HERmione explained

HERmione
Author:H.D.
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Novel, Autobiography
Publisher:New Directions Publishing Corporation
Release Date:1 November 1981
Media Type:Print Paperback
Pages:256
Isbn:0-8112-0817-6
Dewey:813/.52 19
Congress:PS3507.O726 H47 1981
Oclc:7553331

HERmione is an autobiographical novel written by the poet H.D. It forms part of what she refers to as her Madrigal cycle, which also includes Bid Me to Live, Paint it Today and Asphodel.

Although written in 1927, it was not published until 1981; this may be due to a lack of confidence in her own writing quality, as H.D. suggested was true of Asphodel, or due to the centrality of her homosexual relationship with Gregg represented in the novel.[1] While there is no evidence that H.D. attempted to publish the novel, it, along with another autobiographical work The Gift were being prepared for publication at the time of her death in 1961. Her literary executor, Norman Holmes Pearson, had created a typescript of HER which had been heavily revised by H.D.[2]

In the novel, she represents herself as Hermione Gart, a woman in her twenties, shortly after failing at Bryn Mawr. It includes portraits of poet Ezra Pound (as George Lowndes) and Frances Josepha Gregg (as Fayne Rabb), with both of whom she had relationships.[3]

Sources

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Friedman et al (1990), 206
  2. Friedman et al (1990), 208
  3. Moody (2007), 180