Laura Riding Novelist
- Gender: Female
- Citizenship: United States
- Born: Jan 16, 1901
- Died: Sep 2, 1991
Laura (Riding) Jackson (January 16, 1901 - September 2, 1991) was an American poet, critic, novelist, essayist and short story writer.
She was born Laura Reichenthal in New York to a family of Austrian Jewish immigrants, and educated at Cornell University, where she began to write poetry, publishing first (1923 - 26) under the name Laura Riding Gottschalk. She became associated with the Fugitives through Allen Tate, and they published her poems in The Fugitive magazine. Her first marriage, to historian Louis R. Gottschalk (1899 - 1975), ended in divorce in 1925, at the end of which year she went to England at the invitation of Robert Graves and his wife Nancy Nicholson. She would remain in Europe for nearly 14 years.
Poetry brings all possible experience to the same degree: a degree in the consciousness beyond which the consciousness itself cannot go.
poetry
To a poet the mere making of a poem can seem to solve the problem of truth, but only a problem of art is solved in poetry.
poetry