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H.D.

Hilda Doolittle (September 10, 1886 – September 27, 1961) was an American modernist poet, novelist, and memoirist who wrote under the name H.D. throughout her life. Her career began in 1911 after she moved to London and co-founded the avant-garde Imagist group of poets with American expatriate poet and critic Ezra Pound. During this early period, her minimalist free verse poems depicting Classical motifs drew international attention. Eventually distancing herself from the Imagist movement, she experimented with a wider variety of forms, including fiction, memoir, and verse drama. Profoundly affected by her experiences in London during the Blitz, H.D.'s poetic style from World War II until her death pivoted towards complex long poems on esoteric and pacifist themes.

H.D.
H.D. circa 1917, photographed by Man Ray
Born
Hilda Doolittle

(1886-09-10)September 10, 1886
DiedSeptember 27, 1961(1961-09-27) (aged 75)
Zürich, Switzerland
Alma materBryn Mawr College
Occupations
  • Poet
  • novelist
  • memoirist
Signature

H.D. was born in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, to wealthy and educated parents who relocated to Upper Darby in 1896. Discovering her bisexuality she had her first same-sex relationship while attending Bryn Mawr College between 1904 and 1906. After years of friendship, H.D. became engaged to Pound and followed him to London in 1911 where he championed her work, but their relationship soon fell apart, with H.D. instead marrying the Imagist poet Richard Aldington in 1913. In 1918 she met the novelist Bryher, who became her romantic partner and close friend until her death. An associate literary editor of the Egoist journal between 1916 and 1917, H.D. was published by the English Review and Transatlantic Review. During World War I, both her brother and father died, and she separated from Aldington. She was treated by Sigmund Freud during the 1930s, looking to understand both her war trauma and bisexuality.[1]

H.D. was keenly interested in Ancient Greek literature and published numerous Greek translations. Throughout her career, her poems routinely drew from Greek mythology and classical poets, from her earliest Imagist lyrics which depicted natural landscapes using Hellenistic motifs, to her 1950s long poem Helen in Egypt which reinterpreted the myth of the Trojan War. Raised Moravian by her family, and first introduced to occult and esoteric religious ideas by Pound in her youth, H.D. gradually developed a unique syncretic spiritual worldview. H.D.'s spiritual devotion intensified during and after World War II, and these ideas became a central concern of her late writing.

While H.D. wrote in a wide range of genres and modes over career, during her lifetime she was known almost exclusively for her early Imagist poems. Following a reappraisal by feminist critics in the 1970s and 1980s, the significance of her late long poems and prose works was increasingly recognized, and she has come to be understood as a central figure in the history of modernist literature.

Life and Work

Early life

 
Cover of H.D.'s 1958 book End to Torment: A Memoir of Ezra Pound showing the couple as they were in the early 1910s

Hilda Doolittle was born on September 10, 1886, into the Moravian community in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.[2] Her father, Charles, was professor of astronomy at Lehigh University,[3] and her mother, Helen (née Wolle),[4] was a member of the Moravian brotherhood. Hilda was their only daughter in a family with five sons. When Charles was appointed professor of astronomy at the University of Pennsylvania to take charge of the Flower Observatory,[5][6] they moved to Upper Darby. She attended Friends' Central School in Philadelphia and graduated in 1905, delivering a commencement address entitled "The Poet's Influence".[7] She enrolled at Bryn Mawr College in 1905 to study Greek literature,[8] where she met the poets Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams. After three terms of poor grades, H.D. withdrew from the college, studying at home until 1910.[9][10]

H.D. met poet Ezra Pound as a teenager in 1901. He became a life-long friend and played a formative role in her development as a writer. In 1905, Pound and H.D. began an on-and-off relationship[10] which included at least two engagements.[11] Although his parents were in favor of the relationship, her parents strongly objected.[8][10] In 1907, Pound gave her Hilda's Book, a handmade vellum binding of twenty-five of his earliest love poems, which he dedicated to her.[12]

In 1910, Doolittle began a relationship with Frances Josepha Gregg, a young female art student at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.[13] Inspired by Gregg, H.D. wrote her first published poems, modeled after the work of Theocritus.[14] Some of her early work, including some children's stories about astronomy, was published in New York newspapers and Presbyterian newsletters.[4][15]

Imagism

H.D. traveled to London in May 1911 to holiday with Gregg and Gregg's mother; Gregg returned home, but H.D. stayed to develop a career as a writer. Pound introduced her to his friends, including English writer Brigit Patmore. Patmore introduced her to Richard Aldington, who became her husband in 1913. The three lived in Church Walk, Kensington—Pound at no. 10, Aldington at no. 8, and H.D. at no. 6—and gathered to work daily in the British Museum Reading Room.[16][17]

Pound had already begun to meet with other poets in London to discuss ideas for reforming contemporary poetry,[18] and like all modernists in different artistic fields, "make it new".[19] They achieved this through the incorporation of free verse, the brevity of the tanka and haiku forms, and the removal of unnecessary verbiage. Pound, H.D. and Aldington became known as the "three original Imagists"[5] and published a three-point manifesto proclaiming the edicts of Imagism. According to Pound:[20][21]

We were agreed upon the three principles following:

  1. Direct treatment of the 'thing' whether subjective or objective.
  2. To use absolutely no word that does not contribute to the presentation.
  3. As regarding rhythm: to compose poetry in the sequence of the musical phrase, not in sequence of a metronome.

During a 1912 conversation with Pound, H.D. told him that she found "Hilda Doolittle" to be an old fashioned and "quaint" name; he suggested the signature H.D., an abbreviation she kept for the remainder of her career.[22] After he "scrawled the name H.D. Imagiste" at the bottom of the page of her poem "Hermes of the Ways", she adopted H.D. as a pen.[23] Privately he called her "Dryad".[24]

Under the rubric Imagiste, in October 1912 Pound submitted a selection of H. D.'s poems to Harriet Monroe, founder of the magazine Poetry. Three of her poems were published in the January 1913 issue—"Hermes of the Ways" (Pound said "this is poetry" after reading), "Priapus: Keeper of Orchards" (later renamed "Orchard"), and "Epigram"—alongside three by Aldington.[23][25] These early poems are informed by her reading of Classical Greek literature, especially of Sappho,[26] an interest shared with Aldington and Pound. Her Imagist poetry is characterized by sparse language[27] and a classical, austere purity,[28] exemplified by one of her earliest and best-known poems, "Oread" (1915).[29]

Whirl up, sea—
whirl your pointed pines,
splash your great pines
on our rocks,
hurl your green over us,
cover us with your pools of fir.

The style was not without its critics. In a dedicated Imagist issue of The Egoist magazine in May 1915, the English poet and critic Harold Monro named H.D. as the "truest Imagist", but dismissed her early work as "petty poetry", denoting "either poverty of imagination or needlessly excessive restraint".[30] In contrast, a 1927 review by the British modernist author and critic May Sinclair described "Oread"'s brevity as a "miracle" and criticized Monro for not recognizing it.[30]

World War I and after

H.D. married Aldington in 1913 and the following year Pound married the English artist Dorothy Shakespear.[22][4] H.D. and Aldington's only child, a daughter, was stillborn in 1915. He enlisted in the army, and she took his place as assistant editor of The Egoist, serving for the next year.[31] The couple drifted apart: he reportedly took a mistress in 1917, and she started a close but platonic relationship with the English writer D. H. Lawrence.[32]

In 1918, H.D.'s brother Gilbert was killed in action. She moved to Cornwall that March with the Scottish composer Cecil Gray, a friend of Lawrence. She became pregnant with Gray's child,[33] but by the time she realized she was expecting, the relationship had cooled and Gray had returned to London.[34] H.D. learned that her father died, having never recovered from Gilbert's death.[9] Despondent and sick with the Spanish flu, she came close to death during the birth of their daughter Perdita Aldington in 1919.[35][36]

H.D. and Aldington tried to salvage their relationship but failed, in part because of his post-war post-traumatic stress disorder, but especially because of her pregnancy with Gray. They became estranged but did not divorce until 1938.[37]

 
Bryher photographed in 1923 by Man Ray

She began a relationship with the wealthy English novelist Bryher (Annie Winifred Ellerman) after meeting in Cornwall in July 1918 .[38] Bryher was younger than H.D. by several years, a lesbian, and equally non-conformist.[39][40] Both women were unusually tall, a fact that made H.D. self-conscious, and they made for a striking couple at social occasions.[40] They lived together on and off until 1950,[41] and although both had numerous other partners, Bryher was H.D.'s lover for the rest of her life.[39] Bryher entered a marriage of convenience with the American writer and publisher Robert McAlmon, allowing him to use some of her wealth to fund his Paris-based Contact Press publishing house.[42] In 1923, H.D. and Bryher traveled to Egypt for the opening of Tutankhamun's tomb, before settling in Switzerland.[9]

H.D.'s first book, Sea Garden, was published in 1916. She wrote one of her few known statements on poetics, Notes on Thought and Vision, in 1919, although it was not published until 1982.[43] In it, she speaks of poets (including herself) as belonging to a kind of elite group of visionaries with the power to "turn the whole tide of human thought".[44]

Poetry cycles, novels and psychoanalysis

Poetry and novella cycles are a feature of H.D.'s early 1920s writing.[45] The first, "Magna Graeca", consists of the poems Palimpsest (1921) and Hedylus (1928), which use classical settings to explore the role of a poet, particularly a female's value in a patriarchal literary culture. The following cycles, "HERmione", "Bid Me to Live", "Paint It Today", and "Asphodel" are largely autobiographical and preoccupied with the development of the female artist and the conflict between heterosexual and lesbian desire. The novellas Kora and Ka and The Usual Star from the Borderline cycle were published in 1933, followed by Pilate's Wife, Mira-Mare and Nights.[45]

 
H.D. in 1922

Her mother died in 1927.[46] Bryher divorced McAlmon that year to marry Kenneth Macpherson, then H.D.'s male lover.[47][48] Bryher, Macpherson and H.D. lived and traveled together through Europe together in what the New York School poet Barbara Guest termed a "menagerie of three".[39] Bryher adopted H.D.'s daughter, Perdita, while still married Macpherson: leading to the change of name to Perdita Macpherson.[49][47][50] Later, Bryher named Perdita as heir to her will.[48] They moved to the shores of Lake Geneva where they lived in a Bauhaus villa.[51] H.D. became pregnant in 1928 and got an abortion.[52]

In 1927, Bryher and Macpherson founded the monthly magazine, Close Up, as a venue for the discussion of cinema.[9] That year the independent film cinema group POOL or Pool Group was established (largely funded with Bryher's inheritance) and was managed by all three.[53] In the 1930 POOL film Borderline, the actors were H.D. and Bryher and the couple Paul and Eslanda Robeson, the latter appearing as wife and husband.[54] The film explores extreme psychic states, racism, and interracial relationships.[55] H.D. wrote an explanatory pamphlet to accompany the film.[56]

Although not published until 1960, in 1927 H.D. wrote the thinly disguised roman à clef Bid Me to Live.[57] Some characters are recognizable as members of the wartime Bloomsbury Group, including Lawrence and his wife Frieda, Pound, and Captain Jack White—the Irish revolutionary drifter with whom H.D. herself appears caricatured in the Lawrence novel Aaron's Rod (1922).[58]

H.D. began psychoanalysis in 1928 with the Freudian Hanns Sachs[9] and traveled to Vienna in 1933 for analysis with Sigmund Freud.[59] She became interested in Freud's theories since 1909 after reading his works in the original German,[60] and was referred by Bryher's psychoanalyst because of her apparent paranoia about the rise of Adolf Hitler. World War I had left her feeling shattered: she lost her brother in action; her father died in reaction to the loss of his son; her husband was traumatized by combat; and she believed that the shock at hearing of the sinking the RMS Lusitania indirectly caused the miscarriage of her child.[61] H.D. undertook two series of analysis with Freud (March to May 1933 and October to November 1934)[41] and on his request wrote Bid me to Live (published 1960), in which she details her traumatic war experiences.[62] Writing on the Wall, an impressionistic memoir of the sessions and a reevaluation of the importance of his psychoanalysis, was written concurrently with Trilogy and published in 1944; in 1956 it was republished together with Advent, a journal of the analysis, under the title Tribute to Freud.[63]

World War II and after

Hilda and Bryher spent World War II in London. While there, her daughter Perdita became a secretary of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS).[51] Between 1941 and 1943 H.D. wrote The Gift, a short memoir of her childhood in Bethlehem that details the people and events that shaped her.[64] She began the Trilogy series in 1942, comprising three long, unrhyming, and complex volumes of poems: The Walls do not Fall (1944), Tribute to the Angels (1945) and The Flowering of the Rod (1946). H.D. wrote the first while living in London and details her reactions to the Blitz and World War II. The following two books compare the ruins of London to those of ancient Egypt and classical Greece; the former of which she had seen during a 1923 visit.[65] The opening lines of The Walls do not Fall clearly and immediately signal her break with her earlier work:[66]

An incident here and there,
and rails gone (for guns)
from your (and my) old town square.

H.D.'s relationship with Bryher ended just after the war, although they remained in contact. She moved to Switzerland where she had a severe mental breakdown in the spring of 1946 and took refuge in a clinic until the autumn of that year. She lived in Switzerland for the rest of her life.[67] In the late 1950s, she underwent further treatment with the psychoanalyst Erich Heydt, who supported her while she wrote End to Torment, a memoir of her relationship with Pound.[68]

Later work and death

 
H.D. in later years

H.D.'s later work drew heavily from her eclectic blend of Christianity, Ancient Greek and Egyptian religion, Spiritualism,[69] Hermeticism,[70] Martinism and Cabala via the works of Robert Ambelain,[71] alchemy,[72] tarot,[73] astrology,[72] and Freudian psychoanalysis. She used the medium of the long poem to explore and communicate this mix of spiritualities.[74]

H.D. wrote her longest poem, Helen in Egypt, between 1952 and 1955 when she was in her 60s. However, it was not published until just before her death in 1961.[75] It is based Euripides' trilogy drama Helen, but imagines Helen of Troy's life after the fall of Troy and her relocation to Egypt. The poem reconstructs the source material into a feminist reinterpretation,[76][77] and has thus been described as "exploring ... [but] ... concluding" the themes as her earlier work.[75] Helen in Egypts long form and wide historical span has been seen as a response to Pound's Cantos, which she admired. In End to Torment she approved of Norman Holmes Pearson's labeling of Helen in Egypt as "her 'cantos'".[78]

A compilation of her late poems were published posthumously in 1972 under the title Hermetic Definition.[63] The book takes as its starting points her love for a man 30 years her junior and the line "so slow is the rose to open" from Pound's Canto 106. "Sagesse", which she wrote in bed having broken her hip in a fall, serves as a coda to Trilogy, being partly written in the voice of a young female Blitz survivor who finds herself living in fear of the atom bomb.[79] "Winter Love" was written during the same period as End to Torment and uses as narrator the Homeric figure of Penelope to restate the material of the memoir in poetic form. At one time, H.D. considered appending this poem as a coda to Helen in Egypt.[80]

She returned to the U.S. in 1960 to collect the Award of Merit Medal from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, becoming the first woman to be granted the award for poetry.[81][82]

H.D was left gravely ill after a stroke in July 1961 and was taken to the Klinik Hirslanden in Zürich, where she died on September 27.[83] She was survived by Bryher and her daughter Perdita.[47] Her ashes were brought to Bethlehem, where they were buried in the family plot in the Nisky Hill Cemetery on October 28, 1961. Her headstone is inscribed with lines from her early poem "Epitaph":[84]

So you may say,
Greek flower; Greek ecstasy
reclaims forever
one who died
following intricate song's
lost measure.

Appraisal

During her career, H.D. wrote a large number of works in a variety of styles and formats. They evolved from lyrics written in the 1910s (such as Sea Garden), through her early period Imagist poems and free verse, to her complex long poems Trilogy (1944), Helen in Egypt (1955), Vale Ave (1957), and the 1971 collection Hermetic Definition, consisting of the title poem (1961), "Sagesse" (1957), and "Winter Love" (1959). However, during her lifetime, the later poems, novels and numerous translations of classical works were rarely studied or taught, and only her early poems (especially "Oread" and "Heat") appeared in anthologies. For decades, her reputation was as an Imagist who peaked in the 1920s; a consignment the literary critic Susan Friedman believes placed H.D. as "a captive and in prison".[85] In 1972, Hugh Kenner wrote that assigning her as just an Imagist poet was similar to evaluating "five of the shortest pieces in Harmonium [as equal to] the life's work of Wallace Stevens".[85] Although Pound claimed in the 1930s that he formed the Imagist movement "to launch H.D. and Aldington before either had enough stuff for a volume", many the of foundational poets within the group, including Amy Lowell, viewed H.D. as the main focal point and innovator in achieving the group's "revolution in taste".[86][87]

H.D. was aware early on that both the strictures of Imagism and Pound's controlling temperament would constrain her creative voice, and by the mid-1920s her work had developed beyond Imagism.[88] In 1990, the feminist scholar Gertrude Reif Hughes described her as "physically fragile-looking in a traditionally feminine way".[89] H.D. understood the danger of objectification, particularly as the only woman in a group of men in her circle. She worried about being perceived merely as their private muse, which she feared affected her public image and standing as a poet and prominent intellectual in her own right.[90] Female objectification is explored in "HER", where she writes of "a classic dilemma for woman: the necessity to choose between being a muse to another or being an artist oneself".[90] Although Pound was a lifelong champion, a number of other early Imagists, including Aldington and Lawrence, attempted to diminish her importance and consign her to a minor role.[22] Similarly, while her mid-period poems and writings explore mysticism, esotericism and the occult, in a similar manner to poets such as W.B. Yeats (with whom she was personally acquainted), H.D. was rarely read before the 1970s.[91]

Although the critic Linda Wagner wrote in 1969 that one of the "ironies of contemporary literature [is] that H.D. is remembered chiefly for her Imagist work given that few contemporary writers have written so much in their maturity";[75] her reappraisal only began in the 1970s and 1980s. This coincided with the emergence of feminist interest in her work, followed by queer studies scholars.[92] Specifically, critics such as Friedman (1981), Janice Robertson (1982) and Rachel DuPlessis (1986) began to challenge the standard view of English-language literary modernism as based on only the work of male writers, and gradually restored H.D. to a more significant position in the movement.[22] In 1990, Hughes wrote that H.D. mid-century poems, like those of Gwendolyn Brooks, anticipate second-wave feminism, and explore issues raised in Simone de Beauvoir's 1949 book The Second Sex. According to Hughes, H.D.'s work challenges patriarchal privilege and seeks to "revise the mentalities that sponsor them". She notes in particular how in Helen in Egypt, H.D. positions Helen as "the protagonist, instead of the pawn", in such a way as to counter the "conservative and often misogynistic" tendencies which Hughes finds in the modernism of Pound and T. S. Eliot.[93]

Legacy

H.D.'s writings have served as a model for a number of more recent female poets working in the modernist and post-modernist traditions, including Barbara Guest, the Black Mountain poet Hilda Morley and the Language poet Susan Howe.[94] The Anglo-American poet Denise Levertov wrote of her deep appreciation for H.D., particularly for her long poems on mystical themes, writing that H.D. "showed the way to penetrate mystery, [...] to enter into darkness, mystery, so that it is experienced".[95] Her influence is not limited to female poets; many male writers and poets, including Robert Duncan, have acknowledged their debt.[96] Duncan placed H.D. at the center of his lengthy study of modernist poetry in general, titled The H.D. Book, and frequently lectured on her work.[97] The Dutch poet H.C. ten Berge wrote his 2008 "Het vertrapte mysterie" ("The Trampled Mystery") in memory of H.D.[98]

Passages from Trilogy were widely shared across electronic discussion lists in the days following the September 11th attacks.[99]

During World War II, her daughter Perdita was involved in breaking codes at Bletchley Park and later worked for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the predecessor of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). In the OSS, she served with Graham Greene and James Angleton.[51] H.D.'s grandchildren include the author and Beatles biographer Nicholas Schaffner.[100]

Works

Works are listed by date of composition, where known.[101][102]

Poetry

  • Sea Garden (1912–1916)
  • Choruses from the Iphigeneia in Aulis and The Hippollytus of Euripides (1919)
  • Hymen (1921)
  • Heliodora (1924)
  • Collected Poems of H.D. (published 1925, bringing together Sea Garden, Hymen, Heliodora, and two new collections)
    • The God, grouping previously uncollected poems (1913–1917)
    • Translations (1915–1920)
  • Red Roses for Bronze (1931)
  • Uncollected and Unpublished Poems 1912–1944, first collected in Collected Poems: 1912–1944 (1983)
    • A Dead Priestess Speaks (1930s approx.)
  • Trilogy
    • "The Walls Do Not Fall" (1942)
    • "Tribute to the Angels" (1944)
    • "The Flowering of the Rod" (1944)
  • Helen in Egypt (1952–1955)
  • Vale Ave (1957)
  • Hermetic Definition (published 1971)
    • "Hermetic Definition" (1960–1961)
    • "Sagesse" (1957)
    • "Winter Love" (1959)
  • Collected Poems: 1912–1944 (published 1983)

Plays

Both texts are loose verse translations of Greek dramas by Euripides.

Prose

H.D.'s fictional and nonfictional prose writings are difficult to distinguish with much certainty. Her novels and short stories are often romans-a-clef, and her memoirs and essays are often experimental.

Fiction

  • Paint it Today (1921)
  • Asphodel (1921–1922)
  • Palimpsest (1926)
  • HERmione (1927)
  • Bid Me to Live (1927, revised 1947)
  • Kora and Ka (1930)
  • Nights (1931)
  • Usual Star (1934)
  • The Hedgehog (1936)
  • Majic Ring (1943–1944)
  • Pilate's Wife (1929–1934)
  • Within the Walls (1941)
    • Collection of short stories or vignettes.
  • The Gift (1941–1943)
  • The Sword Went Out to Sea (1946–1947)
  • White Rose and the Red (1948)
  • By Avon River (1949)
    • Historical fiction and poetry.
  • The Mystery (1949–1951)
  • Magic Mirror (1955–1956)

Nonfiction

  • Notes on Thought and Vision (1919)
  • Borderline: A POOL Film with Paul Robeson (1930)
  • Tribute to Freud
    • "Advent" (1933)
    • "Writing on the Wall" (1944)
  • Compassionate Friendship (1955)
  • Hirslanden Notebooks (1957–1959)
  • End to Torment: A Memoir of Ezra Pound (1958)
  • Thorn Thicket (1960)

Notes

  1. ^ Davies 1997, p. 39.
  2. ^ Guest 1984, p. 9.
  3. ^ Downs 2000, p. 87.
  4. ^ a b c Pearson & Dembo 1969, p. 437.
  5. ^ a b Gates 1992, p. 5.
  6. ^ Moody 2009, p. 34.
  7. ^ Silverstein 1990, pp. 32–33.
  8. ^ a b King 1981, p. 348.
  9. ^ a b c d e Lewis 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Barnstone 1998, p. 78.
  11. ^ Silverstein 1990, p. 32.
  12. ^ King 1981, p. 347.
  13. ^ Silverstein 1990, pp. 33.
  14. ^ Friedman & DuPlessis 1990b, p. 209.
  15. ^ Bryer & Roblyer 1969, p. 632.
  16. ^ Moody 2009, p. 180.
  17. ^ Hollenberg 2022, pp. 35–36.
  18. ^ Wilhelm 1990, pp. 31–34.
  19. ^ Hughes 1990, p. 375.
  20. ^ Hatlen 1995, p. 109.
  21. ^ Pound 1954, p. 3.
  22. ^ a b c d Barnstone 1998, p. 79.
  23. ^ a b Pondrom 1990, p. 87.
  24. ^ Moody 2009, p. 35.
  25. ^ Korg 2003, p. 31.
  26. ^ Keeling 1998, pp. 176–177, 189.
  27. ^ Gill 2005, pp. 560–561.
  28. ^ Ward 1970, pp. 241.
  29. ^ Kammer 1979, p. 157.
  30. ^ a b Sinclair 1927.
  31. ^ Silverstein 1990, p. 35.
  32. ^ Firchow 1980, pp. 51–76.
  33. ^ Downs 2000, p. 88.
  34. ^ Korg 2003, p. 50.
  35. ^ Friedman 1990, p. 9.
  36. ^ Firchow 1980, p. 54.
  37. ^ Kelvin 2000, pp. 179–180.
  38. ^ Parker 2014, p. 132.
  39. ^ a b c Kakutani, Michiko (January 4, 1984). "Books of The Times: Herself Defined. The Poet H. D. and Her World". The New York Times. from the original on August 21, 2022. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  40. ^ a b McCabe 2021, p. 12.
  41. ^ a b DuPlessis & Friedman 1981, p. 417.
  42. ^ Caserio 2004, pp. 400–402.
  43. ^ DuPlessis 1986, p. 40.
  44. ^ McCabe 2021, p. 81.
  45. ^ a b Hokanson 1992, pp. 839–840.
  46. ^ McCabe 2021, p. xvii.
  47. ^ a b c Delatiner, Barbarao (June 15, 1986). "New Library Evokes 'Lost Generation'". The New York Times. Retrieved September 21, 2022.
  48. ^ a b "'Bryher 1894–1983". Academy of American Poets. Retrieved September 21, 2022.
  49. ^ Scott 1995.
  50. ^ McCabe 2005, p. 128.
  51. ^ a b c Schaffner 2002.
  52. ^ Friedman 2002, p. 567.
  53. ^ Connor 2004, p. 19.
  54. ^ Walton 1997, p. 88.
  55. ^ Walton 1997, pp. 89–90.
  56. ^ Mandel 1980, pp. 127, 135.
  57. ^ Doolittle, Hilda (1960). Bid Me to Live: A Madrigal. Grove Press.
  58. ^ Quigley, Patrick (2018). "Captain Jack White: Ulster Prophet of Dissent". Przegląd Kulturoznawczy. 3 (37): (396-406) 403-404. doi:10.4467/20843860PK.18.022.10107.
  59. ^ Guest 1984, pp. 207–208.
  60. ^ McCabe 2005, p. 133.
  61. ^ Willis 2007, p. 86.
  62. ^ Chisholm 1990, p. 96.
  63. ^ a b Friedman 1975, p. 801.
  64. ^ Morris 1986, pp. 517–518.
  65. ^ "The Walls Do Not Fall by H.D." British Library. from the original on June 25, 2022. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  66. ^ Anthology. "Sagetrieb" (2008). University of Michigan. p. 49.
  67. ^ Pearson & Dembo 1969, p. 436.
  68. ^ Friedman 1981, pp. 20–21.
  69. ^ Robinson 2016, p. 5.
  70. ^ Anderson 2013, p. 3.
  71. ^ Robinson 2016, p. 6.
  72. ^ a b Robinson 2016, p. 50.
  73. ^ Robinson 2016, p. 22.
  74. ^ Hatlen 2004, p. 497.
  75. ^ a b c Wagner 1969, p. 523.
  76. ^ Glaser 2005, p. 91.
  77. ^ Twitchell-Waas 1998, pp. 464–465.
  78. ^ Twitchell-Waas 1998, pp. 464, 479.
  79. ^ Bancroft 2021, p. 312.
  80. ^ Friedman 1975, p. 808.
  81. ^ Silverstein 1990, p. 45.
  82. ^ Lohser & Newton 1996, p. 40.
  83. ^ Guest 1984, pp. 332–333.
  84. ^ H.D. 1983, p. 299.
  85. ^ a b Friedman 1975, pp. 801–802.
  86. ^ Engel 1969, p. 507.
  87. ^ Hatlen 1995, pp. 108–109.
  88. ^ Hatlen 1995, pp. 108–111.
  89. ^ Hughes 1990, p. 378.
  90. ^ a b Parker 2014, p. 131.
  91. ^ Friedman 1975, p. 802.
  92. ^ Richardson 2004, p. 182.
  93. ^ Hughes 1990, p. 376.
  94. ^ Clippinger, David. "Resurrecting the Ghost: H.D., Susan Howe, and the Haven of Poetry" March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  95. ^ Levertov, Denise (June 1962). "H.D.: An Appreciation". Poetry. 100 (3): 183.
  96. ^ Keenaghan 2005, pp. 74–75.
  97. ^ Duncan, Robert (2011). The H.D. Book. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  98. ^ "Meester van de variatie". De Reactor (in Dutch). Retrieved June 21, 2022.
  99. ^ Detloff, Madelyn (2009). The Persistence of Modernism: Loss and Mourning in the Twentieth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 80.
  100. ^ McCabe 2021, p. 313.
  101. ^ Christodoulides, Nephie J.; Mackay, Polina (2012). The Cambridge Companion to H.D. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. xiii–xviii. ISBN 9780521187558.
  102. ^ H.D. (2015). Robinson, Matte (ed.). Hirslanden Notebooks: An Annotated Scholarly Edition. Victoria, Canada: ELS Editions. pp. ix–xxxvii.

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  • Ward, A.C. (1970). Longman Companion to Twentieth Century Literature. Prentice Hall Press. ISBN 978-0-582-32803-7.
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  • Willis, Elizabeth (Spring 2007). "A Public History of the Dividing Line: H. D., the Bomb, and the Roots of the Postmodern". Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory. 63 (1): 81–108. doi:10.1353/arq.2007.0005. S2CID 162848498.

External links

  • H.D. Papers. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
  • on .
  • Works by H.D. at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by H.D. at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • H.D. at Modern American Poetry

other, uses, disambiguation, hilda, doolittle, september, 1886, september, 1961, american, modernist, poet, novelist, memoirist, wrote, under, name, throughout, life, career, began, 1911, after, moved, london, founded, avant, garde, imagist, group, poets, with. For other uses see HD disambiguation Hilda Doolittle September 10 1886 September 27 1961 was an American modernist poet novelist and memoirist who wrote under the name H D throughout her life Her career began in 1911 after she moved to London and co founded the avant garde Imagist group of poets with American expatriate poet and critic Ezra Pound During this early period her minimalist free verse poems depicting Classical motifs drew international attention Eventually distancing herself from the Imagist movement she experimented with a wider variety of forms including fiction memoir and verse drama Profoundly affected by her experiences in London during the Blitz H D s poetic style from World War II until her death pivoted towards complex long poems on esoteric and pacifist themes H D H D circa 1917 photographed by Man RayBornHilda Doolittle 1886 09 10 September 10 1886Bethlehem Pennsylvania U S DiedSeptember 27 1961 1961 09 27 aged 75 Zurich SwitzerlandAlma materBryn Mawr CollegeOccupationsPoet novelist memoiristSignatureH D was born in Bethlehem Pennsylvania to wealthy and educated parents who relocated to Upper Darby in 1896 Discovering her bisexuality she had her first same sex relationship while attending Bryn Mawr College between 1904 and 1906 After years of friendship H D became engaged to Pound and followed him to London in 1911 where he championed her work but their relationship soon fell apart with H D instead marrying the Imagist poet Richard Aldington in 1913 In 1918 she met the novelist Bryher who became her romantic partner and close friend until her death An associate literary editor of the Egoist journal between 1916 and 1917 H D was published by the English Review and Transatlantic Review During World War I both her brother and father died and she separated from Aldington She was treated by Sigmund Freud during the 1930s looking to understand both her war trauma and bisexuality 1 H D was keenly interested in Ancient Greek literature and published numerous Greek translations Throughout her career her poems routinely drew from Greek mythology and classical poets from her earliest Imagist lyrics which depicted natural landscapes using Hellenistic motifs to her 1950s long poem Helen in Egypt which reinterpreted the myth of the Trojan War Raised Moravian by her family and first introduced to occult and esoteric religious ideas by Pound in her youth H D gradually developed a unique syncretic spiritual worldview H D s spiritual devotion intensified during and after World War II and these ideas became a central concern of her late writing While H D wrote in a wide range of genres and modes over career during her lifetime she was known almost exclusively for her early Imagist poems Following a reappraisal by feminist critics in the 1970s and 1980s the significance of her late long poems and prose works was increasingly recognized and she has come to be understood as a central figure in the history of modernist literature Contents 1 Life and Work 1 1 Early life 1 2 Imagism 1 3 World War I and after 1 4 Poetry cycles novels and psychoanalysis 1 5 World War II and after 1 6 Later work and death 2 Appraisal 3 Legacy 4 Works 4 1 Poetry 4 2 Plays 4 3 Prose 4 3 1 Fiction 4 3 2 Nonfiction 5 Notes 6 Sources 7 External linksLife and Work EditEarly life Edit Cover of H D s 1958 book End to Torment A Memoir of Ezra Pound showing the couple as they were in the early 1910s Hilda Doolittle was born on September 10 1886 into the Moravian community in Bethlehem Pennsylvania 2 Her father Charles was professor of astronomy at Lehigh University 3 and her mother Helen nee Wolle 4 was a member of the Moravian brotherhood Hilda was their only daughter in a family with five sons When Charles was appointed professor of astronomy at the University of Pennsylvania to take charge of the Flower Observatory 5 6 they moved to Upper Darby She attended Friends Central School in Philadelphia and graduated in 1905 delivering a commencement address entitled The Poet s Influence 7 She enrolled at Bryn Mawr College in 1905 to study Greek literature 8 where she met the poets Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams After three terms of poor grades H D withdrew from the college studying at home until 1910 9 10 H D met poet Ezra Pound as a teenager in 1901 He became a life long friend and played a formative role in her development as a writer In 1905 Pound and H D began an on and off relationship 10 which included at least two engagements 11 Although his parents were in favor of the relationship her parents strongly objected 8 10 In 1907 Pound gave her Hilda s Book a handmade vellum binding of twenty five of his earliest love poems which he dedicated to her 12 In 1910 Doolittle began a relationship with Frances Josepha Gregg a young female art student at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts 13 Inspired by Gregg H D wrote her first published poems modeled after the work of Theocritus 14 Some of her early work including some children s stories about astronomy was published in New York newspapers and Presbyterian newsletters 4 15 Imagism Edit H D traveled to London in May 1911 to holiday with Gregg and Gregg s mother Gregg returned home but H D stayed to develop a career as a writer Pound introduced her to his friends including English writer Brigit Patmore Patmore introduced her to Richard Aldington who became her husband in 1913 The three lived in Church Walk Kensington Pound at no 10 Aldington at no 8 and H D at no 6 and gathered to work daily in the British Museum Reading Room 16 17 Pound had already begun to meet with other poets in London to discuss ideas for reforming contemporary poetry 18 and like all modernists in different artistic fields make it new 19 They achieved this through the incorporation of free verse the brevity of the tanka and haiku forms and the removal of unnecessary verbiage Pound H D and Aldington became known as the three original Imagists 5 and published a three point manifesto proclaiming the edicts of Imagism According to Pound 20 21 We were agreed upon the three principles following Direct treatment of the thing whether subjective or objective To use absolutely no word that does not contribute to the presentation As regarding rhythm to compose poetry in the sequence of the musical phrase not in sequence of a metronome During a 1912 conversation with Pound H D told him that she found Hilda Doolittle to be an old fashioned and quaint name he suggested the signature H D an abbreviation she kept for the remainder of her career 22 After he scrawled the name H D Imagiste at the bottom of the page of her poem Hermes of the Ways she adopted H D as a pen 23 Privately he called her Dryad 24 Under the rubric Imagiste in October 1912 Pound submitted a selection of H D s poems to Harriet Monroe founder of the magazine Poetry Three of her poems were published in the January 1913 issue Hermes of the Ways Pound said this is poetry after reading Priapus Keeper of Orchards later renamed Orchard and Epigram alongside three by Aldington 23 25 These early poems are informed by her reading of Classical Greek literature especially of Sappho 26 an interest shared with Aldington and Pound Her Imagist poetry is characterized by sparse language 27 and a classical austere purity 28 exemplified by one of her earliest and best known poems Oread 1915 29 Whirl up sea whirl your pointed pines splash your great pines on our rocks hurl your green over us cover us with your pools of fir The style was not without its critics In a dedicated Imagist issue of The Egoist magazine in May 1915 the English poet and critic Harold Monro named H D as the truest Imagist but dismissed her early work as petty poetry denoting either poverty of imagination or needlessly excessive restraint 30 In contrast a 1927 review by the British modernist author and critic May Sinclair described Oread s brevity as a miracle and criticized Monro for not recognizing it 30 World War I and after Edit H D married Aldington in 1913 and the following year Pound married the English artist Dorothy Shakespear 22 4 H D and Aldington s only child a daughter was stillborn in 1915 He enlisted in the army and she took his place as assistant editor of The Egoist serving for the next year 31 The couple drifted apart he reportedly took a mistress in 1917 and she started a close but platonic relationship with the English writer D H Lawrence 32 In 1918 H D s brother Gilbert was killed in action She moved to Cornwall that March with the Scottish composer Cecil Gray a friend of Lawrence She became pregnant with Gray s child 33 but by the time she realized she was expecting the relationship had cooled and Gray had returned to London 34 H D learned that her father died having never recovered from Gilbert s death 9 Despondent and sick with the Spanish flu she came close to death during the birth of their daughter Perdita Aldington in 1919 35 36 H D and Aldington tried to salvage their relationship but failed in part because of his post war post traumatic stress disorder but especially because of her pregnancy with Gray They became estranged but did not divorce until 1938 37 Bryher photographed in 1923 by Man Ray She began a relationship with the wealthy English novelist Bryher Annie Winifred Ellerman after meeting in Cornwall in July 1918 38 Bryher was younger than H D by several years a lesbian and equally non conformist 39 40 Both women were unusually tall a fact that made H D self conscious and they made for a striking couple at social occasions 40 They lived together on and off until 1950 41 and although both had numerous other partners Bryher was H D s lover for the rest of her life 39 Bryher entered a marriage of convenience with the American writer and publisher Robert McAlmon allowing him to use some of her wealth to fund his Paris based Contact Press publishing house 42 In 1923 H D and Bryher traveled to Egypt for the opening of Tutankhamun s tomb before settling in Switzerland 9 H D s first book Sea Garden was published in 1916 She wrote one of her few known statements on poetics Notes on Thought and Vision in 1919 although it was not published until 1982 43 In it she speaks of poets including herself as belonging to a kind of elite group of visionaries with the power to turn the whole tide of human thought 44 Poetry cycles novels and psychoanalysis Edit Poetry and novella cycles are a feature of H D s early 1920s writing 45 The first Magna Graeca consists of the poems Palimpsest 1921 and Hedylus 1928 which use classical settings to explore the role of a poet particularly a female s value in a patriarchal literary culture The following cycles HERmione Bid Me to Live Paint It Today and Asphodel are largely autobiographical and preoccupied with the development of the female artist and the conflict between heterosexual and lesbian desire The novellas Kora and Ka and The Usual Star from the Borderline cycle were published in 1933 followed by Pilate s Wife Mira Mare and Nights 45 H D in 1922 Her mother died in 1927 46 Bryher divorced McAlmon that year to marry Kenneth Macpherson then H D s male lover 47 48 Bryher Macpherson and H D lived and traveled together through Europe together in what the New York School poet Barbara Guest termed a menagerie of three 39 Bryher adopted H D s daughter Perdita while still married Macpherson leading to the change of name to Perdita Macpherson 49 47 50 Later Bryher named Perdita as heir to her will 48 They moved to the shores of Lake Geneva where they lived in a Bauhaus villa 51 H D became pregnant in 1928 and got an abortion 52 In 1927 Bryher and Macpherson founded the monthly magazine Close Up as a venue for the discussion of cinema 9 That year the independent film cinema group POOL or Pool Group was established largely funded with Bryher s inheritance and was managed by all three 53 In the 1930 POOL film Borderline the actors were H D and Bryher and the couple Paul and Eslanda Robeson the latter appearing as wife and husband 54 The film explores extreme psychic states racism and interracial relationships 55 H D wrote an explanatory pamphlet to accompany the film 56 Although not published until 1960 in 1927 H D wrote the thinly disguised roman a clef Bid Me to Live 57 Some characters are recognizable as members of the wartime Bloomsbury Group including Lawrence and his wife Frieda Pound and Captain Jack White the Irish revolutionary drifter with whom H D herself appears caricatured in the Lawrence novel Aaron s Rod 1922 58 H D began psychoanalysis in 1928 with the Freudian Hanns Sachs 9 and traveled to Vienna in 1933 for analysis with Sigmund Freud 59 She became interested in Freud s theories since 1909 after reading his works in the original German 60 and was referred by Bryher s psychoanalyst because of her apparent paranoia about the rise of Adolf Hitler World War I had left her feeling shattered she lost her brother in action her father died in reaction to the loss of his son her husband was traumatized by combat and she believed that the shock at hearing of the sinking the RMS Lusitania indirectly caused the miscarriage of her child 61 H D undertook two series of analysis with Freud March to May 1933 and October to November 1934 41 and on his request wrote Bid me to Live published 1960 in which she details her traumatic war experiences 62 Writing on the Wall an impressionistic memoir of the sessions and a reevaluation of the importance of his psychoanalysis was written concurrently with Trilogy and published in 1944 in 1956 it was republished together with Advent a journal of the analysis under the title Tribute to Freud 63 World War II and after Edit Hilda and Bryher spent World War II in London While there her daughter Perdita became a secretary of the Office of Strategic Services OSS 51 Between 1941 and 1943 H D wrote The Gift a short memoir of her childhood in Bethlehem that details the people and events that shaped her 64 She began the Trilogy series in 1942 comprising three long unrhyming and complex volumes of poems The Walls do not Fall 1944 Tribute to the Angels 1945 and The Flowering of the Rod 1946 H D wrote the first while living in London and details her reactions to the Blitz and World War II The following two books compare the ruins of London to those of ancient Egypt and classical Greece the former of which she had seen during a 1923 visit 65 The opening lines of The Walls do not Fall clearly and immediately signal her break with her earlier work 66 An incident here and there and rails gone for guns from your and my old town square H D s relationship with Bryher ended just after the war although they remained in contact She moved to Switzerland where she had a severe mental breakdown in the spring of 1946 and took refuge in a clinic until the autumn of that year She lived in Switzerland for the rest of her life 67 In the late 1950s she underwent further treatment with the psychoanalyst Erich Heydt who supported her while she wrote End to Torment a memoir of her relationship with Pound 68 Later work and death Edit H D in later years H D s later work drew heavily from her eclectic blend of Christianity Ancient Greek and Egyptian religion Spiritualism 69 Hermeticism 70 Martinism and Cabala via the works of Robert Ambelain 71 alchemy 72 tarot 73 astrology 72 and Freudian psychoanalysis She used the medium of the long poem to explore and communicate this mix of spiritualities 74 H D wrote her longest poem Helen in Egypt between 1952 and 1955 when she was in her 60s However it was not published until just before her death in 1961 75 It is based Euripides trilogy drama Helen but imagines Helen of Troy s life after the fall of Troy and her relocation to Egypt The poem reconstructs the source material into a feminist reinterpretation 76 77 and has thus been described as exploring but concluding the themes as her earlier work 75 Helen in Egypts long form and wide historical span has been seen as a response to Pound s Cantos which she admired In End to Torment she approved of Norman Holmes Pearson s labeling of Helen in Egypt as her cantos 78 A compilation of her late poems were published posthumously in 1972 under the title Hermetic Definition 63 The book takes as its starting points her love for a man 30 years her junior and the line so slow is the rose to open from Pound s Canto 106 Sagesse which she wrote in bed having broken her hip in a fall serves as a coda to Trilogy being partly written in the voice of a young female Blitz survivor who finds herself living in fear of the atom bomb 79 Winter Love was written during the same period as End to Torment and uses as narrator the Homeric figure of Penelope to restate the material of the memoir in poetic form At one time H D considered appending this poem as a coda to Helen in Egypt 80 She returned to the U S in 1960 to collect the Award of Merit Medal from the American Academy of Arts and Letters becoming the first woman to be granted the award for poetry 81 82 H D was left gravely ill after a stroke in July 1961 and was taken to the Klinik Hirslanden in Zurich where she died on September 27 83 She was survived by Bryher and her daughter Perdita 47 Her ashes were brought to Bethlehem where they were buried in the family plot in the Nisky Hill Cemetery on October 28 1961 Her headstone is inscribed with lines from her early poem Epitaph 84 So you may say Greek flower Greek ecstasy reclaims forever one who died following intricate song s lost measure Appraisal EditDuring her career H D wrote a large number of works in a variety of styles and formats They evolved from lyrics written in the 1910s such as Sea Garden through her early period Imagist poems and free verse to her complex long poems Trilogy 1944 Helen in Egypt 1955 Vale Ave 1957 and the 1971 collection Hermetic Definition consisting of the title poem 1961 Sagesse 1957 and Winter Love 1959 However during her lifetime the later poems novels and numerous translations of classical works were rarely studied or taught and only her early poems especially Oread and Heat appeared in anthologies For decades her reputation was as an Imagist who peaked in the 1920s a consignment the literary critic Susan Friedman believes placed H D as a captive and in prison 85 In 1972 Hugh Kenner wrote that assigning her as just an Imagist poet was similar to evaluating five of the shortest pieces in Harmonium as equal to the life s work of Wallace Stevens 85 Although Pound claimed in the 1930s that he formed the Imagist movement to launch H D and Aldington before either had enough stuff for a volume many the of foundational poets within the group including Amy Lowell viewed H D as the main focal point and innovator in achieving the group s revolution in taste 86 87 H D was aware early on that both the strictures of Imagism and Pound s controlling temperament would constrain her creative voice and by the mid 1920s her work had developed beyond Imagism 88 In 1990 the feminist scholar Gertrude Reif Hughes described her as physically fragile looking in a traditionally feminine way 89 H D understood the danger of objectification particularly as the only woman in a group of men in her circle She worried about being perceived merely as their private muse which she feared affected her public image and standing as a poet and prominent intellectual in her own right 90 Female objectification is explored in HER where she writes of a classic dilemma for woman the necessity to choose between being a muse to another or being an artist oneself 90 Although Pound was a lifelong champion a number of other early Imagists including Aldington and Lawrence attempted to diminish her importance and consign her to a minor role 22 Similarly while her mid period poems and writings explore mysticism esotericism and the occult in a similar manner to poets such as W B Yeats with whom she was personally acquainted H D was rarely read before the 1970s 91 Although the critic Linda Wagner wrote in 1969 that one of the ironies of contemporary literature is that H D is remembered chiefly for her Imagist work given that few contemporary writers have written so much in their maturity 75 her reappraisal only began in the 1970s and 1980s This coincided with the emergence of feminist interest in her work followed by queer studies scholars 92 Specifically critics such as Friedman 1981 Janice Robertson 1982 and Rachel DuPlessis 1986 began to challenge the standard view of English language literary modernism as based on only the work of male writers and gradually restored H D to a more significant position in the movement 22 In 1990 Hughes wrote that H D mid century poems like those of Gwendolyn Brooks anticipate second wave feminism and explore issues raised in Simone de Beauvoir s 1949 book The Second Sex According to Hughes H D s work challenges patriarchal privilege and seeks to revise the mentalities that sponsor them She notes in particular how in Helen in Egypt H D positions Helen as the protagonist instead of the pawn in such a way as to counter the conservative and often misogynistic tendencies which Hughes finds in the modernism of Pound and T S Eliot 93 Legacy EditH D s writings have served as a model for a number of more recent female poets working in the modernist and post modernist traditions including Barbara Guest the Black Mountain poet Hilda Morley and the Language poet Susan Howe 94 The Anglo American poet Denise Levertov wrote of her deep appreciation for H D particularly for her long poems on mystical themes writing that H D showed the way to penetrate mystery to enter into darkness mystery so that it is experienced 95 Her influence is not limited to female poets many male writers and poets including Robert Duncan have acknowledged their debt 96 Duncan placed H D at the center of his lengthy study of modernist poetry in general titled The H D Book and frequently lectured on her work 97 The Dutch poet H C ten Berge wrote his 2008 Het vertrapte mysterie The Trampled Mystery in memory of H D 98 Passages from Trilogy were widely shared across electronic discussion lists in the days following the September 11th attacks 99 During World War II her daughter Perdita was involved in breaking codes at Bletchley Park and later worked for the Office of Strategic Services OSS the predecessor of the Central Intelligence Agency CIA In the OSS she served with Graham Greene and James Angleton 51 H D s grandchildren include the author and Beatles biographer Nicholas Schaffner 100 Works EditWorks are listed by date of composition where known 101 102 Poetry Edit Sea Garden 1912 1916 Choruses from the Iphigeneia in Aulis and The Hippollytus of Euripides 1919 Hymen 1921 Heliodora 1924 Collected Poems of H D published 1925 bringing together Sea Garden Hymen Heliodora and two new collections The God grouping previously uncollected poems 1913 1917 Oread Translations 1915 1920 Red Roses for Bronze 1931 The Mysteries Renaissance Choros Uncollected and Unpublished Poems 1912 1944 first collected in Collected Poems 1912 1944 1983 A Dead Priestess Speaks 1930s approx Trilogy The Walls Do Not Fall 1942 Tribute to the Angels 1944 The Flowering of the Rod 1944 Helen in Egypt 1952 1955 Vale Ave 1957 Hermetic Definition published 1971 Hermetic Definition 1960 1961 Sagesse 1957 Winter Love 1959 Collected Poems 1912 1944 published 1983 Plays Edit Both texts are loose verse translations of Greek dramas by Euripides Hippolytus Temporizes A Play in Three Acts 1927 Ion 1937 Prose Edit H D s fictional and nonfictional prose writings are difficult to distinguish with much certainty Her novels and short stories are often romans a clef and her memoirs and essays are often experimental Fiction Edit Paint it Today 1921 Asphodel 1921 1922 Palimpsest 1926 HERmione 1927 Bid Me to Live 1927 revised 1947 Kora and Ka 1930 Nights 1931 Usual Star 1934 The Hedgehog 1936 Majic Ring 1943 1944 Pilate s Wife 1929 1934 Within the Walls 1941 Collection of short stories or vignettes The Gift 1941 1943 The Sword Went Out to Sea 1946 1947 White Rose and the Red 1948 By Avon River 1949 Historical fiction and poetry The Mystery 1949 1951 Magic Mirror 1955 1956 Nonfiction Edit Notes on Thought and Vision 1919 Borderline A POOL Film with Paul Robeson 1930 Tribute to Freud Advent 1933 Writing on the Wall 1944 Compassionate Friendship 1955 Hirslanden Notebooks 1957 1959 End to Torment A Memoir of Ezra Pound 1958 Thorn Thicket 1960 Notes Edit Davies 1997 p 39 Guest 1984 p 9 Downs 2000 p 87 a b c Pearson amp Dembo 1969 p 437 a b Gates 1992 p 5 Moody 2009 p 34 Silverstein 1990 pp 32 33 a b King 1981 p 348 a b c d e Lewis 2021 a b c Barnstone 1998 p 78 Silverstein 1990 p 32 King 1981 p 347 Silverstein 1990 pp 33 Friedman amp DuPlessis 1990b p 209 Bryer amp Roblyer 1969 p 632 Moody 2009 p 180 Hollenberg 2022 pp 35 36 Wilhelm 1990 pp 31 34 Hughes 1990 p 375 Hatlen 1995 p 109 Pound 1954 p 3 a b c d Barnstone 1998 p 79 a b Pondrom 1990 p 87 Moody 2009 p 35 Korg 2003 p 31 Keeling 1998 pp 176 177 189 Gill 2005 pp 560 561 Ward 1970 pp 241 Kammer 1979 p 157 a b Sinclair 1927 Silverstein 1990 p 35 Firchow 1980 pp 51 76 Downs 2000 p 88 Korg 2003 p 50 Friedman 1990 p 9 Firchow 1980 p 54 Kelvin 2000 pp 179 180 Parker 2014 p 132 a b c Kakutani Michiko January 4 1984 Books of The Times Herself Defined The Poet H D and Her World The New York Times Archived from the original on August 21 2022 Retrieved June 25 2022 a b McCabe 2021 p 12 a b DuPlessis amp Friedman 1981 p 417 Caserio 2004 pp 400 402 DuPlessis 1986 p 40 McCabe 2021 p 81 a b Hokanson 1992 pp 839 840 McCabe 2021 p xvii a b c Delatiner Barbarao June 15 1986 New Library Evokes Lost Generation The New York Times Retrieved September 21 2022 a b Bryher 1894 1983 Academy of American Poets Retrieved September 21 2022 Scott 1995 McCabe 2005 p 128 a b c Schaffner 2002 Friedman 2002 p 567 Connor 2004 p 19 Walton 1997 p 88 Walton 1997 pp 89 90 Mandel 1980 pp 127 135 Doolittle Hilda 1960 Bid Me to Live A Madrigal Grove Press Quigley Patrick 2018 Captain Jack White Ulster Prophet of Dissent Przeglad Kulturoznawczy 3 37 396 406 403 404 doi 10 4467 20843860PK 18 022 10107 Guest 1984 pp 207 208 McCabe 2005 p 133 Willis 2007 p 86 Chisholm 1990 p 96 a b Friedman 1975 p 801 Morris 1986 pp 517 518 The Walls Do Not Fall by H D British Library Archived from the original on June 25 2022 Retrieved June 25 2022 Anthology Sagetrieb 2008 University of Michigan p 49 Pearson amp Dembo 1969 p 436 Friedman 1981 pp 20 21 Robinson 2016 p 5 Anderson 2013 p 3 Robinson 2016 p 6 a b Robinson 2016 p 50 Robinson 2016 p 22 Hatlen 2004 p 497 a b c Wagner 1969 p 523 Glaser 2005 p 91 Twitchell Waas 1998 pp 464 465 Twitchell Waas 1998 pp 464 479 Bancroft 2021 p 312 Friedman 1975 p 808 Silverstein 1990 p 45 Lohser amp Newton 1996 p 40 Guest 1984 pp 332 333 H D 1983 p 299 a b Friedman 1975 pp 801 802 Engel 1969 p 507 Hatlen 1995 pp 108 109 Hatlen 1995 pp 108 111 Hughes 1990 p 378 a b Parker 2014 p 131 Friedman 1975 p 802 Richardson 2004 p 182 Hughes 1990 p 376 Clippinger David Resurrecting the Ghost H D Susan Howe and the Haven of Poetry Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved September 21 2020 Levertov Denise June 1962 H D An Appreciation Poetry 100 3 183 Keenaghan 2005 pp 74 75 Duncan Robert 2011 The H D Book Berkeley University of California Press Meester van de variatie De Reactor in Dutch Retrieved June 21 2022 Detloff Madelyn 2009 The Persistence of Modernism Loss and Mourning in the Twentieth Century Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 80 McCabe 2021 p 313 Christodoulides Nephie J Mackay Polina 2012 The Cambridge Companion to H D Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp xiii xviii ISBN 9780521187558 H D 2015 Robinson Matte ed Hirslanden Notebooks An Annotated Scholarly Edition Victoria Canada ELS Editions pp ix xxxvii Sources EditAldington Richard 1992 Gates Norman T ed Richard Aldington An Autobiography in Letters Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 00832 5 Gates Norman T Introduction to Chapter 1 In Aldington 1992 Anderson Elizabeth 2013 H D and the Modernist Religious Imagination Mysticism and Writing London Bloomsbury Bancroft Christian 2021 Doolittle Hilda H D 1886 1961 In De Roche Linda ed Twentieth Century and Contemporary American Literature in Context Santa Barbara California Greenwood Press ISBN 978 1 4408 5358 6 Bryer Jackson R Roblyer Pamela Autumn 1969 H D A Preliminary Checklist Contemporary Literature 10 4 Special Number on H D A Reconsideration 632 675 doi 10 2307 1207704 JSTOR 1207704 Caserio Robert L June 2004 Material Modernism The Politics of the Page and Becoming Marianne Moore The Early Poems 1907 1924 review American Literature 76 2 400 402 doi 10 1215 00029831 76 2 400 ISSN 1527 2117 S2CID 152423723 Chisholm Dianne Spring 1990 H D s Autoheterography Tulsa Studies in Women s Literature 9 1 79 106 doi 10 2307 464182 JSTOR 464182 Connor Rachel Ann 2004 H D and the Image Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 6122 9 Davies Megan Lloyd 1997 H D imagiste Bisexuality Identity Imagism In Bertram Vicki ed Kicking Daffodils Twentieth Century Women Poets Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0782 X Downs M Catherine 2000 H D Hilda Doolittle 1886 1961 In Champion Laurie ed American Women Writers 1900 1945 A Bio Bibliographical Critical Sourcebook Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 3133 0943 4 DuPlessis Rachel Blau 1986 H D The Career of that Struggle Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 2533 2702 4 DuPlessis Rachel Blau Friedman Susan Stanford Autumn 1981 Woman Is Perfect H D s Debate with Freud Feminist Studies 7 3 417 430 doi 10 2307 3177758 JSTOR 3177758 PMID 11620149 Engel Bernard F Autumn 1969 H D Poems That Matter and Dilutations Contemporary Literature 10 4 Special Number on H D A Reconsideration 507 522 doi 10 2307 1207693 JSTOR 1207693 Firchow Peter E 1980 Rico and Julia The Hilda Doolittle D H Lawrence Affair Reconsidered Journal of Modern Literature 8 1 51 76 ISSN 0022 281X JSTOR 3831310 Friedman Susan March 1975 Who Buried H D A Poet Her Critics and Her Place in The Literary Tradition College English 36 7 801 814 doi 10 2307 375177 JSTOR 375177 Friedman Susan Stanford 1981 Psyche Reborn The Emergence of H D Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 37826 5 Friedman Susan ed 2002 Analyzing Freud Letters of H D Bryher and Their Circle New York New Directions ISBN 978 0 8112 1499 5 Friedman Susan Stanford DuPlessis Rachel Blau eds 1990a Signets Reading H D Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 2991 2680 3 Silverstein Louis H 1990 Chapter 4 Herself Delineated Chronological Highlights of H D In Friedman amp DuPlessis 1990a Pondrom Cyrena N 1990 Chapter 7 H D and the Origins of Imagism In Friedman amp DuPlessis 1990a Friedman Susan Stanford DuPlessis Rachel Blau 1990b Chapter 12 I had two loves separate The Sexualities of H D s Her In Friedman amp DuPlessis 1990a Friedman Susan Stanford 1990 Penelope s Web Gender Modernity H D s Fiction Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 5212 5579 0 Gill Jo 2005 H D Hilda Doolittle 1886 1961 In Marshall Bill Johnston Cristina eds France and the Americas Culture Politics and History Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 8510 9411 0 Glaser Brian Brodhead 2005 H D s Helen in Egypt Aging and the Unconscious Journal of Modern Literature 28 4 91 109 ISSN 0022 281X JSTOR 25167543 Guest Barbara 1984 Herself Defined The Poet H D and Her World Garden City New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 3851 3129 2 H D 1983 Martz Louis L ed Collected Poems 1912 1944 New York New Directions ISBN 978 0 8112 0876 5 H D 1998 Trilogy New York New Directions ISBN 978 0 8112 2266 2 Barnstone Aliki Reader s Notes In H D 1998 Hatlen Burton 1995 The Imagist Poetics of H D s Sea Garden Paideuma Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics 24 2 3 107 130 ISSN 0090 5674 JSTOR 24726520 Hokanson Robert O Brien December 1992 Penelope s Web Gender Modernity H D s Fiction by Susan Stanford Friedman American Literature 64 4 839 840 doi 10 2307 2927666 JSTOR 2927666 Hollenberg Donna Krolik 2022 Winged Words The Life and Work of the Poet H D Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 22006 9 Hughes Gertrude Reif September 1990 Making it Really New Hilda Doolittle Gwendolyn Brooks and the Feminist Potential of Modern Poetry American Quarterly 42 3 375 401 doi 10 2307 2712940 JSTOR 2712940 Kammer Jeanne 1979 The Art of Silence and the Forms of Women s Poetry In Gilbert Sandra M Gubar Susan eds Shakespeare s Sisters Feminist Essays on Women Poets Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 2532 0263 5 Keeling Bret L Summer 1998 H D and The Contest Archaeology of a Sapphic Gaze Twentieth Century Literature 44 2 176 203 doi 10 2307 441870 ISSN 0041 462X JSTOR 441870 fkeel Keenaghan Eric Summer 2005 Vulnerable Households Cold War Containment and Robert Duncan s Queered Nation Journal of Modern Literature 28 4 57 90 doi 10 1353 jml 2005 0054 ISSN 0022 281X JSTOR 25167542 S2CID 153457298 Kelvin Norman Spring 2000 H D and the Years of World War I Victorian Poetry 38 1 170 196 ISSN 0042 5206 JSTOR 40004298 King Michael Fall 1981 Go Little Book Ezra Pound Hilda Doolittle and Hilda s Book Paideuma Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics 10 2 347 360 ISSN 0090 5674 JSTOR 24725256 Korg Jacob 2003 Winter Love Ezra Pound and H D Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 18390 5 Lewis Jone Johnson June 5 2021 Biography of Hilda Doolittle Poet Translator and Memoirist ThoughtCo Retrieved March 7 2022 Lohser Beate Newton Peter M 1996 Unorthodox Freud The View from the Couch New York Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 5723 0128 3 Mandel Charlotte January 1980 Garbo Helen The self projection of beauty by H D Women s Studies 7 1 2 127 136 doi 10 1080 00497878 1980 9978507 McCabe Susan 2021 H D and Bryher An Untold Love Story of Modernism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 1906 2122 3 McCabe Susan 2005 Cinematic Modernism Modernist Poetry and Film Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 5218 4621 9 Moody Anthony David 2009 Ezra Pound Poet A Portrait of the Man and his Work Vol 1 The Young Genius 1885 1920 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 957146 8 Morris Adalaide Winter 1986 A Relay of Power and of Peace H D and the Spirit of the Gift Contemporary Literature 27 4 493 524 doi 10 2307 1208493 ISSN 0010 7484 JSTOR 1208493 Parker Sarah 2014 The Lesbian Muse and Poetic Identity 1889 1930 London Pickering amp Chatto ISBN 978 1 84893 386 6 Parini Jay Leininger Phillip W eds 2004 The Long Poem The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515653 9 Richardson Mark H D Hilda Doolittle In Parini amp Leininger 2004 Vol 2 Hatlen Burton The Long Poem In Parini amp Leininger 2004 Vol 2 Pearson Norman Holmes Dembo L S Autumn 1969 Norman Holmes Pearson on H D An Interview Contemporary Literature 10 4 Special Number on H D A Reconsideration 435 446 doi 10 2307 1207690 JSTOR 1207690 Pound Ezra 1954 Eliot T S ed Literary Essays of Ezra Pound New York New Directions Robinson Matte 2016 The Astral H D Occult and Religious Sources and Contexts for H D s Poetry and Prose London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 6289 2419 0 Schaffner Val 2002 Perdita Macpherson Schaffner 1919 2001 www imagists org Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved May 16 2022 Scott Bonnie Kime 1995 H D In Cathy N Davidson et al eds The Oxford Companion to Women s Writing in the United States Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 989105 4 via Oxford Reference Sinclair May March 1927 The poems of H D The Fortnightly Review Archived from the original on July 22 2022 Twitchell Waas Jeffrey Winter 1998 Seaward H D s Helen in Egypt as a Response to Pound s Cantos Twentieth Century Literature 44 4 464 483 doi 10 2307 441594 ISSN 0041 462X JSTOR 441594 Wagner Linda Welshimer Autumn 1969 Helen in Egypt A Culmination Contemporary Literature 10 4 Special Number on H D A Reconsideration 523 536 doi 10 2307 1207694 ISSN 0010 7484 JSTOR 1207694 Walton Jean Winter 1997 Nightmare of the Uncoordinated White Folk Race Psychoanalysis and Borderline Discourse 19 2 88 109 ISSN 1522 5321 JSTOR 41389446 Ward A C 1970 Longman Companion to Twentieth Century Literature Prentice Hall Press ISBN 978 0 582 32803 7 Wilhelm James J 1990 Ezra Pound in London and Paris 1908 1925 University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 271 00682 X Willis Elizabeth Spring 2007 A Public History of the Dividing Line H D the Bomb and the Roots of the Postmodern Arizona Quarterly A Journal of American Literature Culture and Theory 63 1 81 108 doi 10 1353 arq 2007 0005 S2CID 162848498 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to H D Wikimedia Commons has media related to H D Wikisource has original text related to this article H D H D Papers Yale Collection of American Literature Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Archival resources on ArchiveGrid Works by H D at Project Gutenberg Works by H D at LibriVox public domain audiobooks H D at Modern American Poetry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title H D amp oldid 1131203003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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