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...cream for lunch. It was 1960 and H.D., as she signed herself, had come home briefly from Europe to receive the Gold Medal from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She died the following year, at age 75, in Zurich, within a circle of admirers and close to Bryher, nee Annie Winifred Ellerman, the energetic heiress and novelist (The Fourteenth of October) who had been her lover and benefactor for more than 40 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Astronomer's Daughter | 1/16/1984 | See Source »

...Coin of Carthage, by Bryher. The Punic Wars, seen not so much on the battlefronts as in the backwaters of living and in the private hopes and problems of small people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Jul. 5, 1963 | 7/5/1963 | See Source »

...What Bryher eventually brings into view, however, is the enduring landscape along the fringes of a wasting war of occupation. Hannibal's army lives off the Italian countryside for decades at a stretch, until the danger from the war is as familiar a part of peasant life as drought or plague. The Italian villagers are loyal to Rome when the legions can defend them, comfortably acquiescent when the Carthaginians ride into town and offer better prices. To the fearful peasantry, Hannibal's few armored elephants loom dreadfully, like the roaming German Tiger Tanks of World...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: History Seen Small | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

...most likely to survive, his friend Dasius is an idealist most unlikely to do so. The restless son of a Roman freedman and a Greek slave, he yearns for the dark freedom of Carthage's Africa, finds it, and loses everything. In time of war, Bryher suggests, it is advisable to make only the smallest demands upon life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: History Seen Small | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

...Bryher's small, shapely book, like the handful of minor historical classics in which she has previously sought to trap various troubled and far-off times (Roman Wall, Beowulf), is nobody's guidebook to the important events of a historic day or decade. But it offers the details and textures of a particular age so pervasively known and felt by the author that it does not have to be clumsily insisted upon as scholarship. The figures who move in Bryher's historic landscape are neither makers nor victims of history. They are men, seen small, but with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: History Seen Small | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

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