Sunday, February 13, 2011

Out Spotlight

Today's Out Spotlight comes from one of the most prominent families in Massachusetts, becoming a poet as an adult. Her writing and her life was nearly forgotten until gender studies classes began looking at women like her as example of early lesbianism. She had written what is considered by many some to be included in the collection of the most romantic poetry written. Today's Out Spotlight is Amy Lowell and her love and inspiration Ada Dwyer Russell.

Amy Lawrence Lowell was born into the prominent Lowell family in Brookline Massachusetts in 1874. Her paternal grandfather, John Amory Lowell, developed the cotton industry of Massachusetts with her maternal grandfather, Abbott Lawrence. The towns of Lowell and Lawrence, Massachusetts, are named for the families. Her grandfather Lowell's cousin was the poet James Russell Lowell.

The youngest of five, there was much success in the Lowell household. Her eldest brother, Percival, became an astronomer in his late 30's discovered the "canals" of Mars and founded Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona as well as writing two books inspired by travels to Japan and Asia. Her other brother, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, became president of Harvard University.

The family home was called "Sevenels" for the "Seven L's" or Lowells. Educated by an English governess at home until the age of nine, she was sent to a series of private schools. Lowell was far from a model student growing up. During vacations and summers, she traveled with her family to Europe and to the western United States.

In 1891, as a proper young lady from a wealthy family, she had her debut. She was invited to numerous parties, but did not get the marriage proposal that the year was supposed to produce. While a university education was out of the question for a Lowell daughter, as opposed to her brothers, sheset about educating herself, reading from the 7,000 volume library of her father and also taking advantage of the Boston Athenaeum.

She lived the life of a wealthy socialite and began a lifelong love of book collecting. Six years after her social coming out, at the age of 23 she accepted a marriage proposal, but her fiance changed his mind, marrying another woman . Lowell went to Europe and Egypt in 1897-98 to recover, living on a severe diet that was supposed to improve her health and help with an increasing weight problem. Instead, the diet nearly ruined her health.

In 1900, after her parents had both died, she bought the family home, Sevenels. Her life as a socialite continued, with parties and entertaining. She also took up the civic involvement of her father, especially in supporting education and libraries.

She had always enjoyed writing, but her efforts at writing plays didn't meet with her own satisfaction. Fascinated by the theater, she attended many performance at the numerous theaters in Boston at the time. In 1893 and 1896, she had seen performances by the actress Eleanora Duse, in 1902, after seeing Duse on another tour in Europe, she went home and wrote a tribute to her in blank verse -- and, as she later said, "I found out where my true function lay." She became a poet -- or, as she also later said, "made myself a poet."

By 1910, her first poem was published in Atlantic Monthly, and three others were accepted there for publication. In 1912, the year that also saw the first books published by Robert Frost and Edna St. Vincent Millay, she published her first collection of poetry, A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass.

It was in 1909 that Amy Lowell met actress Ada Dwyer Russell. Russell was born in 1863m raised a Mormon, she became a theatrical actress preforming on Broadway and in London's West End. She married Harold Russell in 1893 but entered a life long separation a few years after their marriage. The couple never sought divorce.

From about 1914 on, Russell, a widow who was 11 years older than Lowell, became Amy's traveling and living companion and secretary. The two women traveled to England together, where Lowell met Ezra Pound, who at once became a major influence and a major critic of her work. Lowell has been linked romantically to writer Mercedes de Acosta, but the only evidence of any contact between them is a brief correspondence about a planned memorial for Duse. They lived together in a "Boston marriage". "Boston Marriage" was a New England colloquialism in the decades between the late 19th and early 20th century to describe two women living together, independent of financial support from a man. The assumption that in the era when the term was in use, it denoted a lesbian relationship. However, there is no documented proof that any particular "Boston marriage" included sexual relations.

In 1913 Lowell returned to England again to summer, this time bringing her maroon auto and maroon-coated chauffeur, part of her eccentric persona. She returned to America just as World War I began, having sent that maroon auto on ahead of her.

The following year, she published her second book of poetry, Sword Blades and Poppy Seeds. Many of the poems were in vers libre (free verse), which she renamed "unrhymed cadence." A few were in a form she invented, which she called "polyphonic prose."

In 1915, Lowell published an anthology of Imagist verse, followed by new volumes in 1916 and 1917. Her own lecture tours began in 1915, as she talked of poetry and also read her own works. She was a popular speaker, often speaking to overflow crowds. Perhaps the novelty of the Imagist poetry drew people; perhaps they were drawn to the performances in part because she was a Lowell; in part her reputation for eccentricities helped bring in the people.

Lowell was quite different than most of the the socialite ladies of the time. She dressed in severe suits and men's shirts. She wore pince nez glasses that clipped on her nose and had her hair done usually by Ada, in a pompadour that added a bit of height to her five feet. She slept on a custom-made bed with exactly sixteen pillows. She kept sheepdogs, until World War I's meat rationing made her give them up and gave guests towels to put in their laps to protect them from her dogs' drools. She draped mirrors and stopped clocks. And, perhaps most famously, she smoked cigars, which she claimed were less distracting to her work than cigarettes, because they lasted longer. She preferred sleeping until three in the afternoon and working through the night. She also struggled with her weight and a glandular condition was which caused her to continue to gain. (Ezra Pound called her "hippopoetess.") She was operated on several times for persistent hernia problems.

In 1915, she also ventured into literary criticism with Six French Poets, featuring Symbolist poets little known in America. In 1916, she published another volume of her own verse, Men, Women and Ghosts. A book derived from her lectures, Tendencies in Modern American Poetry followed in 1917, then another poetry collection in 1918, Can Grande's Castle and Pictures of the Floating World in 1919 and adaptations of myths and legends in 1921 in Legends.

During an illness in 1922 she wrote and published A Critical Fable - anonymously. For some months she denied that she'd written it. Her relative, James Russell Lowell, had published in his generation A Fable for Critics, witty and pointed verse analyzing poets who were his contemporaries. Amy Lowell's A Critical Fable likewise skewered her own poetic contemporaries.

She then began on a massive biography of John Keats, whose works she'd been collecting since 1905. Almost a day-by-day account of his life, the book also recognized Fanny Brawne for the first time as a positive influence on him.
The work was taxing on her health, nearly ruining her eyesight. Additionally her hernias continued to cause her trouble. In May of 1925, she was advised to remain in bed with a troublesome hernia, not following doctor's orders she ceased her bedrest. On May 12 she died of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 51. The following year, she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for What's O'Clock. That collection included the patriotic poem "Lilacs".

Ada, named by her as executrix her estate, not only burned all personal correspondence, as directed by Lowell, but also published three more volumes of Lowell's poems posthumously. These included some late sonnets to Eleanora Duse, who had died in 1912 herself, and other poems considered too controversial for Lowell to publish during her lifetime. Lowell left her fortune and Sevenels in trust to Ada. Ada survived Amy by 27 years, passing in 1952.

"Lillian Faderman and others rediscovered Amy Lowell as an example of poets and others whose same-sex relationships had been important to them in their lives, but who had -- for obvious social reasons -- not been explicit and open about those relationships. Faderman and others re-examined poems like "Clear, With Light Variable Winds" or "Venus Transiens" or "Taxi" or "A Lady" and found the theme -- barely concealed -- of the love of women." Ada was the subject of her more erotic work, most notably the love poems contained in 'Two Speak Together', a subsection of Pictures of the Floating World. "A Decade," which was written as a celebration of the ten year anniversary of Ada and Amy's relationship, and the "Two Speak Together" section of Pictures of the Floating World was recognized for the love poetry that it is.

The theme was not completely concealed to those who knew the couple well. John Livingston Lowes, a friend Lowell's, had recognized Ada as the object of one of her poems, and Lowell wrote back to him, "I am very glad indeed that you liked 'Madonna of the Evening Flowers.' How could so exact a portrait remain unrecognized?

And so, too, the portrait of the committed relationship and love of Amy Lowell and Ada Dwyer Russell was largely unrecognized until recently."




A Decade

When you came, you were like red wine and honey,
And the taste of you burnt my mouth with its sweetness.
Now you are like morning bread,
Smooth and pleasant.
I hardly taste you at all for I know your savour,
But I am completely nourished.



The Taxi

When I go away from you
The world beats dead
Like a slackened drum.
I call out for you against the jutted stars
And shout into the ridges of the wind.
Streets coming fast,
One after the other,
Wedge you away from me,
And the lamps of the city prick my eyes
So that I can no longer see your face.
Why should I leave you,
To wound myself upon the sharp edges of the night?


A Gift

See! I give myself to you, Beloved!
My words are little jars
For you to take and put upon a shelf.
Their shapes are quaint and beautiful,
And they have many pleasant colours and lustres
To recommend them.
Also the scent from them fills the room
With sweetness of flowers and crushed grasses.

When I shall have given you the last one,
You will have the whole of me,
But I shall be dead.

33 comments:

  1. I think Howie Mandel just undressed me with his eyes at starbucks.
    about 3 hours ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

    I'm so close to hitting 1 Million followers!!!
    about 3 hours ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

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  2. I hear ya Howie. Been there done that.

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  3. ^^ :)

    What a romantic and gorgeous post today. Exceptional, one to add to the list of many. The one you did about the Chicago blues is another fave.

    The poetry is breathtaking, especially the first one.

    And you killed me with the song choice.

    Happy Valentine's Day!

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  4. Austin's tweets makes me think he is not alone this weekend. Something about those blue eyes of a certain hubs brings out the ornery. ; )

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  5. Day 2 of editing. What an incredible process. I have been bitten by the filmmaking bug. I love this!!
    about 2 hours ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

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  6. USWeekly doesn't mention Jake being at the spotted pig in their story
    http://www.usmagazine.com/moviestvmusic/news/how-jen-aniston-celebrated-her-42nd-birthday-2011122

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  7. According to a story by the combined forces of X17Online and Life and Style, “Jennifer Aniston celebrated her 42nd birthday on Feb. 11 by having an intimate dinner with Jake Gyllenhaal in NYC.”

    After noting that Aniston’s “hot birthday date” with Gyllenhaal was at New York’s Spotted Pig restaurant, a so-called “eyewitness” is quoted as saying, “Jake and Jen looked really happy and really seemed to be enjoying themselves.” That same “eyewitness” added that they “looked very comfortable with each other” and “were glowing.”

    First, Aniston did NOT have a “hot birthday date” or an “intimate dinner” with Gyllenhaal.

    Her reported “intimate dinner” date included 30 of her friends, such as Adam Sandler and his wife Jackie Titone, Hugh Jackman and his wife Deborra-Lee Furness, her publicist, her agent, producers of Just Go With It, and several other pals like Gyllenhaal, with whom she’s remained friends since they filmed The Good Girl.

    Gossip Cop would love to know who X17Online and Life & Style’s so-called “eyewitness” is because Aniston and friends ate in a private room, and the “eyewitness” somehow managed to miss that the “intimate” dinner included a big group that included Sandler and Jackman.

    Oops.

    http://www.gossipcop.com/jennifer-aniston-birthday-jake-gyllenhaal-adam-sandler-spotted-pig-42/

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  8. diamondstein: Jake Gyllenhaal: you really need to step up your disguise when you go incognito in park slope. #shadesaintdoinit
    32 minutes ago via Twitter for Android

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  9. oops not in LA lol!!!!February 13, 2011 at 7:14 PM

    Pretty sure I just saw Jake Gyllenhaal riding a bike on Broad. Pretty sure I just died.
    about 3 hours ago via Echofon

    http://twitter.com/#!/cheyennesanchez

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  10. Now, Jake's in Disguise? LOL!February 13, 2011 at 7:47 PM

    Oh, I'm sure we will see plenty of tweets placing Jake in Park Slope and probably even a few strategically placed photos too. Maybe if we're lucky, we'll get to see him perform on stage in Three Sisters tonight too.

    The pattern is well established that when it comes to this closet case, the public gets a heavy dose of "Don't look there, look over here.". Whenever Jake is where his peeps don't want him to be (like with Austie poo), they go frantic trying to place him thousands of miles away. That Jen and Jake thing was an absolute mess. From the private door to the fact that many gossip sites didn't even bother to pick up the story like they were supposed to. Private Jake sure disappears when he needs alibis, doesn't he?

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  11. LOL sad thing is you really DO believe there is a PR conspiracy. So sad it's funny. Hey if it makes you sleep well at night go for it. LOL

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  12. Pretty sure?

    What kind of a lousy tweet is that?

    Let's see, right now it's 43 degrees in Park Slope. At 12 noon it was 38. At 6pm, it was 40. With winds right now at 11 mph.

    Not only not the most ideal conditions to be bike riding in downtown NYC, but we have yet to see Jake getting around by a two wheel Tuesday Trike. He's been using the train.

    The tweeter is based out of Florida so I suppose he/she is visiting Park Slope? And instantly recognizes Jake? On a bike? With a helmet on, possibly dark glasses as well? If those south winds were at his back, he would've even been going a little faster.

    And so this tweeter had a split second to recognize Jake as he wheeled by?

    What a poor attempt to place Jake in Park Slope after speculation on here today that he could be in L.A. with Austin.

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  13. You know, he could stop his bike tear off his helmet and glasses and yell "HERE I AM!!" A million pics be taken of him and still you could come up with an excuse not placing him there,lol.

    Now tell us your conspiracy theory about JFK's assination. There was somebody else there on the floor below Lee Harvey Oswald, right?

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  14. You know, he could stop his bike tear off his helmet and glasses and yell "HERE I AM!!" A million pics be taken of him and still you could come up with an excuse not placing him there,lol.

    Now tell us your conspiracy theory about JFK's assination. There was somebody else there on the floor below Lee Harvey Oswald, right?

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  15. LOL sad thing is you really DO believe there is a PR conspiracy. So sad it's funny. Hey if it makes you sleep well at night go for it. LOL

    Public relations is about spin and the systematic effort to make a client as desirable as possible to the public. While conspiracies are about collaborations, deceit, flim flam, subterfuge, and con games. So yep, working for someone in the closet, requires both PR and conspiracies. The problem for Jake is that his people are lame and buggle more than they fix. That's why more people today, believe Jake is gay than they did 3 years ago before he went into hiding.

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  16. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  17. USWeekly doesn't mention Jake being at the spotted pig in their story
    http://www.usmagazine.com/moviestvmusic/news/how-jen-aniston-celebrated-her-42nd-birthday-2011122


    That's an excellent point, OwlGirl. For such a high profile gossip rag, why didn't they get the scoop? They were all over the Tay Tay mess. Perhaps this was a last minute PR formulation (a rush job as opposed to a hand job) to hide Jake's whereabouts--in contrast to being a formally orchestrated and coordinated scheme that required all "hands" on deck.

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  18. Riding OwlGirl's shirt tails, I'm re-posting People.com's account of Jennifer's b-day party and it doesn't seem to be including Jake in their list of attendees either. Boy, you sure would think it would include him. Here's as it appears right now at 19:58 CT on the 13th day of the 2nd month of the year 2011:

    Before heading off on vacation with pals, Jennifer Aniston celebrated her 42nd birthday in the Big Apple Friday night, dining with famous friends at The Spotted Pig.

    Aniston was "in an extremely good mood" as she sampled small bites, including quiches with Just Go With It costar Adam Sandler, as well as Hugh Jackman, a source tells PEOPLE.

    "The full kitchen was at her disposal," says the source, who adds that the party dined in the private third floor dining area.


    Thanks People.com for the clarification on the big 3rd floor private banquet room at the ol' Pig de Spot.

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  19. Great tribute to Aretha, and Bob Dylan with Avett Brothers and Mumford and Sons - very good. Now just waiting for Mick to do the tribute to Solomon Burke

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  20. Whoa. I was a top tweet today? What does that even mean? And why did this happen? about 1 hour ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

    RT kaitlyn231 @AUS10NICHOLS I'm sure you've been a top tweet before and or already seen this but... :) http://yfrog.com/h0ja1avj
    about 1 hour ago via Twitter for iPhone Retweeted by AUS10NICHOLS

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  21. Pegee, the 2 sightings are seperateL Park slope tweet is from Brooklyn and the Broad st tweet is from Florida.

    Since there are FB sightings of Jake in NY this weekend, I would assume the Florida sighting is a case of mistaken ID.

    People didn't mention Paul Rudd or Chris Rock, hmmmmm interesting, I wonder if they snuck out the back too!

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  22. fashion week cut short for Austin's woman:


    Just got called back to work early. This means I'll miss Chris Benz's show tomorrow. :( #FashionDevastation #nyfw
    about 2 hours ago via Echofon

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  23. There is a Broad Street in NYC.

    Hey, Lady Gaga was great on the Grammys tonight.

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  24. Mickkkkkkkkkkkkk!

    He still has it. Doing Solomon Burke's Someone to Love, back to those blues roots that started The Stones. He gave a lesson to everybody out there performing.

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  25. Mick was great. That guy hasn't lost much of a step at all, has he?

    Your Lady Antebellum won as well, Special!

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  26. Liked Arcade Fire, raw and brash. But talk about surreal them getting their Grammy from Barbra Streisand.

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  27. There is a Broad Street in NYC.

    Except if you read that tweeter's tweets you can see she's in Philly, probably goes to school there. And Broad Street is a very famous street in Philly.

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  28. "The problem for Jake is that his people are lame and bungle more than they fix. That's why more people today, believe Jake is gay than they did 3 years ago before he went into hiding". Wow, M& M you sure got it right in that statement. I think these lame PR efforts to link Jake with any woman within 20 feet of him are trial balloons to see if the he is gay comments have died down a bit but they are more prevalent than ever.

    I am missing everything this weekend. Had to do some work during the weekend to meet a Monday am deadline for the first time in forever. Just surfacing now. I hope to catch the Grammy clips on youtube.

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  29. Great! Thanks for all the answers last night because I did not properly check out both tweeterers thoroughly but let others do all the work.

    So we have Florida and Philly. LOL - Jake's not going to be in either place riding bikes, trains or autos.

    This really frees him up to be in L.A.! Awesome.

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  30. No Peegee, the tweeter lives in FL but probably goes to school in Philly.

    Tweet of Jake in Park Slope and FB sightings of him in Brooklyn this weekend including one with Maggie makes that tweet of him on a bike on Broad St. in Philly a case of mistaken ID.

    So no, Peegee not FL, and the Philly sighting was mistaken ID.


    Brooklyn Tweets and FB sightings in Brooklyn.

    Please pay attention.

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  31. At least wait a few minutes in between...February 14, 2011 at 9:25 AM

    Lol at Jack using nothing but tweets/FB sightings to place Jake somewhere and in the same breath dimissing another tweet he deems "a case of mistaken identity".
    Must be awesome to be the authority of deciding when it's allowed to believe a tweet and when not! Pray tell, how nasty would you get if we only had the Philly tweet and we dared question that one?

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  32. Lots of great performances on the Grammys last night, especially Muse, Eminem, Mumford, Mick and Arcade Fire. I was shocked at their win, it's not even their best work.

    I was kind of disappointed with Gaga's performance. That song is too much like Madonna's Express Yourself, and for my taste I thought the "spectacle" aspect kind of fell flat.

    Saw Gaga on 60 Minutes. Couple of things struck me. One was how she uses the spectacle to keep her private life private. Two, she said she never lies to her fans, and that she thinks you can't be a great artist if you do lie. I think there is a lot of truth in that.

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  33. "how nasty would you get if we only had the Philly tweet and we dared question that one?"

    you only question what doesn't fit with your slash fantasy

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