Susan Miles

Susan Miles was the pen name of Ursula Wyllie Roberts (1887–1975).

[1][2] He was Lieutenant-Colonel Robert John Humphrey Wyllie and her mother was Emily Titcomb.

[5] As Susan Miles, she published several slim volumes of poetry: Dunch (1918),[6] Annotations (1922),[7] Little Mirrors (1923?

), Rainbows (1962),[11] A Morsel of Gold (1962)[12] and Epigrams and Jingles (1962)[13] as well as the more famous novel in verse Lettice Delmer (1958, reprinted by Persephone Books in 2002), two other novels (Blind Men Crossing a Bridge (1934) and Rabboni (1942))[14][15] and a biography of her husband, Rev.

[17] Dunch was sufficiently significant to earn her a reasonably positive mention in Harold Monro's often unforgiving Some Contemporary Poets (1920) and Herbert Palmer described her as "One [of] the most original" in the chapter on Women Poets in his 1938 study of post-Victorian poetry.