Background
Phelps Putnam was born in Massachusetts in 1894 and attended Philips Exeter Academy.
Phelps Putnam was born in Massachusetts in 1894 and attended Philips Exeter Academy.
Yale University.
Following graduation Putnam traveled to Europe and worked a series of odd jobs including a brief period as an assistant editor for the Atlantic Monthly Press and writing advertising copy for an insurance company. Putnam’s first book of poems, Trinc, Rabelaisian for drink, was published in 1927. Following Trinc Putnam set to work on an epic, to be titled The Earthly Comedy.
In 1930 Putnam was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and the following year he published The Five Seasons (1931).
This volume marks the beginning of Putnam’s work towards producing The Earthly Comedy, however, Putnam died in 1948 before completing his epic, perhaps thwarted by his ill health (asthma and alcoholism) and the paralyzing ambition of his plans. As Field Officer Matthiessen acknowledges in his essay “To the Memory of Phelps Putnam” “he sketched a poem too vast ever to be able to shoulder the weight of writing it”.
Putnam wrote little in his later years, which largely consists of poetry published in various magazines and lyrics for a musical collaboration with Harl McDonald entitled Songs of Conquest: Cycle for Chorus of Mixed Voices (1937). Putnam’s love life appears to have superseded his poetic reputation.
Twice married (to Ruth Peters and Una Fayerweather) Putnam had numerous affairs, including trysts with Katharine Hepburn and painter Russell Cheney.
In her autobiography Maine Hepburn writes of Putnam:
He absolutely fascinated medical I flew up onto a pink cloud.”
Relative Rob Putnam is a television writer in Los Angeles and writes for Music Connection magazine.
He enrolled at Yale University where he was a member of the secret society Skull and Bones and was among the "Renaissance" generation of talented Yale-educated writers (which includes alumni such as Stephen Vincent Benét, Henry R Luce, Archibald MacLeish, Cole Porter, and Thornton Wilder). I took one look at him and I was stricken with whatever it is that strickens one at once and for no reason when one looks at a member of the opposite sexual