Amy Lowell was
born February 9th 1874 in Brookline Ma. She spent a somewhat solitary childhood and
loved to read. She confided to her diary
as a teen, “I should like best of anything to be literary.” And literary she was. She was frequently published in Atlantic
Monthly and published four volumes of poetry between 1916 and 1921, edited
three anthologies of imagist poetry and wrote two volumes of critical analysis.
Her last work was a biography of Keats. She became a literary celebrity. She was quite eccentric; a short, overweight,
flamboyant, spoke in a loud voice, kept her hair in a bun, wore a pince-nez and
constantly smoked cigars. She was the
center of attention wherever she went and in great demand as a lecturer. The story is told that once when her motor
car broke down somewhere in Boston she informed the police officer assisting
her that her brother, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, would be responsible for removing
and fixing her auto. When called, at
Harvard, where he was president, he said he was not sure it was his sister and
asked the officer for a description. He
said she was wearing high boots, foot propped up, sitting on a stone wall
smoking a cigar. Lowell, taking a deep
breath and rolling his eyes, said yes,
that certainly had to be his sister!
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