Education
He was educated at Winchester College and Trinity College, Oxford.
He was educated at Winchester College and Trinity College, Oxford.
He served in the Royal Artillery as an officer in 1914, in the fighting at Loos and the Somme. He was invalided out in 1916, after suffering from shell shock. He began to give poetry readings, in 1917.
He was Professor of English Literature at the University of Tokyo, from 1921 to 1924.
He then worked in the theatre and cinema. The play Wings over Europe (1928), with Maurice Browne, was a Broadway hit.
Nichols wrote several prose fictions, including The Smile of the Sphinx, a fantasy set in the Middle East and Golgotha & company, a satirical fantasy featuring the Wandering Jew, the return of Christ and a future war. These fictions were collected in Nichols" book Fantastica.
He lived in Germany and Austria in 1933-1934.
He then settled in the south of France until he left in June 1940. His father was John Bowyer Buchanan Nichols, the poet. On 11 November 1985, Nichols was among 16 Great War poets commemorated on a slate stone unveiled in Westminster Abbey"s Poet"s Corner.
The inscription on the stone was written by a fellow Great War poet, Wilfred Owen.
lieutenant reads: "My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity."
He is buried at Street Mary"s, Lawford, Essex next to the family home, Lawford Hall.
In 1919 the English composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji wrote a Music to “The Rider by Night” (not extant in full).
In 1918 he was a member of an official British propaganda mission to the United States of America.