Elizabeth Madox Roberts Society
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Biography of Elizabeth Madox Roberts

I cannot unravel life's mystery
Nor sing the whole of life's way
Oh, sweet my pretty, my dear

-Elizabeth Madox Roberts, "Cradle Songs"
Elizabeth Madox Roberts (1881-1941), one of America's most original novelists and poets, set her work in the area around her home town of Springfield, Kentucky, what she called her Little Country, the rolling hills at the southern edge of the Bluegrass. Her distinctive voice came clear in her first book, Under the Tree (1922), a never-out-of-print collection of poems for children. Roberts liberated the genre from didactic sentimentalism and instead portrayed a child's sense of wonder and often comic absurdity. In her best known novels -- The Time of Man (1926) and The Great Meadow (1930), both short-listed for the Pulitzer Prize -- she developed a highly idiosyncratic language to explore the inner lives of women as they make sense of their places in the sometimes hostile but vividly rendered outer world.
Artist's sketch of Elizabeth Madox Roberts
Roberts attended local schools in Springfield, then high school in Covington, where she lived with her maternal grandparents. Both her parents, Mary Elizabeth Brent and Simpson Roberts, a Confederate veteran turned surveyor/engineer, placed a high value on education, but Elizabeth's frail health kept her from college until 1917 when at age 36 she enrolled at the University of Chicago. There, she discovered a lively literary scene and forged friendships with a group of writers and artists, including Glenway Wescott, Janet Lewis, Yvor Winters, and Monroe Wheeler.

Her colleagues recognized her original genius and helped her launch a late-blooming but productive career: seven novels, three volumes of poems, and two collections of stories. Her work received critical acclaim from Carl and Mark Van Doren, Robert Penn Warren, Ford Madox Ford, Sherwood Anderson, Sylvia Townsend Warner, and many others as well as a wide readership and many awards, including the O. Henry Prize.
PictureLouisville Courier-Journal Obituary (newspapers.com)
She died at age 60 and was buried in Springfield, on a hill overlooking the Little Country whose rhythms and ways she conveyed with the attentiveness of an anthropologist, the sensibility of a modernist, and the sensuality of a poet.

Picture
An autographed portrait of Roberts. The inscription reads: "To Georgene Roberts from her Aunt Elizabeth, with much love." (provided by Jon Thoma, son of Georgene Roberts)
Elizabeth Madox Roberts with parasol
Picture
 Elizabeth Madox Roberts and Lucia Clark Markham on the campus of Univeristy of Kentucky, 1913
Elizabeth Madox Roberts' Signature
Grave of Elizabeth Madox Roberts
Elizabeth Madox Roberts
 Elizabeth Madox Roberts on the campus of Univeristy of Kentucky, 1913
© Elizabeth Madox Roberts Society, 2026. All rights reserved.
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