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The Poet Index · Entry 008

H. D.
Poems

Lifespan
1886–1961
Nationality
United States
Indexed Works
48

It's a perfect example of H.D.'s Imagist method—a brief, physically striking poem that demonstrates precisely what she can achieve with just one image and very little abstraction.

Where to start

The Works

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  1. 01CITIES1916
  2. 02EVENING1916
  3. 03GARDEN1916
  4. 04HERMES OF THE WAYS1916
  5. 05HUNTRESS1916
  6. 06LOSS1916
  7. 07MID-DAY1916
  8. 08ORCHARD1916
  9. 09PEAR TREE1916
  10. 10PURSUIT1916
  11. 11SEA GARDEN1916
  12. 12SEA GODS1916
  13. 13SEA IRIS1916
  14. 14SEA LILY1916
  15. 15SEA POPPIES1916
  16. 16SEA ROSE1916
  17. 17SEA VIOLET1916
  18. 18SHELTERED GARDEN1916
  19. 19STORM1916
  20. 20THE CLIFF TEMPLE1916
  21. 21THE CONTEST1916
  22. 22THE HELMSMAN1916
  23. 23THE SHRINE1916
  24. 24THE WIND SLEEPERS1916
  25. 25AT BAIA1921
  26. 26CIRCE1921
  27. 27DEMETER1921
  28. 28EVADNE1921
  29. 29HYMEN1921
  30. 30LEDA1921
  31. 31NIGHT1921
  32. 32PHAEDRA1921
  33. 33SIMAETHA1921
  34. 34SONG1921
  35. 35THE ISLANDS1921
  36. 36ACON1924
  37. 37CUCKOO SONG1924
  38. 38EGYPT1924
  39. 39HELIOS1924
  40. 40PRAYER1924
  41. 41PRISONERS1924
  42. 42SEA HEROES1924
  43. 43SHE CONTRASTS WITH HERSELF HIPPOLYTA1924
  44. 44SHE REBUKES HIPPOLYTA1924
  45. 45THE GIFT1924
  46. 46THETIS1924
  47. 47FOR BRYHER AND PERDITA1925
  48. 48WHY HAVE YOU SOUGHT1925

Recurring themes

Biographical record

About H. D.

Hilda Doolittle was born in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in 1886, the daughter of an astronomy professor and a Moravian mother. This unique background provided her with both scientific precision and a strong inclination towards the mystical. She studied at Bryn Mawr College, where she met Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams—two friendships that would significantly influence American poetry.

In 1911, she moved to London, a decision that became permanent. Within a year, she was at the heart of a small, passionate group of poets known as the Imagists. The tale goes that Pound read some of her poems in a tea shop, jotted down "H.D. Imagiste" at the bottom, and sent them to Poetry magazine, a pen name that she would carry for the rest of her life. The Imagists had a straightforward yet revolutionary approach: no embellishments, no abstractions, no excess. Just the essence itself, expressed in clear, powerful language. H.D. was the movement's most dedicated practitioner.

Her early poems drew deeply from Greek mythology and landscapes—not as mere decoration, but as a vivid vocabulary for themes of desire, grief, and the physical body.

Works like "Garden" and "Oread" feel almost sculpted rather than written. The lines are short, the images tangible, and the emotions condensed to a point of intensity.

After World War I, her life became more complex and intriguing. She entered into a long, passionate relationship with the novelist Bryher (Annie Winifred Ellerman), who became her life partner and financial supporter. In the 1930s, she underwent psychoanalysis with Sigmund Freud in Vienna, an experience she later detailed in her memoir, *Tribute to Freud*. She survived the London Blitz, and that harrowing experience opened her work to something broader and more surreal.

Biographical span
1886Birth
1961Death
1919Median work

Poets in the same orbit

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