One of Cline's friends at the Detroit News in the late teens was Stirling Bowen (1895-1955), the son of Wilber P. Bowen (1863-1929), Head of the Department of Physical Education at the Normal School in Ypsilanti, Michigan, and his first wife, Helen M. ("Nellie") Stirling (1866-1895), who died about six weeks after the boy was born. Stirling also had four half-sisters from his father's second marriage.
Stirling Bowen married Gene Beasley (1895-1975) in Detroit in 1915. They had two sons and one daughter. He contributed verse to the Detroit News and to The Liberator and other magazines. He published a small booklet An Appeal to the Nation's Courage (1922) protesting the imprisonment of John Pancer, the organizer of the Industrial Workers of the World. But his most significant publication was his only book, Wishbone (1930), a collection of three rather bleak novellas, deriving in ways from Sherwood Anderson and Ernest Hemingway. (The book was retitled Triad when published in England in 1931.)
He worked on the Detroit News in teens and early twenties, then in Chicago, before moving to New York, where he was for several years the drama critic on The Wall Street Journal. Later he was editor of The Cancer Bulletin.
He was divorced from his first wife in 1945, and two months later married Natalie Mihailova, ten years his junior, who survived him on his death in New York on 11 February 1955 at the age of sixty.
A venue to share my discoveries about the Michigan-born novelist, newspaperman, poet, and dramatist, Leonard Lanson Cline (1893-1929).
Thursday, March 28, 2019
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Song for a Fool by Leonard Cline
Here's the last of Cline's six poems that he published in The Liberator. "Song for a Fool" is the only one that is expressly political (witness the use of "red" in the penultimate line). It appeared in the October 1920 issue. (It was not included in Cline's collection After-Walker, published in 1930. To see all six poems click on the tag "The Liberator". Only two--"Bach" and "Vega"--were collected in After-Walker.)
Friday, March 15, 2019
Society of the Painted Window: Marjorie Hope Nicolson
Form the Smith College Archives |
Marjorie Hope Nicolson, on the other hand, had a long and highly distinguished career in academia, getting her Ph.D. at Yale (1920), and teaching at a number of colleges. She served as Dean of Smith College from 1929-1941, declining in 1939 to become its President. In 1941 she became a full Professor at Columbia University, gaining in 1954 a Chair which she held until her retirement in 1962. She authored and edited over a dozen books, of which I will here call attention to only one, her study of the development of the imaginary voyage in literature from Lucien through the modern era of Verne, H.G. Wells, and C.S. Lewis, Voyages to the Moon (1948).
A more detailed account of Nicolson's career can be found here.
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
On the Roof by Leonard Cline
Another one of Cline's poems that didn't make it into After-Walker was "On the Roof," which was published in the March 1918 issue of The Liberator. (I suspect "laugs" in line 6 of stanza 3 is a typo for "laughs.")
Friday, March 1, 2019
Cline's Mother
From a profile in Recreation, August 1896 |
Jessie Forsyth, born in Flint on 16 February 1865, and her two older sisters, Kate Forsyth (1850-1937) and Zaidee (over the years her name was also spelt Sadie or Sade) Forsyth (1852-1932) were also members of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Kate and Zaidee never married.
Jessie attended Helmuth College in London, Ontario, and the Detroit Training School of Elocution and English Literature, graduating in 1887. She taught for the year 1887-1888 at the College of the Sisters of Bethany in Topeka, Kansas, before returning to Bay City. She married Leonard Lanson Cline (1858-1904) at the Forsyth family home in Bay City on 22 January 1890. Her two children were Elizabeth Forsyth Cline (1891-1966) and Leonard Lanson Cline, Jr. (1893-1929). In the early 1890s the Cline family moved to Detroit.
After her husband's death in 1904, Jessie moved her family to Ann Arbor, where she ran a boarding house close to the University of Michigan. In 1913, after both her children quit the university (Elizabeth, after two years; and Leonard, after three years), Jessie sold out and moved to California, where she remarried at least once. Her spinster sisters followed her out to California. She died as Jessie F. Harte in Los Angeles on 12 April 1939.
Beginning in the 1890s, Jessie wrote and published occasional articles, stories, and poems, sometimes anonymously, sometimes signed as by Jessie F. Cline or Jessie Forsyth Cline, and sometimes under an unrecorded masculine pseudonym. Her work appeared in magazines such as Recreation, Kate Field's Washington, and Werner's Magazine. Her writings also appeared in various newspapers, including the Detroit News-Tribune.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)