In 1961, poets
Ted Hughes and
Sylvia Plath rented their flat in
Chalcot Square,
Primrose Hill, London, to Assia and David Wevill, and took up residence at
North Tawton,
Devon. Hughes was immediately struck with Wevill, as she was with him. He later wrote: :We didn't find her – she found us. :She sniffed us out... :She sat there... :Slightly filthy with erotic mystery... :I saw the dreamer in her :Had fallen in love with me and she did not know it. :That moment the dreamer in me :Fell in love with her, and I knew it. Plath noted their chemistry. Soon afterward, Hughes and Wevill began an affair. At the time of Plath's suicide, Wevill was pregnant with Hughes's child, but she had an abortion soon after Plath's death. The actual relationship, who instigated it and its circumstances, has been hotly debated for many years. After Plath's suicide, Hughes moved Wevill into
Court Green (the Devon home at
North Tawton he had bought with Plath), where Wevill helped care for Hughes and Plath's two children,
Frieda and
Nicholas. Wevill was reportedly haunted by Plath's memory; she even began using things that had once belonged to Plath. In their biography of Wevill,
Lover of Unreason, Koren and Negev maintain that she used Plath's items not from obsession, but for the sake of practicality since she was maintaining a household for Hughes and his children. On 3 March 1965, at age 37, Wevill gave birth to Alexandra Tatiana Elise, nicknamed Shura, while still married to David Wevill. Ostracized by her lover's friends and family, She was continually distraught by his reluctance to marry her and establish a home together, as well as his treatment of her as a "housekeeper". In his letter to Leonard Baskin on 16 July 1969, Hughes references Shura, his daughter with Wevill. He writes, "I have two nice children who make life a great pleasure.... I had a third, a little marvel, but she died with her mother." ==Death==