Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present
Cicely Hamilton
-
Standard Name: Hamilton, Cicely
Birth Name: Cicely Mary Hammill
Pseudonym: Cicely Hamilton
CH
's early twentieth-century plays, novels, feminist prose, and travel writing are firmly rooted in her politics, and demonstrate her skill as political satirist. As a propagandist her method is often to take the views of the other side and render them ridiculous. Her earlier writings reflect her commitment to women's suffrage and economic independence, while her later work focuses primarily on war.
That autumn, against the wishes of both her father and her husband, she joined the WSPU
, organising a local branch at Newport, South Wales. She paid her one-shilling annual membership fee and pledged...
politics
Sarah Grand
In an interview in 1896, SG
made clear her belief in the need for female suffrage: We shall do no good until we get the Franchise, for however well-intentioned men may be, they cannot understand...
politics
May Sinclair
It was an act of great courage for MS
to make herself so conspicuous. Cicely Hamilton
and Catherine Gasquoine Hartley
led the procession. Members of the WWSL each carried a goose quill and a bannerette...
Engle, Sherry D. New Women Dramatists in America, 1890-1920. Palgrave MacMilan, 2007.
90
which based itself on a bond of union between all women in the Theatrical profession who are in sympathy...
politics
Edith Craig
In April and October 1909 EC
directed the enormously successful suffrage play How the Vote Was Won co-authored by Cicely Hamilton
and Christopher St John
. Later that year, she directed the premier production of...
John, Angela V. Elizabeth Robins: Staging a Life, 1862-1952. Routledge, 1995.
153
Author summary
Christopher St John
Writing from the beginning of the twentieth century, CSJ
produced novels, biography, and love-journals, as well as her work for the stage, for which she wrote translations, adaptations, and original plays. She is best...
Publishing
May Sinclair
MS
published A Defence of Men in The English Review, in response to Cicely Hamilton
's Man published in the April issue of the same periodical.
Boll, Theophilus E. M. Miss May Sinclair: Novelist: A Biographical and Critical Introduction. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1973.
252
Reception
Constance Smedley
Though Liberals welcomed the pageant, it was widely condemned by the County or local landowners as socialistic.
Smedley, Constance, and Maxwell Armfield. Crusaders. Chatto & Windus, 1912, x, 416 pp.
203, 206
But the driver who took the Armfields home at the end of the last day said:...
Reception
Catharine Amy Dawson Scott
This novel received excellent reviews and in early 1920 reached the short-list of three English submissions for the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse, which however went in the end to Cicely Hamilton
. In The Observer...
Reception
Elizabeth Robins
On ER
's request, Cicely Hamilton
adapted the novel as a play, but it was never performed. The Lord Chamberlain refused to license it on the grounds that it ought not be allowed to run...
Textual Production
Christopher St John
It was part of a triple bill with Cicely Hamilton
's Jack and Jill and a Friend and Margaret Wynne Nevinson
's In the Workhouse. Another performance, again directed by Edith Craig, was staged...
Timeline
No timeline events available.
Texts
Hamilton, Cicely. Modern Sweden, as Seen by an Englishwoman. J. M. Dent and Sons, 1939.
Hamilton, Cicely. Senlis. W. Collins, 1917.
Hamilton, Cicely. The Child in Flanders. Samuel French, 1922.
Hamilton, Cicely. The Englishwoman. Longmans, Green, 1940.
Hamilton, Cicely. The Old Adam. B. Blackwell, 1926.
Hamilton, Cicely, and Lilian Baylis. The Old Vic. Jonathan Cape, 1926.
Hamilton, Cicely, and Christopher St John. The Pot and the Kettle. 1909.
Hamilton, Cicely. Theodore Savage. Leonard Parsons, 1922.
Hamilton, Cicely. William, An Englishman. Skeffington and Son, 1919.