Novels, films and psychoanalysis, continuing life and loves
In the early 1920s, H.D. started to write three projected cycles of novels. The first of these,
Magna Graeca, consisted of
Palimpsest (1921) and
Hedylus (1928). These novels use their classical settings to explore the poetic vocation, particularly as it applies to women in a patriarchal literary culture. The
Madrigal cycle consisted of
HERmione,
Bid Me to Live,
Paint It Today and
Asphodel. These novels are largely autobiographical and deal with the development of the female artist and the conflict between heterosexual and lesbian desire. Possibly because of their closeness to H.D.'s own life and the lives of her friends and loved ones, most of them were not published until after her death.
Kora and Ka and
The Usual Star, two novellas from the
Borderline cycle, were published in 1933.
As a writer, she completed the first of the
Madrigal cycle novels,
HERmione, based on the pull between lesbian and heterosexual love in her own life. In her personal life, her mother had died, her lesbian lover Bryher had divorced her husband and H. D.'s lover, McAlmon, only to marry H.D.'s new male lover, Kenneth Macpherson. Following this, H.D., Bryher and Macpherson lived together in what the poet and critic
Barbara Guest termed a 'menagerie for three.' In 1928, H.D. became pregnant but chose to abort the pregnancy in November. They set up the magazine
Close Up and formed the POOL cinema group to write about and make films. Only one POOL film survives in its entirety,
Borderline (1930), starring H.D. and
Paul Robeson. In common with the
Borderline novellas, the film explores extreme psychic states and their relationship to surface reality. In addition to acting in this film, H.D. wrote an explanatory pamphlet to accompany the film, a piece which was later published in
Close Up.
In 1933, H.D. travelled to Vienna in order to undergo analysis with
Sigmund Freud. She had long been interested in his ideas, which is evident from the pamphlet on
Borderline as well as some of her earlier works. She was referred to him by Bryher's psychoanalyst due to her increasing paranoia about the approach of World War II—and the first
Great War (World War I) had left her feeling shattered. She had lost her brother in action, while her husband suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder from combat experiences, and she believed that the onslaught of the war indirectly caused the death of her child with Aldington: she also believed it was her shock at hearing the news about the
RMS Lusitania that directly caused her miscarriage.
The rise of
Adolf Hitler indicated another world war, an idea that she found intolerable.
Writing on the Wall, her memoir about this analysis, was written concurrently with
Trilogy and published in 1944; in 1956 it was republished with
Advent, a journal of the analysis, under the title
Tribute to Freud.