Shortly after her mother's death, When Richardson returned to St. Louis, Hemingway, who became infatuated with her, wrote "I knew she was the girl I was going to marry." Richardson, eight years older than Hemingway, was red-haired, with a "nurturing instinct". Bernice Kert, author of
The Hemingway Women, claims Richardson was "evocative" of the woman whom Hemingway met and fell in love with during his recuperation from injuries during World War I,
Agnes von Kurowsky, but in Richardson, Hemingway saw a childishness Agnes lacked. Hemingway visited her in St. Louis in March 1921, and two weeks later she visited him in Chicago. Then they did not see each other for two months until he returned to St. Louis in May. In their correspondence, she promised to buy him a Corona typewriter for his birthday. In June, she announced her engagement despite objections to the marriage from his friends and her sister. Richardson believed she knew what she was doing, and more importantly, she had an inheritance with which to support herself and a husband. She believed in Hemingway's talent and believed she was "right for him". and spent their honeymoon at the
Hemingway family summer cottage on
Walloon Lake. The weather was miserable, and both Richardson and Hemingway came down with fever, sore throat, and cough. The couple returned to Chicago after their honeymoon, where they lived in a small apartment on North Dearborn Street. The death of a hated uncle gave Richardson another inheritance and additional financial independence for the couple. Initially, they intended to visit Rome, but
Sherwood Anderson convinced them to visit Paris instead. Anderson's advice to live in Paris interested her,
Paris In Paris, Richardson and Hemingway lived in a small apartment at 74, rue du Cardinal Lemoine in the
Latin Quarter. In the winter of 1921, he discovered the
Shakespeare and Company bookshop, which also functioned as a lending library and was run by American expatriate
Sylvia Beach. Richardson went there to buy
James Joyce's works, which she liked, because Beach had published Joyce's
Ulysses. The Hemingways first met Joyce at the book shop in March 1922. (left), with
Harold Loeb,
Lady Duff Twysden (in hat), Hadley Richardson Hemingway, Donald Ogden Stewart (obscured), and Pat Guthrie (far left) in
Pamplona, Spain, July 1925. Through Anderson's letters of introduction, Hemingway met
Ezra Pound, who invited the couple for tea, and they were invited to
Gertrude Stein's salon. Stein in turn visited the young couple in their apartment. Hemingway's and Stein's relationship turned hostile after Hemingway gained fame (see ''Hemingway's Boat
, Paul Hendrickson, 2011, and Hemingway'', Kenneth Lynn, 1987). That spring, Richardson and Hemingway traveled to Italy and, in the summer, to Germany. Richardson went alone to Geneva in December 1922 to meet Hemingway who was covering a peace conference. It was during this trip, while waiting for a train at the
Gare de Lyon, that Richardson misplaced and lost a suitcase filled with Hemingway's manuscripts. Devastated and angry at the loss of his work, he blamed her. A few months later, when they learned Richardson was pregnant, the couple decided to move to Toronto for the child's birth. Before they left, the couple went for the first time to watch the bullfighting and the
running of the bulls at the
Festival of San Fermín in Pamplona. Their son
John Hadley Nicanor Hemingway was born on October 10, 1923, in Toronto. He was named for his mother Hadley and for the young Spanish
matador Nicanor Villalta, who had impressed Hemingway the previous summer. The baby was healthy, and the birth quick; Hemingway missed it, as he had been sent to New York on assignment, and was returning on a train when his wife went into labor. Richardson nicknamed the infant Bumby. In Toronto, the family lived in a small apartment on Bathurst Street that had "wall space enough to hang their collection of paintings". Richardson called the assignments given to her husband at the
Toronto Star "absurd". Hemingway considered Toronto boring and wanted to return to Paris to the life of a writer rather than live the life of a Toronto journalist. In June, Richardson and Hemingway went again to Pamplona, leaving Bumby in Paris, and that winter, they went for the first time to Austria to vacation in
Schruns. Sometime after their return to Paris from Canada, Hemingway met the Pfeiffer sisters. When in June 1925 Hemingway and Richardson left Paris for their annual visit to Pamplona—the third year they had done so—they were accompanied by a group of American and British expatriates, including
Pauline Pfeiffer. The trip inspired Hemingway's first novel
The Sun Also Rises, which he began to write immediately after the fiesta, finishing it in September. In November, as a birthday present for Richardson, Hemingway bought
Joan Miró's painting
The Farm. While Richardson was in Austria, Hemingway sailed to New York then returned to Paris in March, at which time his affair with Pauline may have begun. In the spring of 1926, Richardson became aware of the affair, but she endured Pauline's presence in Pamplona that July. On their return to Paris, Richardson and Hemingway decided to separate, and Richardson formally requested a divorce in the fall. By November they had split their possessions, and Richardson accepted Hemingway's offer of the royalties from
The Sun Also Rises. The couple divorced in January 1927, and Hemingway married Pauline Pfeiffer in May the same year. == Paul Mowrer ==