Mary Butts

Mary Butts
Born 13 December 1890(1890-12-13)
Died 5 March 1937(1937-03-05) (aged 46)
Occupation novelist
Nationality British

Mary Frances Butts (13 December 1890 – 5 March 1937) was a British modernist writer. Her work found recognition in important literary magazines such as The Bookman and The Little Review, as well as from some of her fellow modernists, T. S. Eliot, H.D. and Bryher. After her death, her works fell into obscurity until they began to be republished in the 1980s.[1]

Butts was a student of the author and occultist Aleister Crowley, and as one of several students who worked with him on his Magick (Book 4) in 1912, she was given co-authorship credit.

Contents

Life

Butts was born in Poole, Dorset. Her father, Captain Frederick John Butts, died in 1905, after which she had a boarding school education in St Andrews.[2] She studied at Westfield College, but did not complete a degree there.[3] In the first years of World War I she was living in London, England, undertaking social work for the London County Council in Hackney Wick, and in a lesbian relationship. She then met modernist poet John Rodker, whom she was to marry, at that time hiding in Dorking with fellow poet Robert Trevelyan.[4]

During the early 1920s Butts was mostly in Paris, France. She was friends there with artist, poet, and film-maker Jean Cocteau,[5] who illustrated her book Imaginary Letters.[6] Her first novel, Ashe of Rings (1925), was published by Robert McAlmon.[7]

Butts spent about twelve weeks in mid-1921 at Aleister Crowley's Abbey of Thelema in Sicily; she found the practices there shocking, and came away with a drug habit.[8] In 1922 and 1923 she with Cecil Maitland spent periods near Tyneham, Dorset, and her novels of the 1920s make much of the Dorset landscape.[9] She settled in Cornwall in 1932.[2]

Family

In 1918 she married John Rodker, and gave birth to a daughter, Camilla Elizabeth. They divorced in 1927, Butts having much earlier left Rodker for a relationship with Cecil Maitland. In 1930 she married William Park "Gabriel" Atkin (1897–1937), a homosexual artist. After time in London and Newcastle, they moved to Sennen in Cornwall, but the marriage had failed by 1934.[10]

Scholarship on Mary Butts

Butts' papers are held at the Beinecke Library at Yale University.[11] Her biography, by N. Blondel, appeared in 1998.[12]

Published works

References

  1. ^ Blondel, N (2004). "Butts, Mary Franeis (1890–1937)". In Brian Harrison. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. 
  2. ^ a b Taylor, Alan (12 January 2003). "Bohemian rhapsodies". The Sunday Herald. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4156/is_/ai_n9627183. 
  3. ^ http://www.arlindo-correia.com/080803.html
  4. ^ The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/b/blondel-butts.html. 
  5. ^ Ifs, Ands, or Butts, Austin Chronicle, August 31, 1998
  6. ^ Beinecke Library, Recent Acquisitions, Fall 1998
  7. ^ http://times.com/books/98/05/31/reviews/980531.31byrnet.html
  8. ^ Booth, Martin (2001) [2000] (trade paperback). A Magick Life: A Biography of Aleister Crowley (Coronet ed.). London: Hodder and Stoughton. pp. 375–76. ISBN 0-340-71806-4. "Mary Butts and [Cecil] Maitland left Cefalú on 16 September after staying about twelve weeks. They had not enjoyed their visit[...] Also, they both came away drug addicts." 
  9. ^ Patrick Wright, The Village that Died for England (2002 edition), pp. 99-108.
  10. ^ http://specialcollections.wichita.edu/Collections/ms/89-02/89-2-A.HTML
  11. ^ Mary Butts Papers. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
  12. ^ N. Blondel (1998), Mary Butts: Scenes from a Life, McPherson & Company, Kingston, NY, ISBN 0-929701-55-0

External link