Ada Verdun Howell
Australian poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ada Verdun Howell (19 July 1902 – 1981) was an Australian writer and poet. She was born in Beaufort, Victoria, on her father's sheep property. Her sister was the artist Valma Howell. She lived in New York in the latter part of her life where she wrote most of her most famous works. She is best known for her later writing, much praised for its great formal and feminine qualities, as an early sound poet.[citation needed]
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (September 2024) |
Ada Verdun Howell | |
---|---|
Born | 19 July 1902 Beaufort, Victoria, Australia |
Died | 1981 New York, United States |
Occupation | Writer |
Relatives | Valma Howell (sister) |
Her most influential works include the strangely disquieting Monmot and the later Exit Strategies.
The last part of her life was apparently spent in much economic hardship and she died virtually unknown in her own country.
By the time she was in her late thirties Ada had abandoned Melbourne, where she was surrounded by what she felt were stuffy and provincial relations, for New York and the bohemian life, where she was soon surrounded by an artistic life and freedom she was unable to experience in Australia. Her first husband, Adrian Morten, an undistinguished writer and critic, by whom she had her two children, does not appear to have been very supportive. The marriage, like most of Ada's later relationships, floated on a tide of drink and was marked by spectacular rows. After Morten's sudden death she consoled herself with many lovers; "once I got Mr Morten out of my life I felt like a new woman," she told a close friend Harold Norse. In her forties she stumbled into her métier, modern poetry.
In the early 1940s she was taken under the wing of Peggy Guggenheim who was to provide both financial and intellectual encouragement.[1] In the decades that followed she became a close friend to poet and beat Harold Norse. Her last years were a slow decline due to alcoholism. Little is known of her last years and she died of unknown causes in 1981.
Her earliest work Poems is not considered to be of much literary value, however it does display an affection for the sound of words and an awareness of other languages other than English. An example is the poem A single body of water:
Her professional career begins with Anamorphosis where she goes beyond the exterior world of landscape and the body and she begins to explore the interior universe of love and selfhood.
The poem Unlanguid longueurs exhibits a new awareness of the world around her:
Her best known work is the controversial Exit Strategies. This prose/poem cycle was praised by E. E. Cummings as "poetry as pure energy...just in time for atomic age", but similarly condemned by others for the same qualities.
The famous 400 stanza, Eanie Meanie poem:
has few antecedents in the English language: language was to her pure sound, its meaning lost in our collective past
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