Proper noun
A habitational surname from Old English.
A village and civil parish (served by Aldington and Bonnington Parish Council) in Ashford district, Kent, England (OS grid ref TR063365).
A village and civil parish in Wychavon district, Worcestershire, England (OS grid ref SP064440).
Source: en.wiktionary.orgBefore that the three of them lived in Church Walk, Kensington – Pound at no. 10, Doolittle at no. 6, and Aldington at no. 8 – and worked daily in the British Museum Reading Room. Source: Internet
Caroline Zilboorg (editor), Richard Aldington and H.D.: Their lives in letters 1918–61, p. 185. His interest in poetry waned, and he was straighforwardly envious of Eliot's celebrity. Source: Internet
Ezra Pound had in fact coined the term imagistes for H.D. and Aldington, in 1912. Source: Internet
D.) and Richard Aldington living next door. Source: Internet
D. H. Lawrence Apocalypse London: Martin Secker (1932) published posthumously with an introduction (p. v – xli) by Richard Aldington which is an integral part of the text. Source: Internet
He may have been inspired by a Suzuki Harunobu print he almost certainly saw in the British Library (Richard Aldington mentions the specific prints he matched to verse), and probably attempted to write haiku-like verse during this period. Source: Internet