Ulric Nisbet
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Hugh Ulric Swinscow Nisbet (May 19, 1897 - 1987) was a British writer and the author of Thoughts on the purpose of art (1934), Spread no wings (1937) and Old school tie: recollections of Marlborough before the First World War (1964). Under the pseudonym Hugh Callaway he published The onlie begetter(1936),[1] Bridge to world man (1960), Super-sense: a beginning (1967) and The new consciousness (alternative to chaos) (1971). He also published under the name Pierre Saint Vaast. In The onlie begetter he proposed William Herbert as the dedicatee of Shakespeare's Sonnets.
He married Christine Bacheler Nisbet, a well-known American allegorical artist, who gained her BFA at Yale. In 1929 she married Ulric Nisbet and they settled in Salcombe, Devon.
References
- ^ The onlie begetter, by Hugh Callaway at worldcatlibraries.org
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- 20th-century British writers
- 1897 births
- 1987 deaths
- People educated at Marlborough College
- Alumni of the University of Cambridge