Harold Everett Porter#Light verse

{{short description|American writer (1887-1936)}}

File:Holworthy Hall (Harold Porter) (1917).png

Harold Everett Porter (19 September 1887 - 21 June 1936) was an American writer. Under the pen name of Holworthy Hall he published plays, verse, novels and short stories. He took his pseudonym from the dormitory for first-year students where he stayed at Harvard University.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}}

Biography

Porter was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He was the son of Albert de Lance (D.) Porter, who was first a printer in Boston, and then a publisher in New York City as owner of the A. D. Porter Co.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}} His mother, Louella née Root, was born in Ohio and raised in Massachusetts.{{cite web |last=Barlow |first= John F. |title=Holworthy Hall |publisher=IMDb |url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0355631/bio |access-date=4 March 2016}}

File:Holworthy Hall, Harvard University.JPG, Harvard University]]

He attended Harvard College winning a scholarship in the year 1906–1907.{{cite book

|title=Secretary's First Report / Harvard College Class of 1909

|author=Cable, A. G.

|date=May 1909

|page=44

|place=Cambridge (Mass.)

|publisher=Crimson Printing Co., printed for the Class.

|url=http://booksnow1.scholarsportal.info/ebooks/oca1/1/1909report01harvuoft/1909report01harvuoft.pdf}} He was on the lacrosse team in 1906–1907.{{cite book

|title=Secretary's First Report / Harvard College Class of 1907

|author=Morse, J. M.

|date=June 1908

|page=99 [111]

|place=Cambridge (Mass.)

|publisher=Crimson Printing Co., printed for the Class.

|url=https://archive.org/details/secretarysreport1908harv}}

Porter was the editor of the Harvard Lampoon from 1906 to 1909 and an editor of the Harvard Advocate, the campus literary magazine, from 1907 to 1909.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}}

He shared Room 13 in Holworthy Hall, the freshman's dormitory, with John Mansfield Groton,By 1918 he was Rev. J. M. Groton. Son of the late Rev. William M. Groton (former rector of Christ Episcopal church, Westerly). Chaplain of the Episcopal base hospital, Unit 54, of Philadelphia, in France since December 1917, was appointed chaplain in the national army in July 1918. He is rector of the Church of Our Savior, Jenkintown, Pa. Source:[http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82014086/1918-07-26/ed-1/seq-6.pdf "Westerly".] Norwich Bulletin, 26 July 1918, p. 6g-h. Retrieved 5 March 2016. next door to Robert Middlemass (with whom he collaborated on The Valiant) and the artist Julian Ellsworth Garnsey in Room 14.[http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~dorms/index.cgi? Dorm History Search.] Harvard College. Accessed 6 March 2016.

After graduating in 1909 he worked at the Boston publisher Little, Brown & Co., and then with his father's firm at the A.D. Porter Company. The firm published a monthly magazine, The Housewife, which he edited. His first short story under the pseudonym Holworthy Hall was printed in The Saturday Evening Post, and he continued to write short stories for the rest of his life.

In 1916, he was named the president of the A. D. Porter Company.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}}

His short story "The Same Old Christmas Story" appeared in the 1,000th edition (or so) of the Harvard Advocate in May 1916. He was characterised in a review in the rival Harvard Crimson as a "noble graduate of 1907, with a bank account, a tender heart and too much leisure."{{cite journal |journal=The Harvard Crimson |date=12 May 1916 |title=Anniversary Advocate Admirable |first=Albert Bushnell |last=Hart |url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1916/5/12/anniversary-advocate-admirable-pthe-advocate-appears/ |access-date=4 March 2016}}

During World War I he served in the office of the Secretary of War in Washington, D.C., working in the Military Intelligence Division, as a first lieutenant and then captain. He continued to publish stories, and was demobilized as a major in the Officer Reserve Corps.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}} His two non-fiction books date from this period.

He joined the Skaneateles Country Club in 1920. He moved to France to escape the US, living in Paris and Cannes, in a house overlooking the Mediterranean. Playing golf was a particular passion, and he wrote less and less. His marriage ended in divorce, and he returned to the US alone to live in Connecticut. He continued to write stories and died in Torrington of pneumonia, aged 48.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}}

Personal life

In 1911 he married Marian 'Marnie' Heffron of Syracuse, New York. She was the daughter of Dr. John Lorenzo Heffron, the dean of the School of Medicine at Syracuse University.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}} Heffron retired in June 1922 after 40 years' connection with the teaching staff of the medical school, 15 of them as dean.{{cite journal |title=Scientific Notes and News |journal=Science |series=New Series |volume=56 |issue=1436 |date= 7 July 1922 |pages=15–17 |publisher=American Association for the Advancement of Science |doi=10.1126/science.56.1436.15 |jstor=1647388|bibcode=1922Sci....56...15. |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1518987 }} (free access) NB In the same Notes & News section: the John Fritz Medal for applied science was awarded to Guglielmo Marconi.

After their separation/divorce she went back to the States with their three children, and became involved (as Mrs. Harold Everett Porter) with luncheons and dinners for the Boston Symphony Orchestra at the Copley-Plaza Hotel.[http://worldcat.org/digitalarchive/content/server15982.contentdm.oclc.org/BSYMO/PROG/TRUSVolume5/Pub411_1932-1933_BSO_Mon_ConE.pdf "Boston Symphony Orchestra: 52nd season 1932-1933. Programme".] 13 March 1933, p. 15. Retrieved 6 March 2016.

Selected bibliography

{{wikisource author|Harold Everett Porter}}

;Poems

  • "Epithalamium" (1913, Life magazine)Appeared in My next imitation.
  • "Opera Porteri" (1913, Life magazine)Life was founded by Edward S. Martin, Holworthy Hall Room 4, also co-founder of Lampoon, which Porter edited.

;Short stories

  • "The Rôle of Vision" (1910, The Scrap Book)Revolves around an imaginary doctoral thesis, 'The Rôle of Vision in the Mental Life of a Mouse'. [http://hdl.handle.net/2027/umn.319510027998445 The Scrap Book 9, 5 (1910), p. 773.] See {{harvnb|Messing|2014|pp=139, 260.}} The Scrap Book was edited by Frank Munsey. See also [http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/serial?id=scrapbook Online Books Page: The Scrap Book].
  • [https://archive.org/details/mynextimitation00hall "My next imitation"] (1913){{refn|1=Includes "The Same Old Christmas Story", reprinted in the Harvard Advocate, May 1916. "It reads like that story of Bunner's, where the brave little boy sells the gold brick to a kind old gentleman, and thus provides a Christmas for the family of the unsuccessful bunco steerer." }} Imitations of/tributes to other writers, starting with Walt Whitman and Stephen Leacock.
  • [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101076380409;view=1up;seq=463;size=125 "The Gilded Mean"] (1914), published in The Smart Set: A Magazine of Cleverness. (April 1914) Vol. 42, No. 3, pp. 91–96. Also given away as miniature book in packs of Sovereign cigarettes.{{sfn|KIHM|2009}} The Smart Set was edited by H. L. Mencken from 1914 to 1923.
  • [https://archive.org/details/pepper00hallgoog Pepper] (1915), collection of college stories
  • [https://archive.org/details/paprikabeingfur00hallgoog Paprika] (1916), more college tales
  • [https://archive.org/details/dormieoneandoth00compgoog Dormie One: and other golf stories] (1917)

;Novels

  • [https://archive.org/details/henrynavarreohi01compgoog Henry of Navarre, Ohio] (1914)
  • [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.hn1kz2 What He Least Expected] (1917)"The author always makes his characters talk easily and amusingly, but his plot is too complicated and unreal to rivet attention." Review in "The New Books". The Outlook, 11 April 1917, p. 668.
  • [https://archive.org/details/mannobodyknew00hall The Man Nobody Knew] (1919)
  • [https://archive.org/details/sixbestcellars00kahlgoog The Six Best Cellars] (1919) (with Hugh McNair Kahler). A satire of prohibition. Filmed in 1920 as The Six Best Cellars by Famous Players Lasky.
  • [https://archive.org/details/eganhall00halliala Egan] (1920)
  • [https://archive.org/details/ropehall00halliala Rope] (1922)
  • [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951002000164v Colossus] (1930), with a dedication to his friend and literary agent, Harold Ober (still in copyright in 2016, searchable text only)

;Plays

  • The Valiant (1921) a one-act play (with Robert Middlemass, Harvard classmate), appeared in McClure's magazine[https://books.google.com/books?id=ko0vUVJhYSEC&pg=RA2-PA8 "The Valiant"], McClure's (March 1921, p. 8)
  • The Valiant (1929 film), El valien (1930 film), The Man Who Wouldn't Talk (1940 film), and three TV movies
  • [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=iau.31858023967544 The Duke and the Dices] (1929) (still in copyright in 2016, searchable text only)

;Non-fiction

  • The History of the Liberty Engine (1918) (with William Rose Benét and Warner W. Kent){{sfn|KIHM|2009}}{{refn|This document, cited as MS (manuscript) and containing at least 119 pages, held at the U.S. Air Force Museum, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, is referenced several times in {{cite journal

|last=Dickey

|first=Philip S. III

|title=The Liberty Engine 1918–1942

|journal=Smithsonian Annals of Flight

|volume=1

|issue=3

|date=1968

|edition=5th printing, 1978

|url=https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/18673/SAoF-0001.3-Hi_res.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y}} }}

  • [https://archive.org/details/cu31924030744688 Aerial Observation: The Airplane Observer, The Balloon Observer and the Army Corps Pilot] (1921)

Light verse

Porter was evidently a great lover of classical music, and the following lines (which originally appeared in Life magazine in 1913) evoke memories of his favourite operas, singers and musicians.{{cite journal |journal=The Theatre |title=Opera Porteri |volume=XVII

|issue= 143 |date=January 1913 |page=18 |url=https://archive.org/stream/theatremagazine17newyuoft#page/n33/mode/2up |access-date=18 April 2018}}Treating 'Porter' as a Latin second declension noun like 'puer', the title might be roughly translated as 'The operas of Porter', or even 'Porter's opera'; classics scholars would have recognised a pun on titles like Herodoti opera / 'The works of Porter'.The words fit fairly well to [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpPBLiU0cY8 the tune of Mattinata] (YouTube) by Leoncavallo.

{{Quote frame|align=center|

Opera Porteri

O carmen jadlowker dalmorès

O lucia sextetta bizet;

O dippel caruso dolores,

Gioconda, o andré-caplet.

O conti, o eames tetrazzini,

O scotti mascagni farrar.

O gadski busoni puccini,

Calvé constantinomaquarre.

Ah, verdi, pagliacc' trovatore,

Aida fremstad meyerbeer;

Pol plançon and that tells the story,

[https://www.jstor.org/stable/20561812 The opera season is here.]}}

References

;Notes

{{reflist}}

;Sources

  • {{cite web

|ref=

|date=23 September 2009

|last=KIHM

|title=Holworthy Hall

|website=Skaneateles / The character and characters of a lakeside village

|url=https://kihm6.wordpress.com/2009/09/23/holworthy-hall/

|access-date=4 March 2016}}

  • {{cite book

|title=Marching to the Canon: The Life of Schubert's Marche Militaire

|series=Eastman Studies in Music

|last=Messing

|first=Scott

|publisher=Boydell & Brewer

|year=2014

|isbn=9781580464383

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sEslBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA139}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2016}}

{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Porter, Harold Everett}}

Category:1887 births

Category:1936 deaths

Category:20th-century American novelists

Category:The Harvard Lampoon alumni

Category:20th-century American short story writers

Category:20th-century American dramatists and playwrights

Category:Harvard Advocate alumni

Category:20th-century pseudonymous writers