Monica Jones was born Margaret Monica Beale Jones on 7 May 1922 in
Llanelli,
South Wales. Larkin's long and extremely close relationship with Monica Jones dated from the autumn of 1946, when they met at
Leicester University College. Jones had been appointed as an assistant lecturer in English in January 1946 and Larkin arrived in September, as an assistant librarian. "Both had been at Oxford (he at
St John's, she at
St Hugh's), between 1940 and 1943, but had not met. Both had first class degrees in English. They had been born in the same year, 1922, and came from rather similar provincial middle-class backgrounds." Jones had a holiday cottage at
Haydon Bridge where she and Larkin spent many summers together. He left the bulk of his estate to her when he died in 1985. Her literary enthusiasms (not entirely shared by Larkin) included
Walter Scott,
Jane Austen and
George Crabbe. They shared enthusiasm for
Thomas Hardy and
Barbara Pym, and swapped scornful opinions of
C. P. Snow,
Pamela Hansford Johnson,
William Cooper and others. They shared a sympathy with animals: both of them deplored
vivisection and
myxomatosis, were fond of
Beatrix Potter's creations, and of real creatures, in particular cats and rabbits, though Monica Jones had a fear of hens, and of some other birds. Larkin's letters to Jones were sometimes "embellished with [his] skilful sketches", Jones as a rabbit ("Dearest bun"), himself as a seal. There is evidence that Jones gave Larkin editorial advice on his writing. A copy of
Jill he inscribed to her to thank her for making it "decent, ie literate"'. Anna Farthing, a curator of a 2017 exhibition in Hull, told
The Guardian: "All the evidence suggests he sends her drafts of his work, he’s constantly asking for her opinion." In October 1982, Jones was taken to Hexham Hospital after a fall downstairs in her Haydon Bridge cottage. At Easter 1983, she was stricken with
shingles and on leaving hospital this time Larkin, "offered her shelter and care in his house in
Newland Park, Hull." Following his death, in December 1985, "Monica hardly left that house in Hull until her own death in February 2001." She is said to be the model for the character of Margaret Peel, Jim Dixon's
manipulative on-again-off-again girlfriend, in
Kingsley Amis's novel
Lucky Jim (1954). Monica Jones may also be the inspiration for the character Elvira Jones in
Robert Conquest's 1955 novel
A World of Difference. The book contains other "Larkinesque" references, including a spaceship named after the poet. She has also been suggested as the model for Viola Masefield in
Malcolm Bradbury's first novel,
Eating People is Wrong. As with Larkin and another of his long term companions Maeve Brennan, Monica Jones was buried in
Cottingham Cemetery near Hull. Her white headstone is of identical design to the one situated at Larkin's grave. ==Winifred Arnott==