became my ambition to be a poet She confided her ambition to her father who was sceptical of the plan To my father she wrote poets belonged to a higher world to another plane to say one wished to become a poet was to him something like saying one wished to write the fifth gospel 4 Her mother encouraged Raine s poetry from infancy citation needed Raine was educated at County High School Ilford and then read natural sciences including botany and zoology on an Exhibition at Girton College Cambridge receiving her master s degree in 1929 4 While in Cambridge she met Jacob Bronowski William Empson 4 Humphrey Jennings and Malcolm Lowry 5 In later life she was a friend and colleague of the kabbalist author and teacher Z ev ben Shimon Halevi Raine married Hugh Sykes Davies in 1930 She left Davies for Charles Madge and they had two children together but their marriage also broke up as a result of Charles affair with Inez Pearn at that time married to the poet Stephen Spender 6 She also held an unrequited passion for Gavin Maxwell The title of Maxwell s most famous book Ring of Bright Water subsequently made into a film of the same name starring Bill Travers and Virginia McKenna was taken from a line in Raine s poem The Marriage of Psyche The relationship with Maxwell ended in 1956 when Raine lost his pet otter Mijbil indirectly causing the animal s death Raine held herself responsible not only for losing Mijbil but for a curse she had uttered shortly beforehand frustrated by Maxwell s homosexuality Let Gavin suffer in this place as I am suffering now Raine blamed herself thereafter for all Maxwell s misfortunes beginning with Mijbil s death and ending with the cancer from which he died in 1969 7 From 1939 to 1941 Raine and her children shared a house at 49a Wordsworth Street in Penrith with Janet Adam Smith and Michael Roberts and later lived in Martindale She was a friend of Winifred Nicholson Raine s two children were Anna Hopwell Madge born 1934 and James Wolf Madge 1936 2006 In 1959 James married Jennifer Alliston the daughter of Jane Drew and James Alliston Raine s friends both of whom were architects James Wolf Madge then went on to marry Victoria Watson another architect At the time of her death following an accident Raine lived in London She died of pneumonia after being knocked over by a reversing car after having posted a letter 8 Works editHer first book of poetry Stone And Flower 1943 was published by Tambimuttu and illustrated by Barbara Hepworth In 1946 the collection Living in Time was released followed by The Pythoness in 1949 Her Collected Poems 2000 drew from eleven previous volumes of poetry Her classics include Who Are We There were many subsequent prose and poetry works including her scholarly masterwork the two volume Blake and Tradition that was published in 1969 and derived from the A W Mellon Lectures that she delivered at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D C in 1968 9 Raine was the first woman lecturer in the history of the series 10 and her research demonstrated the antiquity coherence and integrity of William Blake s philosophy refuting T S Eliot s assertion to the contrary Collected Essays 1932 11 The story of her life is told in a three volume autobiography notable for the author s attempts to impose a structure on her memories that is quasi mythical thus relating her own life to a larger pattern This reflects patterns in her poetry influenced by W B Yeats The three books were originally published separately and later brought together in a single volume entitled Autobiographies in conscious imitation of Yeats edited by Lucien Jenkins Raine made translations of Honore de Balzac s Cousine Bette Cousin Bette 1948 and Illusions perdues Lost Illusions 1951 She was a frequent contributor to the quarterly journal Studies in Comparative Religion which dealt with religious symbolism and the Traditionalist perspective With Keith Critchlow Brian Keeble and Philip Sherrard she co founded in 1981 Temenos a periodical and later in 1990 the Temenos Academy of Integral Studies a teaching academy that stressed a multi stranded universalist philosophy and in support of her generally Platonist and Neoplatonist views on poetry and culture She studied Thomas Taylor and published a selection of his works 12 Raine was a research fellow at Girton College from 1955 to 1961 She taught at Harvard for at least one course about Myth and Literature offered to teachers and professors in the summer She also spoke on Yeats and Blake and other topics at the Yeats School in Sligo Ireland in the summer of 1974 A professor at Cambridge and the author of a number of scholarly books she was an expert on Coleridge Blake 13 and Yeats The contemporary composer David Matthews has written a song cycle The Golden Kingdom on some of Raine s poems Richard Rodney Bennett s Spells 1974 75 a work for soprano chorus and large orchestra is set to texts by Raine Honours editRaine received honorary doctorates from universities in the United Kingdom France and the United States and won numerous awards and honors including the Edna St Vincent Millay Prize from the American Poetry Society date unknown and also 1952 Harriet Monroe Memorial Prize 1953 Arts Council Award 1961 Oscar Blumenthal Prize 1970 Cholmondeley Award 1972 Smith Literary Award 1976 Warton Lecture on English Poetry 14 1992 Queen s Gold Medal for Poetry 2000 Order of the British Empire Commander 2000 L Ordre des Arts et des Lettres CommandeurBibliography editPoetry collections edit Stone and Flower Nicholson and Watson 1943 Living in Time Editions Poetry London 1946 The Pythoness and other poems H Hamilton 1949 The Year One Poems H Hamilton 1952 Collected poems H Hamilton 1956 The Hollow Hill and other poems 1960 1964 H Hamilton 1965 Six Dreams and other poems Enitharmon 1968 Penguin Modern Poets 17 David Gascoyne W S Graham Kathleen Raine Penguin 1970 Lost Country Dolmen Press 1971 On a Deserted Shore Dolmen Press 1973 En una desierta orilla Trad de R Martinez Nadal M Hiperion 1981 The Oval Portrait and other poems Enitharmon Press 1977 The Oracle in the Heart and other poems 1975 1978 Dolmen Press G Allen amp Unwin 1980 Collected poems 1935 1980 Allen amp Unwin 1981 The Presence Poems 1984 87 Golgonooza Press 1987 Selected Poems Golgonooza Press 1988 Living with Mystery Poems 1987 91 Golgonooza Press 1992 The Collected Poems of Kathleen Raine Golgonooza Press 2000 The Collected Poems of Kathleen Raine Faber and Faber 2019 pbk Prose edit Defending Ancient Springs 1967 Thomas Taylor the Platonist Selected Writings Raine K and Harper G M eds Bollingen Series 88 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1969 also pub Princeton University USA Blake and Tradition 2 Volumes Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1969 William Blake The World of Art Library Artists Arts Book Society Thames and Hudson London 1970 216 pp 156 illustrations Yeats the Tarot and the Golden Dawn Dolmen Press 1973 The Inner Journey of the Poet Golgonooza Press 1976 Cecil Collins Painter of Paradise Golgonooza Press 1979 From Blake to a Vision Dolmen Press 1979 Blake and the New Age George Allen and Unwin 1979 Blake and Antiquity Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1979 an abbreviation of the 1969 Blake and Tradition republished in 2002 by Routledge Classics with a new introduction by Raine The Human Face of God William Blake and the Book of Job Thames and Hudson 1982 The Inner Journey of the Poet and other papers ed Brian Keeble Allen amp Unwin 1982 Yeats the Initiate George Allen amp Unwin 1987 W B Yeats and the Learning of the Imagination Golgonooza Press 1999 Seeing God Everywhere Essays on Nature and the Sacred World Wisdom 2004 contributed essay The Betrayal of Tradition Essays on the Spiritual Crisis of Modernity World Wisdom 2005 contributed essay That Wondrous Pattern Essays on Poetry and Poets Counterpoint Press 2017 These Bright Shadows The Poetry of Kathleen Raine by Brian Keeble A pioneering study of the poetic imagination of Kathleen Raine Angelico Press 2020 Autobiography edit Farewell Happy Fields Hamilton G Braziller 1974 The Land Unknown Hamilton G Braziller 1975 The Lion s Mouth Hamilton G Braziller 1977 autob India Seen Afar Green Books G Braziller 1990 Autobiographies ed Lucien Jenkins Skoob Books 1991 Biography edit No End to Snowdrops Philippa Bernard Shepheard Walwyn Publishers Ltd 2009 ISBN 978 0 85683 268 0Adaptations editWho stands at the door in the storm and rain from The Year One Poems 1952 was set by composer Tarik O Regan for unaccompanied chorus in 2006 with the title Threshold of Night it was first recorded on the 2008 album of the same name A number of poems were also set by Geoffrey Bush these settings were recorded by Benjamin Luxon for Chandos The song cycle On a Deserted Shore by Joseph Phibbs was written and performed for the Temenos Academy in 2012 to texts by Kathleen Raine 15 A Spell For Creation was set by composer Mike Oldfield in the soundtrack for the documentary film The Space Movie 16 17 See also editTemenos Academy ReviewReferences edit Couzyn Jeni 1985 Contemporary Women Poets Bloodaxe p 56 Fletcher Christopher 2007 Raine Kathleen Jessie 1908 2003 poet and literary scholar Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 92258 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Couzyn Jeni 1985 Contemporary Women Poets Bloodaxe p 57 a b c Couzyn Jeni 1985 Contemporary Women Poets Bloodaxe p 58 Dr Kathleen Raine Temenos Academy Elizabeth Lake 2019 Spanish Portrait with an afterword by Vicky Randall The Clapton Press London p 226 ISBN 978 1 9996543 2 0 Obituary Kathleen Raine The Guardian 8 July 2003 Obituaries Kathleen Raine The Scotsman 17 July 2003 Retrieved 8 July 2021 A W Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts www nga gov Retrieved 26 August 2023 MacQuarrie Kirsten 16 August 2023 As woman is so she sees winding the golden string of Dr Kathleen Raine s William Blake scholarship Bluestocking Oxford Retrieved 26 August 2023 Eliot wrote that genius required and what it sadly lacked was a framework of accepted and traditional ideas which would have prevented him from indulging in a philosophy of his own Collected Essays 1932 Thomas Taylor the Platonist Selected Writings Raine K and Harper G M eds Bollingen Series 88 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1969 also pub Princeton University USA Lighting a Candle Kathleen Raine and Temenos Temenos Academy Papers no 25 pub Temenos Academy 2008 p 92 Raine Kathleen 1977 Waste Land Holy Land PDF Proceedings of the British Academy 62 379 397 Premiere Jeremy Huw Williams baritone with Nigel Foster piano St David s Hall Cardiff 29 January 2013 Temenos Conference Oxford 13 15 September 2012 Listing Cardiff Violins Ltd Archived 2 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine Published by Ricordi Creation A Spell For A Spell For Creation by Kathleen Raine allpoetry com The Space Movie 1979 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 via www youtube com Further reading editLighting a Candle Kathleen Raine and Temenos Temenos Academy Papers no 25 pub Temenos Academy 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Kathleen Raine Profile and poems written and audio at the Poetry Archive Guide to the Kathleen Raine Papers Special Collections and Archives The UC Irvine Libraries Irvine California Guardian Unlimited obituary Telegraph obituary Temenos Academy Profile of Raine at Temenos Academy Archival material relating to Kathleen Raine UK National Archives nbsp Kathleen Raine collection at University of Victoria Special Collections Lengthy interview of Raine by Naim Attallah Kathleen Raine Papers at the British Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kathleen Raine amp oldid 1217020595, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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