H. D.

-
Standard Name: H. D.
Used Form: Hilda Doolittle
Birth Name: Hilda Doolittle
Married Name: Hilda Aldington
Self-constructed Name: H. D.
Pseudonym: John Helforth
Pseudonym: Edith Gray
Pseudonym: Helga Dorn
Pseudonym: J. Beran
Pseudonym: Rhoda Peter
Pseudonym: Helga Dart
Pseudonym: Delia Alton
Nickname: Dryad
Nickname: Dooley
Nickname: Astraea
HD, born American, who took British nationality after a marriage which lasted longer on paper than in practice, was a key figure in the international Imagist movement of the early twentieth century and in modernism more broadly: both through her own poetry and through her editing and dissemination of the work of others. As well as her imagistic pieces, she wrote complex longer poems (most published during her lifetime), translation, essays, reviews, outlines for films, and autobiographical novels which are, like most of her work, explorations of the self. Here she writes à clef of her own past, but also builds a web of mythical and psycho-analytical reference which makes her texts dense as well as rewarding. She is an explorer of the female psyche, and of the relation of gender to creativity and of myth to psychoanalysis.

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Residence Bryher
Bryher and H. D. , along with H. D.'s daughter Perdita , took the Riant Chateau, a pension in Territet, Switzerland, as their primary residence.
Hanscombe, Gillian, and Virginia L. Smyers. Writing for Their Lives: The Modernist Women, 1910-1940. Women’s Press.
41
Robinson, Janice S. H.D.: The Life and Work of an American Poet. Houghton Mifflin.
265
Occupation Bryher
In July 1927 Bryher and Macpherson founded Close Up magazine, dedicated to avant-garde film theories and practices.
Hanscombe, Gillian, and Virginia L. Smyers. Writing for Their Lives: The Modernist Women, 1910-1940. Women’s Press.
276
Both as editor and contributor, Bryher used Close Up as a forum to develop and share her...
Travel Bryher
Bryher and H. D. holidayed on the Isles of Scilly off Cornwall, where each came to a significant understanding about her respective writing.
Quartermain, Peter, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 45. Gale Research.
128
Textual Production Anne Carson
AC 's The Albertine Workout was published as New Directions Poetry Pamphlet no. 13 (in a series whose no. 7 was H. D. 's Vale Ave).
Blackwell’s Online Bookshop. http://Bookshop.Blackwell.co.uk.
“Anne Carson”. New Directions.
Friends, Associates Ivy Compton-Burnett
The shifting, erratic, oddly mixed wartime social scene
Spurling, Hilary. Secrets of a Woman’s Heart. Hodder and Stoughton.
166
enabled ICB to become more outgoing, and she established friendships with H. D. , Bryher , and Una Pope-Hennessy . She called HD Mrs Aldington...
Textual Production T. S. Eliot
In June 1917 TSE took over the post of literary editor at The Egoist from his fellow American expatriate the poet and critic H. D. (though nominally from her then husband Richard Aldington , who...
Occupation T. S. Eliot
TSE became Assistant Editor of The Egoist (in succession nominally to Richard Aldington , actually to Aldington's wife, H. D. ), a position he held until 1919.
Parker, Peter, editor. A Reader’s Guide to Twentieth-Century Writers. Oxford University Press.
216
Marsden, Dora, and Harriet Shaw Weaver, editors. The Egoist. Robert Johnson.
(June 1917): front page
Friends, Associates Nina Hamnett
The following year NH met Anna Wickham , who took her in when she had flu, with a dangerously high temperature, and did not want to go back to her family. At that time NH
Intertextuality and Influence Jane Ellen Harrison
JEH 's work exerted a palpable influence on the Modernist movement in literature, and both her persona and her life's work were represented, sometimes in much modified form, in many creative texts. Critic Julia Briggs
Friends, Associates Violet Hunt
VH entertained here frequently: her sometimes piquantly mixed invitation lists included the names of H. D. , D. H. Lawrence , Ezra Pound , Joseph Conrad , Wyndham Lewis , Walter de la Mare ...
Literary responses Violet Hunt
VH 's biography was warmly received both formally and informally. H. D. (Hilda Doolittle ) wrote to Hunt from Switzerland on 30 September 1932, imagining [h]ow happy the book must make you! The style...
Publishing Dora Marsden
Plans were afoot to relaunch The Freewoman shortly after it collapsed in its first form. When Marsden retreated to Southport for health reasons, Rebecca West acted as liaison between her and supporters in the Freewoman Discussion Circle
Textual Features Dora Marsden
A marked difference separating The New Freewoman from its predecessor was its increased literary content, at first secured mainly by Rebecca West . West recruited Ezra Pound to The New Freewoman after meeting him at...
Textual Production Dora Marsden
Assistant editors were Richard Aldington and Leonard Compton-Rickett , and later H. D. (when Aldington went to war in June 1916) and T. S. Eliot (from July 1917). Contributors of creative work and critical reviews...
Textual Features Charlotte Mew
Critic Jeredith Merrin , following H. D. , suggests that Robert Browning 's blank-verse, fictionalized confessions,
Merrin, Jeredith. “The Ballad of Charlotte Mew”. Modern Philology, Vol.
95
, No. 2, pp. 200-17.
205
may have influenced CM 's handling of dramatic monologue.
H. D.,. “Review of The Farmer’s Bride by Charlotte Mew”. The Egoist, Vol.
3
, No. 9, p. 135.
Merrin also finds echoes of Christina Rossetti in CM

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.