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British writer Rebecca West (born Regina Miriam Bloch: 1892 – 1983) became a fixture on the literary landscape just prior to the the outbreak of the First World War. Welcomed in some quarters as a young, thought-provoking writer with much to say on a number of matters, Rebecca West was, at the time of this printing, the mistress to H.G. Wells. The article serves as an interesting profile of the woman by compiling various remarks made during the course of her early career:

"She was fortunate in beginning her career at a time when English literature and journalism were alive with rebellious writers. In those happy days before the war, it was a constant gay fight in print for one's ideas and opinions, and Rebbecca West was soon in the front ranks of the rebels..."

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Rebecca West: <i>The Last Birth of Time</i> (Current Opinion, 1921)

Rebecca West: <i>The Last Birth of Time</i> (Current Opinion, 1921)

Rebecca West: <i>The Last Birth of Time</i> (Current Opinion, 1921)

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