Neith Boyce

Neith Boyce Hapgood (March 21, 1872 - Franklin, Indiana – December 2, 1951 - Richmond, New Hampshire) was a Progressive-Era writer who worked in poetry, theater, short stories, novels, and various forms of creative nonfiction. She began her literary career with fiction published in her father's newspaper in Los Angeles and in California "little magazines," moving to write for cultural magazines edited by her mother in Boston in the late 1880s. From there she migrated to New York and worked on Lincoln Steffens' Commercial Advertiser in the 1890s and lived in Greenwich Village. There she met the radical journalist, writer and poet Hutchins Hapgood. She married Hutchins Hapgood on June 22, 1899. Together with Susan Glaspell, George Cram Cook, and others, they founded the Provincetown Players.

Poems by Neith Boyce
Poems
 * After the Storm. LOTOS 9:3 (September 1895), 177.
 * After Sunset. LOTOS 8:10 (April 1895), 709.
 * Flower of Rajisthan.;; The New Cycle 8:8 (February 1895).
 * Last Week in Autumn. Overland 52:201 (December, 1892), 609.
 * Noel. LOTOS 9: 6-7 (December-January 1895/​1896), front cover.
 * Triolet. LOTOS 9:5 (November 1895), 338.
 * Winter’s Night.; Overland 52:17 (September 1891), 610.

Other Writings

 * Novels: The Forerunner (1903), The Folly of Others (1904), Eternal Spring (1906), The Bond (1908), Two Sons (1917), Proud Lady (1923), Harry: A Portrait (1923)
 * The Modern World of Neith Boyce : Autobiography and Diaries, edited by Carol DeBoer-Langworthy. University of New Mexico Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8263-3147-5