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  1. Elsie Martindale Hueffer (née Martindale; 28 September 1876 – died 29 January 1949) was an early translator of Guy de Maupassant’s short stories into English. She was married to the novelist and poet Ford Madox Ford (1873-1939).

  2. Dowell here, was called by the troubled Hueffer couple down to the Salisbury Plain where Elsie, like Leonora Ashburnham, feared that her husband might commit suicide - as Edward ultimately did.

  3. In November 1892, at 18, he became a Catholic, "very much at the encouragement of some Hueffer relatives, but partly (he confessed) galled by the 'militant atheism and anarchism' of his English cousins." Personal life. In 1894, Ford eloped with his school girlfriend Elsie Martindale.

  4. 19 de abr. de 2018 · Conrad first met Elsie Hueffer née Martindale, in 1898, and between 1899 and the end of 1902, when Conrad and Ford were collaborating, their families were in frequent contact at the Pent or Winchelsea. Of the 30 extant letters from Conrad to Elsie Hueffer alone, some dealt purely with domestic matters, including the elaborate stage managing by ...

  5. In 1894 Ford eloped with his school-girlfriend Elsie Martindale, the daughter of Dr William Martindale, a prominent analytical chemist, who opposed her marrying someone with such unreliable financial prospects. Ford and Elsie married in Gloucester on 17 May 1894.

  6. Overview. Elizabeth Martindale. (1876—1949) Quick Reference. (1876–1949) married (1894) F. M. Hueffer (1873–1939). Elsie Hueffer was the author of one undistinguished novel, Margaret Hever (1909), about a triangular relationship between a remarkable young girl, an aged ... From: Martindale, Elizabeth in The Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction »

  7. It has also been suggested that Ford's attempt to divorce his wife, Elsie Martindale Hueffer and marry Violet Hunt lies behind the novel's time-travelling theme. [1] Plot summary. Unlike Twain's Hank Morgan and some successors, Ford's Mr. Sorrell makes only a very half-hearted attempt to build modern weaponry and machinery in the Middle Ages.