Helen Corke
Helen Corke | |
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Born | 1882 |
Died | 1978 |
Occupation | writer, schoolteacher |
Helen Corke (1882–1978) was an English writer. As a schoolteacher in Croydon, she became acquainted with D. H. Lawrence, and her diary served as the inspiration for Lawrence's second novel The Trespasser.[1] She also became a close friend of Lawrence's lover Jessie Chambers, and later published a memoir about her entitled D.H. Lawrence's Princess. Well into her 90s, she wrote an autobiographical work In Our Infancy which won the 1975 Whitbread Award.
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