Helen Hoyt
Helen Lyman commonly known as Helen Hoyt or Helen Hoyt Lyman (January 22, 1887 – August 2, 1972)[1] was an American poet.
Contents
Life and work
She was born as Helen Hoyt in Norwalk, Connecticut on January 22, 1887.[2][3] Her father was Gould Jennings Holt (not Henry M. Hoyt, Governor of Pennsylvania from 1879 to 1893]. Her niece was the 1920s poet Elinor Wylie,[4]
Helen Hoyt was educated at Barnard College.
In 1921 she married fellow poet William Whittingham Lyman Jr, and so also became known either as Mrs. W.W. Lyman[5] or Helen Hoyt Lyman.[6]
Career
Early in her career Helen Hoyt was an Associate Editor of the journal Poetry, and also had numerous articles and poems published within the magazine from 1913 to 1936. She also edited the September 1916 edition of Others: A Magazine of the New Verse,[7] the woman's number. Other magazines to publish her work include The Egoist and The Masses.[8]
Aside from her own collections, her work was also published in notable anthologies of her times, including The New Poetry: An Anthology (1917), The Second Book of Modern Verse (1920), Silver Pennies: Modern Poems for Boys and Girls (1925), May Days (1926), and The Best Poems of 1931.[9]
Her poems include Ellis Park, Memory, Lamp Posts and Rain At Night.
In 1932, she wrote the foreword to California Poets: An Anthology of 244 Contemporaries, [House of Henry Harrison, editors].
She was a contemporary of Marianne Moore and Mina Loy, among others.
She was known to entertain correspondence with Idella Purnell Stone and Clark Ashton Smith.
Authored publications
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Quotation
"At present most of what we know, or think we know, of women has been found out by men,
we have yet to hear what woman will tell of herself, and where can she tell more intimately than in poetry?"
Others: A Magazine of the New Verse in 1916[10][11]
References
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External links
- The New Poetry: An Anthology at Bartleby.com
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- Works by Helen Hoyt at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
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- ↑ Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, 18:4 (July 1921), p. 209.
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