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Edna St. Vincent Millay [1892-1950] USA
Ranked #69 in the top 380 poets
Votes 89%: 993 up, 126 down

Feminist. Like Frost, skillful writer of sonnet and combines modernist attitudes with traditional forms, creating a unique American poetry.

Progressive political stances, frank portrayal of both hetero and homosexuality, and, above all, her embodiment and description of new kinds of female experience and expression.

Edna St. Vincent Millay, born in 1892 in Maine, grew to become one of the premier twentieth-century lyric poets. She was also an accomplished playwright and speaker who often toured giving readings of her poetry. All of that was in her public life, but her private life was equally interesting. An unconventional childhood led into an unconventional adulthood. At the young age of seven, Edna`s mother asked her husband to leave the family home. After that point he held a negligible role in the girl`s life. Edna and her two sisters moved, with their mother, to Newburyport, Massachusetts where, to Edna`s delight, she was given piano lessons. Edna (who insisted on being called Vincent and who even entered writing contests under that name) and her sisters were encouraged in their literary and musical leanings by their mother. Then, in high school, Millay`s interests expanded to include theatre. She performed in numerous plays and wrote a Halloween play for her classmates to act out. 

Millay enjoyed her free-spirited childhood and adolescence and the creativity that it inspired. At the age of twenty, she entered her poem "Renascence" into a poetry contest for the The Lyric Year, a contest from which 100 poems were to be chosen to be published. It was, at first, overlooked as being too simplistic, however, one of the judges took a second look at it and the poem, now one of her most well known, won  fourth place. It was that poem which really started her on her literary career, beginning with a scholarship to the then all female college of Vassar. 

Millay kept up her writing, both poetic and dramatic while at Vassar. It was during this time that she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for her book The Harp-Weaver and other Poems`. 

Millay`s first book of poetry, enascence and Other Poemswas published in 1917 and well received. Then  Few Figs from Thistleswas published in 1922 and sparked some attention as well as controversy with its feminist leanings. In particular the poems within maintained that the sexual freedom formerly commandeered by men was equally valid for women. This feeling is particularly obvious in the sonnet beginning "What lips my lips have kissed,". 

Keep in mind that all of this was accomplished during Millay`s college years! After graduation she moved to Greenwich Village in New York, a particularly free-thinking and artistic borough. 

Millay did eventually marry Eugen Boissevain, who managed her career and was a great source of support. The marriage, as mentioned above, was agreed to be open and Millay herself said that they maintained their personal freedom, living more as great friends than as husband and wife. Millay, a smoker in an age of smokers, succumbed to her failure in 1950 at her home, Steepletop, in Austerlitz New York. Boissevain, who was considerably older, had died the previous year. 

This biography reproduced here in part was written by Andrea Lynn Dunham

Bipolar disorder, Didactism, Feminism, Formalism, Modernism, Sonnet

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1564-1616
ENG
William Shakespeare
→ influenced Edna St. Vincent Millay
1608-1674
ENG
John Milton
→ influenced Edna St. Vincent Millay
1770-1850
ENG
William Wordsworth
→ influenced Edna St. Vincent Millay
1771-1832
SCO
Walter Scott
→ influenced Edna St. Vincent Millay
1809-1892
ENG
Alfred Lord Tennyson
→ influenced Edna St. Vincent Millay
1812-1870
ENG
Charles Dickens
→ influenced Edna St. Vincent Millay
1819-1880
ENG
George Eliot
→ influenced Edna St. Vincent Millay
1840-1928
ENG
Thomas Hardy
→ praised Edna St. Vincent Millay


WorkLangRating
Sonnet: What Lips My Lips Have Kissed
eng
33
Conscientious Objector
eng
32
Time Does Not Bring Relief
eng
30
I Know I Am But Summer To Your Heart
eng
19
I, Being Born A Woman And Distressed
eng
17
If I Should Learn, In Some Quite Casual Way
eng
17
Love Is Not All
eng
16
Sonnet: VII: From Fatal Interview
eng
15
Lament
eng
13
Dirge Without Music
eng
12
An Ancient Gesture
eng
11
Counting-Out Rhyme
eng
10
Renascence
eng
10
Thou Art Not Lovelier Than Lilacs
eng
9
Recuerdo
eng
8
Second Fig
eng
7
Grown-up
eng
6
The Doctor Asked Her What She Wanted Done
eng
6
To Those Without Pity
eng
6
Afternoon On A Hill
eng
5
Ashes Of Life
eng
5
First Fig
eng
5
Departure
eng
4
Euclid Alone
eng
4
Feast
eng
4
Gazing Upon Him Now, Severe And Dead
eng
4
Mariposa
eng
4
Thursday
eng
4
Travel
eng
4
A Visit To The Asylum
eng
3
Apostrophe To Man
eng
3
City Trees
eng
3
Ebb
eng
3
Prayer To Persephone
eng
3
The Penitent
eng
3
To A Friend Estranged From Me
eng
3
To A Poet That Died Young
eng
3
Where Can The Heart Be Hidden In The Ground
eng
3
Alms
eng
2
As Men Have Loved Their Lovers In Times Past
eng
2
Burial
eng
2
Dirge
eng
2
Humoresque
eng
2
I Shall Forget You Presently, My Dear
eng
2
Interim
eng
2
Rosemary
eng
2
Spring
eng
2
The Betrothal
eng
2
The Dream
eng
2
The Little Ghost
eng
2
The Return From Town
eng
2
The Spring And The Fall
eng
2
The Suicide
eng
2
And Do You Think That Love Itself
eng
1
As To Some Lovely Temple, Tenantless
eng
1
Daphne
eng
1
Doubt No More That Oberon
eng
1
Eel-Grass
eng
1
Epitaph
eng
1
Exiled
eng
1
I Shall Go Back
eng
1
I Think I Should Have Loved You Presently
eng
1
If Still Your Orchards Bear
eng
1
Indifference
eng
1
Intention To Escape From Him
eng
1
Love Is Not Blind. I See With Single Eye
eng
1
Midnight Oil
eng
1
Modern Declaration
eng
1
Not In A Silver Casket Cool With Pearls
eng
1
Oh, Oh, You Will Be Sorry
eng
1
Once More Into My Arid Days Like Dew
eng
1
Passer Mortuus Est
eng
1
Sonnet XXVIII: From Fatal Interview
eng
1
Sorrow
eng
1
The Ballad Of The Harp-Weaver
eng
1
The Fawn
eng
1
The Philosopher
eng
1
The Shroud
eng
1
Three Songs Of Shattering
eng
1
To A Young Poet
eng
1
When The Year Grows Old
eng
1
Witch-Wife
eng
1
And You As Well Must Die, Beloved Dust
eng
0
Assault
eng
0
Autumn Daybreak
eng
0
Being Young And Green
eng
0
Blight
eng
0
Bluebeard: Sonnet VI
eng
0
Cherish You Then The Hope I Shall Forget
eng
0
Chorus
eng
0
Eight Sonnets
eng
0
Elegy
eng
0
Elegy Before Death
eng
0
Fontaine, Je Ne Boirai Pas De Ton Eau!
eng
0
From: A Few Figs From Thistles
eng
0
God`s World
eng
0
Hearing Your Words, And Not A Word Among Them
eng
0
Here Is A Wound That Never Will Heal, I Know
eng
0
I Do But Ask That You Be Always Fair
eng
0
I Dreamed I Moved Among The Elysian Fields
eng
0
I Know The Face Of Falsehood And Her Tongue
eng
0
I Will Put Chaos Into Fourteen Lines
eng
0
Inland
eng
0
Into The Golden Vessel Of Great Song
eng
0
Invocation To The Muses
eng
0
Journey
eng
0
Justice Denied In Massachusetts
eng
0
Kin To Sorrow
eng
0
Let You Not Say Of Me When I Am Old
eng
0
Lines For A Grave-Stone
eng
0
Lines Written In Recapitulation
eng
0
Love, Though For This You Riddle Me With Darts
eng
0
Low-Tide
eng
0
Make Bright The Arrows
eng
0
May The Fruit Never Be Plucked
eng
0
Memorial To D.C.
eng
0
Menses
eng
0
Mindful Of You The Sodden Earth
eng
0
Mist In The Valley
eng
0
My Most Distinguished Guest And Learned Friend
eng
0
Night Is My Sister, And How Deep In Love
eng
0
No Rose That In A Garden Ever Grew
eng
0
Not Even My Pride Shall Suffer Much
eng
0
Not In This Chamber
eng
0
Not With Libations, But With Shouts And Laughter
eng
0
Ode To Silence
eng
0
Oh, My Beloved, Have You Thought Of This
eng
0
Oh, Think Not I Am Faithful To A Vow
eng
0
Only Until This Cigarette Is Ended
eng
0
Pastoral
eng
0
Pity Me Not Because The Light Of Day
eng
0
Portrait By A Neighbour
eng
0
Scrub
eng
0
Song Of A Second April
eng
0
Sonnet: XLVI
eng
0
Souvenir
eng
0
Sweet Love, Sweet Thorn, When Lightly To My Heart
eng
0
Tavern
eng
0
The Bean-Stalk
eng
0
The Blue Flag In The Bog
eng
0
The Concert
eng
0
The Curse
eng
0
The Death Of Autumn
eng
0
The Fledgling
eng
0
The Goose-Girl
eng
0
The Leaf And The Tree
eng
0
The Little Hill
eng
0
The Plaid Dress
eng
0
The Poet And His Book
eng
0
The Singing-Woman From The Wood`s Edge
eng
0
The Snow Storm
eng
0
The True Encounter
eng
0
The Unexplorer
eng
0
The Wood Road
eng
0
Think Not, Not For A Moment Let Your Mind
eng
0
This Door You Might Not Open
eng
0
To Kathleen
eng
0
To The Not Impossible Him
eng
0
Underground System
eng
0
We Talk Of Taxes, And I Call You Friend
eng
0
Weeds
eng
0
When I Too Long Have Looked Upon Your Face
eng
0
Whereas At Morning In A Jeweled Crown
eng
0
Wild Swans
eng
0
Women Have Loved Before As I Love Now
eng
0
Wraith
eng
0

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