"My own idea is that these things are as piffle before the wind." -- Daisy Ashford
Daisy Ashford, full name Margaret Mary Julia Ashford (later Devlin) (7 April 1881 — 15 January 1972) was an English writer who is most famous for writing The Young Visiters, a novella concerning the upper class society of late 19th century England, when she was just nine years old. The novella was published in 1919, preserving her juvenile spelling and punctuation. She wrote the title as "Viseters" in her manuscript, but it was published as "Visiters".
"Bernard always had a few prayers in the hall and some whiskey afterwards as he was rather pious.""Her name was called Lady Helena Herring and her age was 25 and she mated well with the earl.""You look rather rash my dear your colors don't quite match your face."
She was born in Petersham, Surrey, the daughter of Emma and William Ashford, and was largely educated at home. At the age of 4 she dictated her first story, The Life of Father McSwiney, to her father; it was published in 1983. As well as The Young Visiters, she wrote several other stories; a play, A Woman's Crime; and one other short novel, The Hangman's Daughter, which she considered to be her best work.
She stopped writing during her teens. In 1904 she moved with her family to Bexhill, and then to London where she worked as a secretary. She also ran a canteen in Dover during the First World War. When published in 1919, The Young Visiters was an immediate success, and several of her other stories were published in 1920. In the same year, she married James Devlin and settled in Norfolk, at one time running the King's Arms Hotel in Reepham. She did not write in later years, although in old age she did begin an autobiography which she later destroyed. She died in 1972.
Ashford's name was sometimes used as a way to criticize adult authors of the 1920s if their style was deemed too childish or naïve; Edmund Wilson referred to the novel This Side of Paradise by his friend F. Scott Fitzgerald as "a classic in a class with The Young Visiters."
Roman à clef Daisy Goes to the Moon by Matt K. stars Daisy Ashford, is written in Ashford's distinctive style, and is the first of a series of "Daisy Ashford Adventures" to be published.?