, Nicolson occupied the foreground of the experimental modes of life-writing in the 1920s and 1930s, a period during which he also wrote the lives of Swinburne, of his father, Sir Arthur Nicolson, 'First Lord Carnock,' of Lord Curzon, and of the American Dwight Morrow. His work was singled out by Virginia Woolf who acknowledged him to be a leading figure of New Biography. He produced biography, theorised and interacted with other new biographers such as Strachey, Woolf and Maurois, creating a new dynamism which led biography to become accepted as a form of literary art, thus liberating it from the Victorian constraints which came to be seen as a restriction of biography?and history generally?to the domain of natural sciences, Missolonghi as akin to Christ's last journey back to Jerusalem

C. Battershill, Edgcumbe, Richard, Byron: the Last Phase Charles Scribner's SonsThe Impossible Art: Virginia Woolf on Modern Biography,' The Cambridge Quarterly, tspace.library.utoronto.ca. Epstein, William H., Recognizing Biography, issue.6 294, pp.349-360, 1909.

C. N. Parke, Tennyson: Aspects of his Life, Character and Poetry _______________, Byron: The Last Journey Prion Books, 1999, print. _______________, Some People The Development of English Biography The Harold Nicolson Diaries The Lines of Life: Theories of Biography, Biography: Writing Lives, pp.1907-1964, 1921.

J. Sartre and L. Nausée, , 1972.

. Shklovsky, . Viktor, . Literature, . Cinematography, and . Masinovsky, The Perfect Library Kindle format. Woolf, Virginia, 'The New Biography' [1927], Granite and Rainbow, London, Forgotten Books, 2015, print. _____________, 'The Art of Biography,' The Death of the Moth and Other Essays, Prague, e-artnow ebooks, 2013, Kindle Format. _____________, The Letters of Virginia Woolf, 1918.