Modern photo of Beachy Head, England
Dear friends and readers,
A fifth blog report on this year’s ASECS meeting in Cleveland. Centlivre. Three panels, two very early morning; one very late afternoon. Susannah Centlivre’s plays on gambling, addiction and marital and civil liberty speaks to us today so too the sources and power of Smith’s melancholy vast poetry. The gothic strange work of several later 18th century women writers is explained & defended.
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Folger production of The Basset Table: Valeria (Emily Trask) and Ensign Lovely (Robbie Gay) bond at Valeria’s lab table, where they share a discovery about worms.
An early morning session on Susannah Centlivre on Friday, 8:00 am (87, “A Woman’s Case”) surprised me by how good it was. Only recently have I had the opportunity to see one of Centlivre’s plays staged; it was so much better than than it had read, I realized I had not been giving them an adequate reading at all; these papers found Centlivre adumbrated humane understandings of addiction in the areas of gambling and alcoholism for men, and explored in a modern way the problem of personal or civil liberty.
Emma Ingrisani’s “‘If He Has Lost his Money, this News will break his Heart:’ Sentiment and Vice in Centlivre’s The Gamester claimed this play showed real sympathy for gamblers. Centlivre shows Valere’s gambling to be compulsive, but the qualities that led him to be addicted to gambling make him appealing. In gambling Valere experiences sublimity, he’s attached to gambling and feels himself magnificent; & the point is made that the man of feeling is not moral so much as someone who enjoys his emotions and is attuned to the emotions of others. The culture of sensibility alters the play’s criticism of gambling. The play is suggestive of an inner world in the characters, and seeks to explain supposedly abnormal impulses. The play’s conservative sexual politics parallels a sophisticated economic and social world. Angelia knows his faults, wants to marry Valere anyway as his dangerous masculine sexuality appeals.
In Aparna Gollapudi’s “The ‘Itch to Play:’ Gambling as Addiction in Centlivre’s The Gamester and The Basset Table are companion pieces. The male in The Gamester is an early prototype of an addict; the fame in The Basset Table cannot be an addict as such because as a woman she is unfree, bound to the will of others and thus does not have autonomy in the first place. Ms Gollapudi suggested the Enlightenment adumbrates the idea of an addict out of its concept of an ideal man of reason. Gambling is still considered a vice or sin, where we look at it psychologically (or chemically): the individual has lost control. In most plays we see gamblers play because they want to, not because they feel compelled to. The full idea of addiction (self-enslavement) comes in the later 19th century when people observed opium addiction. Ms Gollapudi cited much earlier treatises where drinking is shown to have an element of inner compulsion; Trotter: the drunkard is driven by cravings despite his intentions, irrationality, not for profit, unthinking pleasure, fueled by a failure of the will. Benjamin Rush gambling a disease or palsy of the will. Cotton’s Compleat Gamester is someone obsessed, with a deep-seated need, uncontrollable. Valere is exhausted in the morning; he earnestly vows to stop gambling, but he is at the table again soon after. Lady Sago is wasting her husband’s money, wilful and she and others are shocked into reform by showing them parallels with sexual complaisance. In the tradition of such plays, the male threatens financial harm to his family (e.g., Holcroft’s play); Lady Towneley chooses an irrational ideal of pleasure (Vanbrugh). Centlivre’s plays present a modern individual self in her depiction of gambling.
Lady Lucy (Katie deBuys), Sir James (Michael Milligan), Mrs. Sago (Tonya Beckman Ross), and Ensign Lovely (Robbie Gay)
Jennifer Airey’s “‘I must vary shapes as often as a player: Centlivre and liberty on the English stage” took up Centlivre’s defense of the stage against Collier’s criticism it’s immoral. In A Bold Stroke for a Wife, Colonel Feignwell frees Anne Lovely through his masquerading; the females help one another by using disguises too. Feignwell also defends his militarism as supporting the Hanoverian world which provides liberty for the subject; Anne Lovely shows us the right of women to resist male domestic tyrants who claim a power over individuals they do not deserve. Anne Lovely says her right to chose her dress (not to wear quaker clothes) is an aspect of her liberty, freedom of movement. She is justified, and enters a new contract with a better master; but her freedom goes only so far. The play’s parallel argument is that children are obliged to obey only when parents use authority reasonably. The older guardians are utterly destructive, selfish, obsessive. Underlying the action of masquerade is the idea that through acting one can save oneself. Ms Airey felt the play’s presentation of good sense and romantic fidelity in the central characters disconnects actors from the charge of prostitution (selling themselves).
Misty Anderson was the respondent and said that in Centlive liberty is a core value. She summed up Ms Ingrisani’s paper thus: emotional susceptibility is not entirely negative (gambling is an emotionally drenching experience). The depiction of the gambler is part of the history of the depiction of the reformed rake: excess is turned on itself but it “re-inscribes” [makes visible?] uncontrollable passions. Ms Gollapudi’s paper: more psychological terrain, makes a powerful case for considering the history of the invention of addiction (we move from Hogarth’s disease of the will to Methodist’s brain-searing). Gender gets in the way as Lady Reveller cannot be a slave as she is not free & in the end is indistinguishable from social norms; Valeria is obsessed with science; her character is just not convincing. Ms Airey’s paper: acting itself part of the agenda for liberty; a provisional self challenges patriarchal power and belongs to Butler’s discourse of the self as performer, re-assembling the self for social life.
2005 Bold Stroke for a Wife: Illinois Wesleyan University
Ms Anderson seemed though to object to the empathy and idea that rebellion gives liberty and pleasure: what do we do with actors around us who act with less liberal tendencies? Ms Ingisani defended the breaking out; but, asked Ms Anderson, is not this a risk, a danger making someone susceptible to a conservative person’s resentment? Valere is a psychological portrait but we see he’s a victim to an economic system. To Ms Gollapudi’s paper, MS Anderson said the will is not something individual, women can realize themselves through social manipulation; we don’t believe men have self-mastery (or autonomy) either. Ms Airey wants to show Centlivre defends the theater as a place of moral reformation.
Ms Anderson then asked what is the difference between Behn’s and Centlivre’s characters. Centlivre claims liberty through enacting performance; Behn’s characters perform hedonism plainly, not an act. Centlivre’s characters exist in a deeply unjust situation where you choose one trap over another; we can see some freedom if we see that signing a contract does not enslave us ontologically.
It was a brilliant response, show-offy too. My demur (which I voiced in the discussion afterward) is that if you obey the social conventions these will prevent you from enacting radical freedoms which may over-ride and erase contracts if the whole society agrees eventually to change. To worry about the risk of vengeful conservative people about you, made me think of Marianne Dashwood’s reply to Elinor who claimed freedom of understanding even if her behavior was under subjection that this ends up in subservience. And in another dialogue that “we are all offending every moment of our lives” no matter what we do (S&S I:13 & 17). The compromise Ms Anderson suggested ends up in supporting the establishment, not changing it and keeps everyone unfree.
Would it were that every session I ever went to at a conference came near the interest of this one.
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Again at 8:00 am, now Saturday morning, a really worthwhile seesion on Charlotte Smith’s poetry (which I love (155, “Unromantic Charlotte Smith”).
Charlotte Smith by George Dance
Regulas Allen (“‘Rightly to spell of every herb hat sips the dew: Chaos and classification in the poetry of Charlotte Smith”) found the pervasive theme in Smith’s poetry is displacement, exile, a failure of boundaries, mourning over disorder, nothing can be securely in a place. She approaches plants in a scientific spirit, telling the species of plant, categorizing them using Linnaeus to try to impose an order on chaos which the notes to the poems continually undermine. In her life she knew continual disasters from the time of her marriage; abject terrorizing powerless misery as a women with a violent ruthless failure of a husband. She remembered her childhood as a time of wealth, innocence, contentment; her refusal to relinquish her class pretensions meant she had to make large enough sums of money to support gentility and a good future for 9 children too so she had to write for publication continually. She produced 10 novels and many editions of poetry. Her apparently learned study of Linneaus, geology (Erasmus Darwin), botany, her notes at the bottom of her texts, were not done to show off but as a way of finding order in nature. She’s not plagiarizing but situating her work in time and against the savagery of society (as in footnotes telling of pirates brutality).
Written Near a Port on a Dark Evening
Huge vapors brood above the clifted shore,
Night on the ocean settles, dark and mute,
Save where is heard the repercussive roar
Of drowsy billows, on the rugged foot
Of rocks remote; or still more distant tone
Of seamen in the anchored bark that tell
The watch relieved; or one deep voice alone
Singing the hour, and bidding “Strike the bell.”
All is black shadow, but the lucid line
Marked by the light surf on the level sand,
Or where afar the ship-lights faintly shine
Like wandering fairy fires, that oft on land
Mislead the pilgrim-such the dubious ray
That wavering reason lends, in life’s long darkling way.
Her poetry has a continuity. In the sonnets and Beachy Head we find traumatic displacement, or geographical violent shifts, corpses adrift in tides, emblematic landscapes of despair. She finds deep-time geology registered in a Middleton churchyard; couples cruelly parted; if she presents a shepherd she looks at the ground he walks on, many presences sleep unremembered there. In her Emigrants we find a French lady and her children, a female exiled from her husband, born to affluence; the channel waters, England and France dissolve into one; in Beachy Head the cliffs register the sudden violence of time, shells high up show continental shifts; it ends on a hermit in a sea cave who tries to make his place but cannot. Late in life the botany and zoology of her Rural Walks show her turning to order, contrasting what has been learned in the new science to peasant cultures she has known. It’s an escapist pursuit, a resource for someone sick at heart, provides calm to a wounded mind. She does not just think of herself and hers: her poetry is about the instability and harshnesses of experience for others too.
Greta River Bridge by John Sell Cotman (1782-1842)
Ruth Knezevich talked of “Charlotte Smith’s “Antiquarian Pursuits in Beachy Head.” Ms Knezevich wants to understand the history and philosophy we find in this poem. The narrator’s literary voice presents the past tangibly by narrating a history (including going back to a castle of Stephen of Blois) that reflects the invasions and evolutions across the island (with relics) and the globe. People are in a local place but that’s the micro-level. She records names, places, events that make a wider perspective. We are invited actively to participate in the geological landscape and history. Her use of annotations is innovative; she distinguishes botany from Shakespearean perspective. She uses them to authorize her text and embed it in the writing of her era. The poem ends in brief rhapsody. She can be distinguished from romanticism by her concrete particularism and brings out the duality (intertwining?) of history with a literary voice. She wants her text to be respected, with her roots in 18th century traditions which go back (as in Warton’s history of poetry) back to the middle ages.
Lisa Ottum also discussed “Unromantic History in Beachy Head.” In her own era Smith was attacked for imitation; in our time Beachy Head is seen as central and romantic. Ms Ottum saw the poem as part of a debate about history’s effects, moving from past the cliffs to Asia, from the countryside to pre-historic time, from geology to cosmopolitanism. Smith has read Fergusson and Kames, Hume and Gibbon, and followed the changes in historical writing. She looked to the past to understand the present, to private life too, seen in larger social movements. Historians wanted to learn about manners and customs of people as well as statecraft. In Beachy Head she could find a proximate perspective to bring the moral imagination to bear. The poem is preoccupied with departed happiness which is fleeting, unsustainable. She uses temporal shifts in perspective, with a surplus of emotion. All things will collapse away into nothingness; after contemplation of large disasters, she has smaller pictures of cottages. The mind then rests on local peaceful moments. The poem draws on Cowper’s Task, anticipates Mont Blanc, where mediating power of the poet copes with vast powerful teaming worlds.
A cover illustration for Radcliffe’s Udolpho: in prose she too register the cataclysms of time and history
We had a fine discussion afterward. It ranged from asking what were Smith’s sources to when the people first encountered Smith and what editions they first saw her work in. I asked if she was influenced by Scott’s Antiquary and we talked of his Old Mortality and Scott’s use of history, chronicles and antiquarianism. What geology did Smith read? I thought of the poets and text of Marjorie Hope Nicolson’s Mountain Gloom and Mountain Glory. We discussed when Smith was first identified as a romantic (by Wordsworth, and again in the 1970s), the long period where most of her works fell out of print and no one discussed her. What a change since the mid-1980s and the feminist movement which was essentially responsible for bringing her back.
For “Women and the late 18th century gothic, see continuation in comments.
The novel has a famous scene of a wild hurricane flood over a vast cliff (mocked by Austen in her letters — but recalled)
Ellen
Friday afternoon, 4:15 to 5:45, 139: “Women and the late 18th century Gothic.” Four papers. Margaret Anne Doody attracted a crowd; her paper, “An Author’s House Is Not Always Her Castle: House and History in Women’s Fiction” had a fruitful central thesis: that women writers use houses as a way to tell large social, political and also natural history. She cited passages from novels by Charlotte Smith, Regina Maria Roche, Agnes Maria Bennet. We find also a common use of trees, of buildings in the form of fortresses and abbeys, ruins and dignified cultivated places. The problem with her paper is she tended to over-rate all the women authors indiscriminately, gave Scott too little credit (he read much beyond some of these women writers), did not allow for men doing the same thing (Trollope begins with a ruin in his powerful Macdermots of Ballycloran) and didn’t work out her idea but instead used her time to explicate the opening of Smith’s Ethelinde where the cold shallow amoral Lady Newenden is bored by Grasmere Abbey. Prof Doody seemed to suggest we were to empathize with this female character who jeeringly rejected the landscape, its history, its beauty in favor of hypocritical social rituals, who laughed at the melancholy appreciation of the hero of his ancestral home and its landscape. This amused the crowd but is reading utterly against the grain of the novel. No one objected to any of this.
Judith Slagle gave a paper filled with new information on the translations of Margaret Holford Hodson from Italian. Hodson was a good friend of Joanna Baillie. Prof Slagle’s paper came from a book she has recently published on the two women writers: Romantic Appropriations of History. Prof Slagle spoke at length about Hodson’s long metrical poems, e.g., Margaret of Anjou, and said gothic settings are central to Hodson’s choices. These stories & settings allowed this woman writer under the guise of translations mask to sympathize with murderers, explore crime, be these earlier numinous queens (so have much excitement?). The poems, said Prof Slagle, have therapeutic power.
Emily MN Kugler discussed Charlotte Dacre’s erotic gothic Zofloya. She found in this alternative sexualities (lesbian) and echoes of Lewis’s Monk. Women are made base and unreal whether as demon lovers or passively pure and the book rejects tyrannical heterosexual love in favor of alternative bonds. No criticism of the ethical amorality in women at all. Does Dacre revel in sado-masochism? No one asked.
Nicol Weizenback gave a paper on Smith, “The Darker Regions: An Exploration of Charlotte Smith’s Gothic and Radical Novels,” which showed a real knowledge of Smith’s novel and appreciation of their typical subtle insights and underlying paradigms. She read it too fast, and the organization of her paper left her offering her best thoughts as asides. She also seemed to be apologetic because she used a literary critical text by another woman scholar in the room — but she was giving credit as she went & I could not see what she was uncomfortable about (if she was uncomfortable).
A summary: The life of Charlotte Smith reads like a tale of woe. She was sold, in a legal prostitution (in effect) deal made by her father and aunt with a wealthy merchant. The chancery suit which dominated her later life was only settled after her death and much of the money was eaten up by lawyers. Two of her children died very young; two who lived to grow up pre-deceased her; one was crippled by war, one had to go to India (where life was corrupt and dangerous). Her first novel, Emmeline, is arguably one of the first powerful gothic novels; her Old Manor House has been rightly been regarded as her masterpiece and it has a quintessentially “true gothic” heroine in Monimia. The radical political novel, Desmond, is her least gothic book, with its retelling of larger revolutionary ideals and attack on primogeniture. Her last novel, The Young Philosopher may be said to be a culmination of all her themes and kinds across her 10 fictions.
Ms Weizenbeck was interested in how often Smith has utterly transgressive heroines who are not punished at the close: in the first a young woman is an adulteress, has a baby outside wedlock, for which Wollstonecraft attacked Smith. These unconventional characters at the periphery of her books spoke to her women readers, even if sometimes they are dismissed (the young woman who has a baby out of wedlock in Desmond we are told gives it up to him and vanishes). She concentrates on relationships which are not aligned with conventional familial and sexual ones. We see some intense friendships between men. Smith shows women are punished most harshly when they allow themselves to be enslaved by conventions. Her model protagonists are versions of herself (the men too). These are profoundly pessimistic subjective novels. I add her indeed they are and all the greater for that.
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[…] I remembered Regulas Allen’s paper (“‘Rightly to spell of every herb hat sips the dew: Chaos and classification in the poetry of […]
[…] I remembered Regulas Allen’s paper (“‘Rightly to spell of every herb hat sips the dew: Chaos and classification in the poetry of […]