Helen Darbishire
Helen Darbishire (1881–1961) was an English literary scholar, who was Principal of Somerville College, Oxford from 1931 until her retirement in 1945.[1]
Life
Helen Darbishire was born in Oxford, the daughter of Samuel Dukinfield Darbishire, a physician at the Radcliffe Infirmary. She was educated at Oxford Girls' High School before going as a scholar to Somerville College, Oxford, where she graduated first-class in English in 1903. After being a visiting lecturer at Royal Holloway College, she returned to Somerville as a tutor in English in 1908. In 1925-6 she held a visiting professorship at Wellesley College. On her return to Oxford she was appointed university lecturer. In 1931 she succeeded Margery Fry as principal of Somerville, resigning her university lectureship (though continuing to teach and lecture). Darbishire remained principal of Somerville until her retirement in 1945, overseeing considerable building expansion at the college.[1]
Her work as a literary scholar focussed on Milton and Wordsworth.
Works
- The early lives of Milton, 1932
- The poet Wordsworth, 1949
- The poetical works of John Milton: with translations of the Italian, Latin and Greek poems from the Colombia University edition, 1952
References
External links
Preceded by Margery Fry |
Principal Somerville College, Oxford 1930-1945 |
Succeeded by Janet Vaughan |