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The Daily Poem

H. D.'s "Eurydice"

The Daily Poem

Goldberry Studios

Education For Kids, Arts, Kids & Family

4.6 • 729 Ratings

🗓️ 2 May 2024

⏱️ 6 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today’s poem features a failed resurrection and a response that spirals through all the customary stages of grief.

Hilda Doolittle was born on September 10, 1886, in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. She attended Bryn Mawr College, where she was a classmate of Marianne Moore. Doolittle later enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania, where she befriended Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams.

H.D. published numerous books of poetry, including Flowering of the Rod (Oxford University Press, 1946); Red Roses From Bronze (Random House, 1932); Collected Poems of H.D. (Boni and Liveright, 1925); Hymen (H. Holt and Company, 1921); and the posthumously published Helen in Egypt (Grove Press, 1961). She was also the author of several works of prose, including Tribute to Freud (Pantheon, 1956).

H.D.’s work is characterized by the intense strength of her images, economy of language, and use of classical mythology. Her poems did not receive widespread appreciation and acclaim during her lifetime, in part because her name was associated with the Imagist movement, even as her voice had outgrown the movement’s boundaries, as evidenced by her book-length works, Trilogy and Helen in Egypt. Neglect of H.D. can also be attributed to her time, as many of her poems spoke to an audience which was unready to respond to the strong feminist principles articulated in her work. As Alicia Ostriker said in American Poetry Review, “H.D., by the end of her career, became not only the most gifted woman poet of our century, but one of the most original poets—the more I read her the more I think this—in our language.”

H.D. died in Zurich, Switzerland, on September 27, 1961.

-bio via Academy of American Poets



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome back to the Daily Poem, a podcast from Goldberry Studios.

0:04.5

I'm Sean Johnson, and today is Thursday, May 2, 2024.

0:09.3

Today's poem is by Hilda Doolittle, better known by her pen name, H.D., and it's called Euridacy.

0:19.7

In contrast with yesterday's poem, this is the spiteful retelling of a failed resurrection.

0:30.1

This draws on the myth of Orpheus, who descends into the underworld and strikes a bargain there with Pluto or Hades

0:43.9

to bring his bride back from the dead into the land of the living on the condition that he

0:52.5

do so without once looking back at her before reaching the surface.

0:59.1

This story is frequently told from Orpheus' perspective, and here HD imagines what kind of

1:07.0

reaction she might have in the aftermath of Orpheus's failed rescue attempt.

1:16.9

Here is Eurytasy by HD.

1:23.7

One.

1:26.2

So you have swept me back. I who could have walked with the live souls above the earth,

1:31.7

I who could have slept among the live flowers at last. So for your arrogance and your ruthlessness,

1:39.8

I am swept back where dead lichens drip, dead cinders upon moss of ash.

1:46.0

So for your arrogance I am broken at last, I who had lived unconscious, who was almost forgot.

1:53.0

If you had let me wait, I had grown from listlessness into peace.

1:57.5

If you had let me rest with the dead, I had forgot you and the past.

2:03.4

Two.

2:05.6

Here only flame upon flame and black among the red sparks streaks of black and light grown

2:11.7

colorless.

2:13.5

Why did you turn back that hell should be re-inhabited of myself thus swept into nothingness?

2:19.3

Why did you glance back? Why did you hesitate for that moment?

...

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