Elinor Morton Wylie née Hoyt (September 7, 1885 – December 16, 1928) was an American poet and novelist who was popular before World War II.
Family
Wylie was born in
Somerville, New Jersey. Her grandfather,
Henry M. Hoyt, was a
governor of
Pennsylvania; she was raised in this socially prominent family in
Washington, D.C. Her aunt was
Helen Hoyt, a minor poet. In 1912, she graduated from the
Holton-Arms School in
Bethesda, Maryland. She eloped with
Harvard graduate Philip Simmons Hichborn (
September 30,
1882 in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - 1912) son of a rear-admiral Philip Hichborn (
March 4,
1839 in
Charlestown, Massachusetts - 1910), they were married on
December 13,
1906. She later eloped with Horace Wylie while still married to Hichborn. She married three times and had a son Philip Simmons Hichborn, Jr. (
September 22,
1907 in
Washington, D.C. - ?) by her first husband. Her last marriage (in 1923) was to
William Rose Benét (
February 2,
1886 in
Brooklyn, New York -
May 4,
1950) who was part of her literary circle and brother of
Stephen Vincent Benet.
Her parents were Henry Martyn Hoyt (December 1856 in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania - ?) and Anne Morton McMichael (July 31, 1861 in Pa. -?). Their other children were:
- Henry Martyn Hoyt (May 8, 1887 in Pa. - 1920 in New York City) who married Alice Gordon Parker (January 27, 1885 in Newark, New Jersey - 1951)
- Constance A. Hoyt (May 20, 1889 in Pa. - 1923 in Bavaria, Germany) who married Ferdinand von Stumm-Halberg on March 30, 1910 in Washington, D.C.
- Morton McMichael Hoyt (April 4, 1899 in Washington, D.C. - ?), three times married and divorced Eugenia Bankhead, known as "Sister" and sister of Tallulah Bankhead
- Nancy McMichael Hoyt (October 01, 1902 in Washington, D.C - ?) romance novelist who wrote Elinor Wylie: The Portrait of an Unknown Woman (1935). She married Edward Davison Curtis, they divorced in 1932.
Career
Talented in several arts, she was torn between painting and writing, but her position inside
Washington, D.C. literary circles, particularly with
John Dos Passos and
Edmund Wilson, encouraged her writing efforts. She wrote eight novels and several books of poetry. Her first book,
Incidental Numbers (1912), was published privately in
England. The first of her books to bring her recognition was her first official collection of poetry,
Nets to Catch the Wind (1921). She was named literary editor of
Vanity Fair magazine in 1922.
Her other volumes of poetry include: Black Armour (1923), Trivial Breath (1928), Angels and Earthly Creatures (1929), and Collected Poems of Elinor Wylie (1932). Wylie's literary interests are largely conservative and formal, as demonstrated by her preoccupation with the sonnet. Heavily influenced by 16th and 17th century English poetics, Wylie also shares the Romantics' infatuation with nature and fantasy.
Her last novel, Orphan Angel (1926) explores what Percy Bysshe Shelley's life would have been like if he had escaped his early death and moved to America.
Works
- Angels and Earthly Creatures
- Black Armour
- Collected Poems
- Collected Prose
- Incidental numbers
- Last Poems of Elinor Wylie
- Mortal Image
- Nets to Catch the Wind
- Prophecy
- Selected Works of Elinor Wylie
- Trivial Breath
Novels
- Jennifer Lorn: A Sedate Extravaganza (1923)
- The Venetian Glass Nephew (1925)
- The Orphan Angel (1926)
- Mr. Hodge and Mr. Hazard (1928)
References
External links