Charlotte Endymion Porter
Charlotte Endymion Porter
BornHelen Charlotte Porter
(1857-01-06)January 6, 1857
Towanda, Pennsylvania
DiedJanuary 16, 1942(1942-01-16) (aged 85)
Melrose, Massachusetts
Pen nameRobert Iphys Everett
OccupationWriter, translator, editor
NationalityAmerican
Alma materWells College
PartnerHelen Archibald Clarke
RelativesHelen Tracy Lowe-Porter (niece)

Charlotte Endymion Porter (January 6, 1857 – January 16, 1942) was an American poet, translator, and literary critic and the cofounder and coeditor of the journal Poet Lore. As the editor or coeditor of editions of the complete works of William Shakespeare, Robert Browning, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and as a translator of major writers from around the world for Poet Lore, she was influential in shaping the American literary taste of her day.

Education

Helen Charlotte Porter was born in Towanda, Pennsylvania, in 1857, one of three children of Henry Clinton Porter, a physician, and Elisa Eleanor (Betts) Porter.[1] She later changed her name to Charlotte Endymion Porter, taking her middle name from a poem by John Keats.[2] She attended Wells College in New York, graduating in 1875 and extending her studies in Shakespeare and French drama at the Sorbonne in Paris.[1]

Journal editor and founder

In 1883, having moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she became the editor of the journal Shakespeariana.[3] Through her work with this journal, she met her life partner, the writer Helen Archibald Clarke (1860–1926), with whom she afterwards collaborated on many projects.[3] Porter resigned from the journal in 1887 after a dispute over her plans for expansion,[1] following which she became for a short time the editor of the journal Ethical Record.[2]

In 1889, Porter and Clarke founded the quarterly journal Poet Lore in Philadelphia, later moving it to Boston.[3] Its stated aim was to champion the "comparative study of literature" and the work of Shakespeare and Robert Browning.[2] After the first few years, the journal's focus on writing about Shakespeare and Browning shifted to encompass a broader view of world literature.[1] In keeping with its mission, the magazine published few American writers but many from around the world, often in translation.[2] Poet Lore helped introduce American readers to the work of such early modern writers as Henrik Ibsen, August Strindberg, Gabriele D’Annunzio, Selma Lagerlöf, Gerhart Hauptmann, Maxim Gorky, Maurice Maeterlinck, Arthur Schnitzler, and Rabindranath Tagore.[2] Many of these translations were by Porter, who developed a reputation as a good translator.[3]

Porter and Clarke sold Poet Lore in 1903 but continued for many years as editors.[2] Poet Lore is still in print, the oldest continuing poetry magazine in the United States.[3]

Authorship

In tandem with her work on the journals, Porter edited a 40-volume edition of Shakespeare and co-edited with Clarke editions of the British poets Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning.[3] Together with Clarke, she published Clever Tales (1897), a book of translations of European authors like Villiers de L'Isle Adam, Ludovic Halévy, Vsevolod Garshin, Jakub Arbes, and Strindberg. Along with her work on Poet Lore, these efforts are credited with helping to shape American literary taste of the day.[2]

Porter was also a poet, publishing in magazines such as The Atlantic Monthly, The Century Magazine, and Ainslee's Magazine and producing a volume of poems entitled Lips of Music in 1910. She published some of her poems under the pseudonym 'Robert Iphys Everett', and some of her poems were set to music by Clarke, Margaret Ruthven Lang, and Mabel Hill.[4]

Porter was a member and longtime vice-president (1903–1936) of the Boston Browning Society.[1] The society sponsored Porter's 1902 stage adaptation of Robert Browning's tragedy Return of the Druses (which was published the following year).[1][3] Porter was also a member of Julia Ward Howe's Boston Authors Club.[1]

Later life

Towards the end of her life, Porter lived on the Isle au Haut in Maine in the summers and the remainder of the year in Massachusetts. She died in 1942 in Melrose, Massachusetts.[3]

Porter's niece, Helen Tracy Lowe-Porter, would follow in her footsteps and become a noted translator. Through her niece, Porter is the great-great-aunt of Boris Johnson, former prime minister of the UK.

Books

As author
  • Lips of Music. New York: Thos. Y. Crowell, 1910 (poems)
  • Return of the Druses. New York: Crowell, 1903 (stage version of Robert Browning's tragedy)
  • Shakespeare Studies: Macbeth. Cincinnati: American Book Company, 1901 (with Clarke)
  • Shakespeare Study Programs: The Tragedies. Boston: RG Badger, 1914
As translator
  • Clever Tales (1897, with Clarke)
As editor
  • Browning, Robert. The Complete Works of Robert Browning. New York: Kelmscott Society and Thos. Y. Crowell, 1898 (with Clarke; 12 volumes)
  • Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. Works: The Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. New York: Thos. Y. Crowell, 1900 (with Clarke; 6 volumes)
  • Shakespeare, William. First Folio Edition of Shakespeare. New York: Thos. Y. Crowell, 1903–13 (40 volumes)

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 James, Edward T., Janet Wilson James, and Paul S. Boyer, eds. Notable American Women, 1607–1950: A Biographical Dictionary. Vol. 1. Harvard University Press, 1971.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 “Clarke, Helen Archibald; and Porter, Charlotte Endymion”. Encyclopædia Britannica, November 19, 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Standridge, Amanda. "Porter, Charlotte Endymion" Archived March 12, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Pennsylvania Center for the Book, Fall 2003.
  4. Porter, Charlotte. Lips of Music. New York: Thos. Y. Crowell, 1910, p. v.
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