The Mayflower is a collection of poetry and prose that was compiled and edited by Elizabeth Oakes Smith in 1848. I was lucky enough to get a copy of the original book, and being an antique book lover, I was pretty excited about that. There is nothing like reading a book that's over 150 years old in your sweats with your cat on your lap. That's my idea of relaxing. Norman Whiskers has developed an appreciation for the classics this way.
Reading The Mayflower with my furry lover boy Norman. |
Sinned Against, or the Cottage Door, is one of EOS's short stories in the book. It's really fascinating because she deals with a theme that was taboo in her time- the poverty and mental anguish of an abandoned unwed mother. In the story, a young woman in this situation is taken in by a prominent figure in town who marries her. She believes her son is a burden to the gentleman and when the boy grows into his teens she sends him away. Can you imagine that?!
Her son leaves home willingly to become a sailor, still loving his mother and feeling sorry for her. In his travels he encounters a murderer. By a twist of fate, the murder discovers that the boy is his long lost son, and he expresses regret. Meanwhile, the murderer is set to be hanged in town square. The man who volunteers to execute the murderer turns out to be the boy's stepfather, who has discovered the identity of the criminal.
I really enjoyed The Sentiment of Petship, an essay about all of the different animals EOS kept as pets at different points in time. She had canaries, dogs and even squirrels. The only animals she could not warm up to were cats- I can't imagine why. (Norman Whiskers was offended by this story.)
Beauty, Vanity and Marble Mantels is a combination essay and short story. The first part is written in the form of a persuasive essay arguing that women who are truly beautiful don't try so hard to be. The second half tells the story of a "homely" lady who was betrayed in love when she saw her cousin kissing her fiance. After the traumatic discovery of the betrayal, she disguised herself as a male minister and fooled a whole congregation until her death. The story was kind of odd, but entertaining, nonetheless.
EOS's The Hard Word is an essay about an engraving of the same name shown in the book.
title page |
There were two names that I knew right away: Fuller and Osgood. Margaret Fuller contributed a short story titled Mary Stuart. Frances Osgood has a poem included titled Confidence and Affection. Other contributing authors include C.F. Hoffman, Emma Embury, Harriet Winslow, Harriet Jenks, H.T. Tuckerman, Elizabeth Bogert, Lucy Wells, Rudolf Herzman, W.R. Prince, E.S. Van Winkle, Daniel Seymour and Anna Lynch. There are beautiful engravings by J. Sartain and A. Warren. This is an awesome little book!
Sinned Against, or the Cottage Door engraving by J. Sartain |
If you liked this one, read the other--EOS edited The Mayflower for two years, 1847 and 1848--or, well, did her work in 1846 and 1847 for volumes published in those years. Most amazing story is "The Defeated Life" (now available in typescript on the Oakes-Smith website), which starts as a pretty sketch of North Yarmouth Maine and ends up an account of the gradual mental dissolution of a young woman "imprisoned" by her husband, a la "Yellow Wallpaper," but roughly a half century earlier.
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