Square haunting Five lives in London between the wars

Francesca Wade

Book - 2020

"In the early twentieth century, Mecklenburgh Square, a hidden architectural gem in the heart of London, was a radical address. On the outskirts of Bloomsbury known for the eponymous group who "lived in squares, painted in circles, and loved in triangles," the square was home to students, struggling artists, and revolutionaries. In the pivotal era between the two world wars, the lives of five remarkable women intertwined at this one address: modernist poet H.D., detective novelist Dorothy L. Sayers, classicist Jane Harrison, economic historian Eileen Power, and author and publisher Virginia Woolf. In an era when women's freedoms were fast expanding, they each sought a space where they could live, love, and above all work... independently."--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Tim Duggan Books [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Francesca Wade (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
420 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 325-387) and index.
ISBN
9780451497796
  • Prologue
  • In The Square
  • H. D.
  • Dorothy L. Savers
  • Jane Ellen Harrison
  • Eileen Power
  • Virginia Woolf
  • After the Square
  • Notes
  • Select Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Text Permissions
  • List of Illustrations
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Wade, editor of White Review magazine, makes an excellent debut with a gripping account of the lives of five women who lived at various times in the same square in London's Bloomsbury district between 1916 and 1940. These women--poet H.D., mystery writer Dorothy Sayers, medievalist and economic historian Eileen Power, classicist Jane Harrison, and novelist Virginia Woolf--all drew sustenance from living in Mecklenburgh Square, which offered an artistically and politically radical milieu, as well as affordable and readily available housing for single women, then a relatively rare commodity. Wade evinces a strong grasp of what drove these women to place work ahead of love, and fluidly traces their various interrelationships. Woolf, for example, was deeply influenced by the newly female-centered histories written by Harrison and Power, both of whom she knew well, while Sayers and H.D. endured tumultuous affairs with the same man, John Cournos, who callously turned both relationships into fiction. Wade also illuminates her protagonists' political advocacy, for egalitarian and peaceful values against hierarchical and militarist ones. By showing how these women confronted an ideological divide still existing today, this superbly written and researched work will make them highly relevant for, and accessible to, contemporary audiences. Agent: Caroline Dawnay and Sophie Scard, United Agents. (Apr.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

White Review editor Wade here delves into the lives of five revolutionary women and wordsmiths in the years between the two world wars--H.D., Dorothy L. Sayers, Jane Harrison, Eileen Power, and Virginia Woolf--connected by Mecklenburgh Square in London, a location known for its progressive spirit and famous residents. While Woolf is the most widely recognizable of those featured, Wade devotes equal attention to her subjects, highlighting the ways in which each of them worked to fight against society's expectations and bring her dreams to fruition. The square also becomes a character in its own right, proving to be a lasting influence on the lives of these women and others throughout history. Thoroughly researched and brimming with titillating anecdotes, this unique blend of literary history and biography provides a richer understanding of this period in England and the influence of those who broke the molds set upon them. VERDICT Literary historians, as well as general readers up on the major events in recent British history, will be well served by this valiant debut about bold women whose struggles continue to resonate today.--Katie McGaha, LA County Lib., Agoura Hills

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A group portrait of five celebrated female writers who declined to ride shotgun for the men who drove British literary life from World War I through 1940. Debut author Wade, who edits the London-based White Review, puts a new spin on the old idea of topographical resonance--the belief that you are what you inhabit--in a book about trailblazing women who lived on Mecklenburgh Square in Bloomsbury at times that occasionally overlapped. The author uses Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own as a touchstone for the social and intellectual equality her subjects craved when they moved to the square, drawn partly by its cheap rents and proximity to the British Museum. Economic historian Eileen Power, one of them, scoffed at the idea that "the ideal wife should endeavor to model herself upon a judicious mixture of a cow, a muffler, a shadow, a mirror," a variation on a sentiment that others in the book seemed broadly to share, if they expressed it less bluntly. The poet H.D. briefly shared her flat with D.H. Lawrence and his wife, Frieda. The detective novelist Dorothy Sayers wrote her first Lord Peter Wimsey mystery in Mecklenburgh Square, five years before the arrival of the intrepid classicist Jane Harrison, who visited ancient ruins and smoked a pipe on the steps of the Parthenon. The unlucky Woolf moved in a year before the first bombs fell on London and, after an explosion destroyed her house, found "mushrooms sprouting on the carpets." At times, Wade overreaches or strains to link the women, most of whom weren't friends: Each, she writes, "sought to reinvent her life" in the square, a brute-force cliché at odds with her subjects' more original thinking. But the author has a jeweler's eye for sparkling anecdotes, and Bloomsbury ultimately emerges as far more than an anchorage for bohemians who "lived in squares, painted in circles and loved in triangles." Engaging profiles of women who found metaphorical rooms of their own in interwar London. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 In the Square Personally, we should be willing to read one volume about every street in the City, and should still ask for more. --Virginia Woolf, "London Revisited" (1916) Marooned on an island in the middle of a busy junction, a stone woman stoops to fill an urn with water. The drinking fountain on which she kneels has long since run dry; the steps leading down to the public lavatories behind her are boarded up; the elegant parade of Georgian buildings to her right is severed by a busy construction site. She breathes the fumes of cars passing down Guilford Street, which connects Bloomsbury with Clerkenwell and London's east, while workmen perch on her pedestal to eat their sandwiches. She is a remnant of the past frozen in the present, her name and story buried like the Fleet river on whose banks Guilford Street was built. Cities are composed of roads and buildings, but also of myths and memories: stories which bring the brick and asphalt to life, and bind the present to the past. For Virginia Woolf, this unassuming statue just outside the entrance to Mecklenburgh Square--the Woman of Samaria, commissioned by a group of sisters in memory of their mother and designed by Henry Darbishire in 1870--was "one of the few pieces of sculpture in the streets of London that is pleasing to the eye." In a city decorated liberally with images of hoary statesmen in celebration of their service to the Empire, Woolf was intrigued by this anonymous woman, who seemed to represent an alternative, hidden history. "I would venture to guess that Anon, who wrote so many poems without signing them, was often a woman," Woolf wrote in A Room of One's Own . In that book, she describes wandering the streets of London and observing women talking, walking, shopping, and selling; their everyday animation reminds her of "the accumulation of unrecorded life" which historians--in their habitual focus on "the lives of great men"--were yet to chronicle. For Woolf, the statue paid subversive tribute to the forgotten women of London's past, a small but significant reminder of the figures who have been left out of books, or whose talents were never allowed to reach their full potential, simply because they were women. In May 1917, T. S. Eliot described for his mother a visit to the American poet Hilda Doolittle, his new colleague on the Egoist magazine. "London is an amazing place," he wrote. "One is constantly discovering new quarters; this woman lives in a most beautiful dilapidated old square, which I had never heard of before; a square in the middle of town, near King's Cross station, but with spacious old gardens about it." Somehow, Mecklenburgh Square has remained a quiet enclave out on Bloomsbury's easternmost edge, separated from the better-known garden squares by Coram's Fields and the brutalist ziggurat of the Brunswick Centre. It is bounded by a graveyard (St. George's Gardens) and the noisy Gray's Inn Road, while its central garden--unusually for Bloomsbury--remains locked to nonresidents and hidden behind high hedges. But for D. H. Lawrence, a one-time lodger there, Mecklenburgh Square was the "dark, bristling heart of London." At the turn of the twentieth century, Mecklenburgh Square was a radical address. And during the febrile years which encompassed the two world wars, it was home to the five women writers whose stories form this book. Virginia Woolf arrived with her bags and boxes at a moment of political chaos; she deliberated in her diaries "how to go on, through war," unaware that another writer had asked exactly that question in the same place twenty-three years earlier, as Zeppelin raids toppled the books from her shelf. Hilda Doolittle, known as H. D., lived at 44 Mecklenburgh Square during the First World War, and hosted Lawrence and his wife Frieda while her husband Richard Aldington was fighting in France. In 1921, three years after H. D. had left the square abruptly for a new start in Cornwall, Dorothy L. Sayers created Lord Peter Wimsey, the swaggering hero of her first detective novel, in the very same room where H. D. had begun work on the autobiographical novel cycle that would occupy her for the rest of her life. From 1926 to 1928, Jane Ellen Harrison, the pioneer of classical and anthropological studies, supported a Russian-language literary magazine from the square, working among a diverse milieu of diaspora intellectuals. And at number 20, between 1922 and 1940, the historian Eileen Power convened socialist meetings to chart an anti-fascist future, scripted pacifist broadcasts for the BBC, and hosted raucous parties in her kitchen. These women were not a Bloomsbury Group: they lived in Mecklenburgh Square at separate times, though one or two knew each other, and others were connected through shared interests, friends, even lovers. H. D. and Sayers lived in the square when their careers had hardly begun, Woolf and Harrison at the very ends of their lives; Power lived there for almost two decades, Sayers and Woolf just one year each. But for all of them, in different ways, their time in the square was formative. They all agreed that the structures which had long kept women subordinate were illusory and mutable: in their writing and their lifestyles, they wanted to break boundaries and forge new narratives for women. In Mecklenburgh Square, each dedicated herself to establishing a way of life that would let her fulfill her potential, to finding relationships that would support her work and a domestic setup that would enable it. But it was not always easy. Their lives in the square demonstrate the challenges, personal and professional, that met--and continue to meet--women who want to make their voices heard. Though I've lived in London all my life, I'd never heard of Mecklenburgh Square until I walked through it by chance one summer evening in 2013. Gazing up at the firmly drawn curtains above H. D.'s weather-worn blue plaque (the only commemoration of any of them there today), I tried to imagine the conversations that had taken place just a few meters away, almost a hundred years earlier. Later, at home, reading about this mysterious square and its illustrious roster of past inhabitants, I was astonished to learn that so many other women writers--some of whose names were unknown to me, but whose lives and work sounded as fascinating as the more famous ones--had made their homes here around the same time. I wanted to know what had drawn these women here, and what sort of lives they'd lived in these tall, dignified houses, where they had written such powerful works of history, memoir, fiction, and poetry--often recreating the square itself in their work. Was their shared address simply a coincidence? Or was there something about Mecklenburgh Square that had exerted on each of them an irresistible pull? They all seemed, on the surface, such different characters, preoccupied by divergent concerns and moving in separate, if occasionally overlapping, circles--but was there anything fundamental that united them, beyond the simple fact that they had happened to alight, at some point, in this hidden corner of Bloomsbury? The next time I found myself nearby, I took a detour to Mecklenburgh Square. As I wandered around looking for gaps in the thick hedge through which I might glimpse the garden, I remembered Virginia Woolf's famous declaration of 1929: "A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write." Turning back for a last glance at H. D.'s balcony as I headed toward Russell Square tube, I wondered if Woolf's extraordinary essay might help me understand the texture of these women's lives here, the prejudices they were fighting and the opportunities they grasped. I began to suspect that what H. D., Sayers, Harrison, Power, and Woolf herself were seeking in Mecklenburgh Square was everything Woolf had urged women writers to pursue: a room of their own, both literal and symbolic; a domestic arrangement which would help them to live, work, love, and write as they desired. Perhaps, I thought, it was this which attracted them all, in the interwar years, to Bloomsbury: a place already with a literary heritage, close to the British Museum Reading Room and the theatres and restaurants of the West End, where a new kind of living seemed possible, and where radical thought might flourish amid a political atmosphere founded on a zeal for change. Excerpted from Square Haunting: Five Writers in London Between the Wars by Francesca Wade All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.