the fourteenth through seventeenth centuries 3 -...

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Contents List of Illustrations xxvii General Introduction xli The Fourteenth through Seventeenth Centuries 3 A Historical Overview, 1300–1700 4 Women’s Place in Society: The Dispossessed 6 Owning Their Words: Women’s Writing, 1300–1700 13 Timeline 17 JULIAN OF NORWICH (c. 1342–c. 1416; England) 23 From Revelation of Divine Love 24 Chapter 3, The illness thus obtained from God 24 Chapter 5, God is all that is good 25 Chapter 59, Wickedness is transformed into blessedness 26 Chapter 60, We are brought back and fulfilled by our Mother Jesus 27 MARGERY KEMPE (c. 1373–c. 1438; England) 28 From The Book of Margery Kempe 29 Chapter 1 [Margery’s First Vision] 29 Chapter 11 [Margery Reaches a Settlement with Her Husband] 31 Chapter 46 [Margery’s Encounter with the Mayor of Leicester] 32 ANNE ASKEW (c. 1521–1546; England) 33 The Ballad Which Anne Askew Made and Sang When She Was in Newgate 34 From The Latter Examination 36 The Sum of My Examination afore the King’s Council at Greenwich 36 Cultural Coordinates: Needlework 39 QUEEN ELIZABETH I (1533–1603; England) 41 The Dread of Future Foes 42 A Song Made by Her Majesty 42 ISABELLA WHITNEY (c. 1540s–c. 1578; England) 43 The Manner of Her Will, and What She Left to London and to All Those in It, at Her Departing 44 ix

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Page 1: The Fourteenth through Seventeenth Centuries 3 - …novella.mhhe.com/sites/dl/free/0072564024/577046/Warhol1e_TOC.pdf · The Fourteenth through Seventeenth Centuries 3 ... ISABELLA

Contents

List of Illustrations xxvii

General Introduction xli

The Fourteenth through Seventeenth Centuries 3A Historical Overview, 1300–1700 4Women’s Place in Society: The Dispossessed 6Owning Their Words: Women’s Writing, 1300–1700 13Timeline 17

JULIAN OF NORWICH (c. 1342–c. 1416; England) 23

From Revelation of Divine Love 24Chapter 3, The illness thus obtained from God 24Chapter 5, God is all that is good 25Chapter 59, Wickedness is transformed into blessedness 26Chapter 60, We are brought back and fulfilled by our Mother Jesus 27

MARGERY KEMPE (c. 1373–c. 1438; England) 28

From The Book of Margery Kempe 29Chapter 1 [Margery’s First Vision] 29Chapter 11 [Margery Reaches a Settlement with Her Husband] 31Chapter 46 [Margery’s Encounter with the Mayor of Leicester] 32

ANNE ASKEW (c. 1521–1546; England) 33

The Ballad Which Anne Askew Made and Sang When She Was in Newgate 34

From The Latter Examination 36The Sum of My Examination afore the King’s Council at Greenwich 36

Cultural Coordinates: Needlework 39QUEEN ELIZABETH I (1533–1603; England) 41

The Dread of Future Foes 42

A Song Made by Her Majesty 42

ISABELLA WHITNEY (c. 1540s–c. 1578; England) 43

The Manner of Her Will, and What She Left to London and to All Those in It, at Her Departing 44

ix

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MARY SIDNEY HERBERT, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE (1561–1621;

England) 52

A Dialogue between Two Shepherds. Thenot and Piers, in Praise of Astraea 53

AEMILIA LANYER (1569–1645; England) 55

From Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum 56To the Virtuous Reader 56Eve’s Apology in Defence of Women 58The Description of Cooke-ham 60

Cultural Coordinates: Household Space 66LADY MARGARET CUNNINGHAM (c. 1580–c. 1622; Scotland) 68

From A Part of the Life of Lady Margaret Cuninghame, Daughter of the Earl of Glencairn, That She Had with Her First Husband, the Master of Evandale 68

[An account of domestic abuse] 68

LADY MARY WROTH (c. 1586–c. 1651; England) 70

From Pamphilia to Amphilanthus 711 [When night’s black mantle could most darkness prove] 7113 [Cloyed with the torments of a tedious night] 7215 [Dear famish not what you yourself gave food] 7216 [Am I thus conquered] 7222 [Come darkest night] 7325 [Like to the Indians, scorched with the sun] 73

LADY ANNE CLIFFORD (1590–1676; England) 74

From The Diary of Lady Anne Clifford (1616–19) 75February 1616 [Meeting with the Archbishop of Canterbury] 75March 1616 [A Refusal to Capitulate] 76April 1616 [From London to Knole] 76May 1616 [Her Mother Dies] 77

Cultural Coordinates: Scolds 79DOROTHY LEIGH (Active c. 1616; England) 81

From The Mothers Blessing 81To My Beloved Sons, George, John, and William Leigh, All ThingsPertaining to Life and Godliness 81Chapter 2, The First Cause of Writing Is a Motherly Affection 82Chapter 13, It Is Great Folly for a Man to Mislike His Own Choice 82

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ELIZABETH BROOKE JOCELIN (c. 1595–1622; England) 83

From The Mothers Legacie, to Her Unborne Childe 84Epistle Dedicatory: To My Truly Loving and Most Dearly Loved Husband,Turrell Jocelin 84

Cultural Coordinates: Women’s Community in Childbirth Rooms 87

ANNE BRADSTREET (1612–1672; England, American colonies) 89

From The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America 90The Prologue 90The Author to Her Book 91Before the Birth of One of Her Children 92In Memory of My Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet 93Some Verses upon the Burning of Our House 93To My Dear and Loving Husband 94

MARGARET FELL FOX (1614–1702; England) 95

From Women’s Speaking Justified 96[The Church of Christ Is a Woman] 96

LADY ANNE HALKETT (c. 1622–1699; England) 97

From Memoirs 98[Her Mother Threatens to Disown Her] 98

MARGARET LUCAS CAVENDISH, DUCHESS OF NEWCASTLE(1623–1674; England) 100

From The Philosophical and Physical Opinions 101To the Two universities [Epistle: To the Most Famously Learned] 101

From Philosophical Letters: or, Modest Reflections 102XXXVI [Other Creatures May Be as Wise as Men] 102

MARY BOYLE RICH (1624–1678; Ireland, England) 103

From Diary 104[Events of 1624–43, Including a Complicated Romantic Affair] 104

Cultural Coordinates: Women’s Spiritual Diaries 111ELIZABETH CAVENDISH EGERTON (1626–1663; England) 113

From Loose Papers 113When I Lost My Dear Girl Kate 113

KATHERINE FOWLER PHILIPS (1631–1664; England) 114

A Married State 114

Contents xi

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Upon the Double Murder of K. Charles I 115

On the Death of My First and Dearest Child, Hector Philips 116

Friendship’s Mystery, To My Dearest Lucasia 117

To My Excellent Lucasia, On Our Friendship 118

Orinda to Lucasia 118

MARY ROWLANDSON (c. 1637–1711; England, American colonies) 119

From A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. MaryRowlandson 120

The First Remove 120The Third Remove 122The Twentieth Remove 124

APHRA BEHN (c. 1640–1689; England) 125

The Rover 127

Cultural Coordinates: Restoration Actresses 200ANNE KILLIGREW (c. 1660–1685; England) 202

A Farewell to Worldly Joys 202

Upon the Saying That My Verses Were Made by Another 203

The Discontent 204

ANNE FINCH (1661–1720; England) 207

A Letter to Daphnis 208

The Introduction 209

Ardelia to Melancholy 210

To the Nightingale 211

The Apology 212

A Nocturnal Reverie 213

Cultural Coordinates: Menstruation and Misogyny 215JANE SHARP (Active 1671; England) 216

From The Midwives Book 217Of the Fashion and Greatness of the Womb, and of the Parts It Is Made Of 217

The Eighteenth Century 221The Eighteenth Century: An Overview 221Women’s Place in Society: The Rise of the New Domestic Woman 226

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Women and the Literary Scene, 1700–1799 234Timeline 236

LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU (1689–1762; England) 239

From Turkish Embassy Letters 240Letter 27 [A Visit to a Turkish Bath] 240Letter 41 [Sultana Hafise] 243

ELIZA HAYWOOD (c. 1693–1756; England) 248

[The Dangers of Tea] 249

MARY LEAPOR (1722–1746; England) 251

Crumble-Hall 251

An Essay on Woman 255

The Headache 257

MERCY OTIS WARREN (1728–1814; United States) 258

An Address to the Inhabitants of the United States 259

JANET SCHAW (1734–c. 1801; Scotland) 262

From The Journal of a Lady of Quality: Being a Narrative of a Journey fromScotland to the West Indies 262

[Society in Antigua] 262[A Visit to Olovaze] 264

Cultural Coordinates: At Sea 267MARY COLLIER (Active 1739–1760; England) 269

The Woman’s Labour 269

ANNA LAETITIA AIKIN BARBAULD (1743–1825; England) 275

The Rights of Woman 276

To a Little Invisible Being Who Is Expected Soon to Become Visible 277

Washing-Day 278

ABIGAIL ADAMS (1744–1818; United States) 280

From The Adams Family Correspondence 281[The Nature of Woman’s Experience] 281[“Remember the Ladies”] 282[Education in the New Republic] 284

Cultural Coordinates: Bluestockings 285HANNAH MORE (1745–1833; England) 287

The Black Slave Trade 288

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From Strictures on a Modern System of Female Education 296Chapter 1, An Address to Women of Rank and Fortune 296

The White Slave Trade 306

Cultural Coordinates: The Hoop-Petticoat 311FRANCES BURNEY (D’ARBLAY) (1752–1840; England) 313

From The Early Journals and Letters of Fanny Burney 315[A Young Writer’s Diary] 315

From Diary and Letters of Madame d’Arblay 316[The Publication of Evelina] 316

From The Early Journals and Letters of Fanny Burney 321[Life in the Court of George III] 321

From Evelina, or the History of a Young Lady’s Entrance into the World 322

Letter 10 [Evelina Arrives in London] 322Letter 11 [Evelina at the Ball] 324Letter 12 [A Trip to Ranelagh] 329Letter 15 [A Dangerous Walk in Vauxhall] 332

Cultural Coordinates: Shopping 340PHILLIS WHEATLEY (c. 1754–1784; United States) 342

On Being Brought from Africa to America 343

On the Death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield 343

To S. M. a Young African Painter, on Seeing His Works 344

To His Excellency General Washington 345

JANE CAVE (Active c. 1786; England) 346

Written by the Desire of a Lady, on an Angry, Petulant Kitchen-Maid 346

Written a Few Hours before the Birth of a Child 347

ELIZA FAY (1756–1816; England) 348

From Original Letters from India 349Letter 14 [Madras] 349Letter 15 [Calcutta] 351Letter 16 [Calcutta cont’d] 352Letter 20 [Calcutta cont’d] 355

MARY DARBY ROBINSON (1758–1800; England) 358

London’s Summer Morning 360

January, 1795 361

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Cultural Coordinates: Prostitution 363MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT (1759–1797; England) 365

From A Vindication of the Rights of Woman with Strictures on Political andMoral Subjects 366

Author’s Introduction 366Chapter 2, The Prevailing Opinion of a Sexual Character Discussed 370Chapter 9, Of the Pernicious Effects Which Arise from the UnnaturalDistinctions Established in Society 375

Cultural Coordinates: Breast-feeding and the Wet Nurse 383

JANET LITTLE (1759–1813; Scotland) 384

Given to a Lady Who Asked Me to Write a Poem 384

MARIA EDGEWORTH (1767–1849; Ireland, England) 386

From Letters for Literary Ladies 388Letters of Julia and Caroline 388

DOROTHY WORDSWORTH (1771–1855; England) 402

From The Grasmere Journals 403[A Brother’s Departure, May 14, 1800] 403[Daffodils, April 1802] 404[Good Friday, April 16, 1802] 405[William Marries, September 24, 1802] 406

MARY BIRKETT (1774–1817; Ireland) 407

A Poem on the African Slave Trade 408

Cultural Coordinates: The Tea Table 416MARY PRINCE (1788–c. 1833; Bermuda, Turk Islands, Antigua, England) 418

The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave 419

ELIZABETH HANDS (Active 1789; England) 438

Written, Originally Extempore, on Seeing a Mad Heifer Run through theVillage Where the Author Lives 439

A Poem, on the Supposition of the Book Having Been Published and Read 439

ANNA MARIA FALCONBRIDGE (Active 1790s; England) 442

From Two Voyages to Sierra Leone 443[A Trip to Bance Island] 443

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The Nineteenth Century 451The Nineteenth Century: An Overview 451Women’s Place in Society: Re-imagining Womanhood 460Women’s Writing, 1800–1899 463Timeline 470

Cultural Coordinates: The First Australian Woman Writer 477

SUSANNA HASWELL ROWSON (1762–1824; England, United States) 478

Charlotte Temple 479

Cultural Coordinates: The Corset, or Why Heroines FaintSo Often 543

JANE AUSTEN (1775–1817; England) 545

Library of Women’s Literature: Pride and Prejudice (1813)

From Northanger Abbey 547Chapters 4–5 [Catherine and Isabella Become Friends] 547

Cultural Coordinates: Cassandra’s Sketch and “Gentle Jane” 552

CATHARINE MARIA SEDGWICK (1789–1867; United States) 554

Cacoethes Scribendi 555

LYDIA HOWARD HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY (1791–1865; United States) 564

To a Shred of Linen 566

Unspoken Language 567

Eve 570

FELICIA DOROTHEA BROWNE HEMANS (1793–1835; England) 572

England’s Dead 574

Bring Flowers 575

Casabianca 576

MARY SHELLEY (1797–1851; England, Italy) 577

From Frankenstein [The Monster’s Narrative] 579Chapter 11 [The Monster’s Early Days] 579Chapter 12 [The Monster Learns Language] 584Chapter 13 [The Monster Begins to Recognize His Difference] 587Chapter 14 [The Cottagers’ History] 590

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Chapter 15 [The Monster Reads the Classics and Makes a Friend] 593Chapter 16 [The Monster Seeks His Creator] 598Chapter 17 [The Monster’s Demand] 603

SOJOURNER TRUTH (c. 1797–1883; United States) 606

From The Narrative of Sojourner Truth 607Her Birth and Parentage 607Accommodations 607Her Brothers and Sisters 608

[Sojourner Truth’s “Ar’n’t I a Woman” Speech, as Reported in the Anti-Slavery Bugle] 609

[Sojourner Truth’s “Ar’n’t I a Woman” Speech, as Recorded in Reminiscencesof Frances D. Gage] 609

Cultural Coordinates: Cartes de Visite 612HARRIET MARTINEAU (1802–1876; England) 613

From Morals of Slavery 614

LYDIA MARIA CHILD (1802–1880; United States) 619

From An Appeal in Favor of That Class of Americans Called Africans 620Preface 620Chapter 1, Brief History of Negro Slavery 621

From Letters from New-York 631Letter 34 [Women’s Rights] 631

SUSANNA MOODIE (1803–1885; England, Canada) 635

From Roughing It in the Bush 637[The Adventures of One Night] 637

Cultural Coordinates: How Did They Do It? The Mechanics of Writing 640

ANGELINA GRIMKÉ (WELD) (1805–1879; United States) 642

From Appeal to the Christian Women of the South 643

ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING (1806–1861; England, Italy) 650

From Sonnets from the Portuguese 65214 [If thou must love me, let it be for nought] 65243 [How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.] 652

From Aurora Leigh 653Book 1 [Aurora’s Education] 653

FRANCES DANA GAGE (1808–1880; United States) 680

Tales of Truth, No.1 681

Contents xvii

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MARGARET FULLER (1810–1850; United States) 685

From Summer on the Lakes 686Summer on the Lakes 686To a Friend 686Chapter 1 [Gateway to the West: Niagara Falls] 687

A Short Essay on Critics 689

From Woman in the Nineteenth Century 693Preface 693[Woman, Present and Future] 694

Cultural Coordinates: Niagara Falls 711ELIZABETH GASKELL (1810–1865; England) 713

The Three Eras of Libbie Marsh 714

HARRIET BEECHER STOWE (1811–1896; United States) 732

From Uncle Tom’s Cabin 734Chapter 1, In Which the Reader Is Introduced to a Man of Humanity 734Chapter 5, Showing the Feelings of Living Property on Changing Owners 741Chapter 7, The Mother’s Struggle 747Chapter 14, Evangeline 756Chapter 22, “The Grass Withereth—the Flower Fadeth” 762Chapter 32, Dark Places 767Chapter 40, The Martyr 774

Cultural Coordinates: The Realism of Stereotypes 779FRANCES (FANNY) LOCKE OSGOOD (1811–1850; United States) 781

Ellen Learning to Walk 781

The Little Hand 782

He Bade Me Be Happy 783

Forgive and Forget 783

A Reply 783

Cultural Coordinates: The Invention of the Ladies’Magazine: Godey’s Lady’s Book 785

FANNY FERN (SARA PAYSON WILLIS PARTON) (1811–1872;

United States) 787

Hints to Young Wives 788

xviii Contents

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Mrs. Stowe’s Uncle Tom 789

Shall Women Vote? 790

The Working Girls of New York 791

HARRIET JACOBS (1813–1897; United States) 792

From Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl 793Written by Herself 793Preface by the Author 794Introduction by the Editor 794Chapter 1, Childhood 795Chapter 2, The New Master and Mistress 797Chapter 5, The Trials of Girlhood 801Chapter 10, A Perilous Passage in the Slave Girl’s Life 803Chapter 21, The Loophole of Retreat 806Chapter 41, Free at Last 809

Cultural Coordinates: Reward for the Capture of Harriet Jacobs 814

ELIZABETH CADY STANTON (1815–1902; United States) 816

Declaration of Sentiments 817

The Solitude of Self 818

Cultural Coordinates: The Seneca Falls Convention 824CHARLOTTE BRONTË (1816–1855; England) 826

[We wove a web in childhood] 828

Library of Women’s Literature: Jane Eyre (1847)

Cultural Coordinates: Phrenology 834EMILY BRONTË (1818–1848; England) 836

A.G.A: To the Bluebell 837

Song [O between distress and pleasure] 838

Love and Friendship 839

[Shall earth no more inspire thee] 839

[I do not weep, I would not weep] 840

To Imagination 840

[No coward soul is mine] 841

Contents xix

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Women Composers of Hymns, 1840–1899 842

SARAH FLOWER ADAMS (1805–1848; England) 843

Nearer, My God, to Thee 843

JULIA WARD HOWE (1819–1910; United States) 844

Battle Hymn of the Republic 844

ANNE BRONTË (1820–1849; England) 845

The Narrow Way 845

CHRISTINA ROSSETTI (1830–1894; England) 846

In the Bleak Midwinter 846

KATHARINE LEE BATES (1859–1929; United States) 847

O Beautiful for Spacious Skies 847

SUSAN WARNER (1819–1885; United States) 848

From The Wide, Wide World 849Chapter 1 [Ellen and Her Mother] 849Chapter 3 [Ellen Goes Shopping] 854

GEORGE ELIOT (1819–1880; England) 862

Silly Novels by Lady Novelists 864

Cultural Coordinates: Spirit Rappers and Spiritualism 881

FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE (1820–1910; England) 883

From Cassandra 885Part 2 [Intellect] 885Part 4 [Moral Activity and Marriage] 889Part 7 [The Dying Woman] 892

MARY BOYKIN CHESNUT (1823–1886; United States) 892

From Civil War Journal 893February 18, 1861 [I wanted them to fight and stop talking] 893February 19, 1861 [We have to meet tremendous odds] 895

HARRIET E. WILSON (1825?–1900?; United States) 897

From Our Nig; or, Sketches from the Life of a Free Black 898Preface 898Chapter 1, Mag Smith, My Mother 899Chapter 2, My Father’s Death 902Chapter 3, A New Home for Me 905

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CATHERINE HELEN SPENCE (1825–1910; Scotland, Australia) 910

From Clara Morison 911Chapter 8, At Service 911

FRANCES E. W. HARPER (1825–1911; United States) 914

Eliza Harris 915

The Slave Mother 917

The Two Offers 918

Aunt Chloe’s Politics 925

Woman’s Political Future 925

DINAH MULOCK CRAIK (1826–1887; England) 928

From A Woman’s Thoughts about Women 929Chapter 1, Something to Do 929

HELEN HUNT JACKSON (1830–1885; United States) 935

My Tenants 935

September 936

The Victory of Patience 937

Chance 938

EMILY DICKINSON (1830–1886; United States) 938

6 [Frequently the woods are pink] 939

14 [One sister have I in our house] 940

216 [Safe in their Alabaster Chambers] 940

241 [I like a look of Agony] 941

249 [Wild Nights—Wild Nights!] 941

252 [I can wade Grief] 941

258 [There’s a certain Slant of light] 942

280 [I felt a Funeral, in my Brain] 942

288 [I’m Nobody! Who are you?] 943

341 [After great pain, a formal feeling comes] 943

365 [Dare you see a Soul at the White Heat?] 943

441 [This is my letter to the World] 944

444 [It feels a shame to be Alive] 944

579 [I had been hungry, all the Years] 944

656 [The name—of it—is “Autumn”] 945

709 [Publication—is the Auction] 945

754 [My Life has stood—a Loaded Gun] 946

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812 [A Light exists in Spring] 946

912 [Peace is a fiction of our Faith] 947

986 [A narrow Fellow in the Grass] 947

1101 [Between the form of Life and Life] 948

1129 [Tell all the Truth but tell it slant] 948

1263 [There is no Frigate like a Book] 948

1580 [We shun it ere it comes] 948

LettersTo Susan Gilbert (Dickinson), early June 1852 949To T. W. Higginson, 7 June 1862 950To T. W. Higginson, February 1885 951

CHRISTINA ROSSETTI (1830–1894; England) 951

A Birthday 953

A Better Resurrection 953

Goblin Market 954

In an Artist’s Studio 966

REBECCA HARDING DAVIS (1831–1910; United States) 966

Life in the Iron-Mills 967

ANNA LEONOWENS (1831–1914; England, Colonial: India, Singapore, Thailand,

United States, and Canada) 992

From The Romance of the Harem 993Chapter 2, Tuptim: A Tragedy of the Harem 993

LOUISA MAY ALCOTT (1832–1888; United States) 999

A Double Tragedy: An Actor’s Story 1000

Library of Women’s Literature: Little Women (1868)

HANNAH CRAFTS (Active 1850s, United States) 1013

From The Bondwoman’s Narrative 1014Preface 1014Chapter 1, In Childhood 1014

ISABELLA BEETON (1836–1865; England) 1021

From Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management 1022[Sample Recipes] 1022

Lark Pie (An Entrée) 1022Boiled Asparagus 1023Christmas Plum-Pudding 1023

[Sample Bills of Fare] 1024Plain Family Dinners for January 1024

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[Sample Sections from “Household Management”] 1025Duties of the Valet 1025The Wet-Nurse 1027

Cultural Coordinates: Level Measures 1031SARAH WINNEMUCCA HOPKINS (c. 1844–1891; Paiute: United States) 1033

From Life among the Piutes 1033Chapter 1, First Meeting of Piutes and Whites 1033

EMMA LAZARUS (1849–1887; United States) 1035

In the Jewish Synagogue at Newport 1036

1492 1038

The New Colossus 1038

Cultural Coordinates: The Sewing Machine 1039SARAH ORNE JEWETT (1849–1909; United States) 1041

A White Heron 1042

KATE CHOPIN (1850–1904; United States) 1048

The Awakening 1049

ROSA PRAED (1851–1935; Australia) 1135

From Policy and Passion 1137An Australian Explorer 1137

MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN (1852–1930; United States) 1142

A Poetess 1143

PANDITA RAMABAI SARASWATI (1858–1922; India) 1152

From The High Caste Hindu Woman 1154Chapter 5 [Suttee] 1154

CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN (1860–1935; United States) 1157

The Yellow Wallpaper 1158

Cultural Coordinates: Nervousness and the Rest Cure 1170

MARY KINGSLEY (1862–1900; England) 1172

From Travels in West Africa 1173[A West African River and a Canoe] 1173

Contents xxiii

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The Twentieth and Twenty–first Centuries 1181The Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries: An Overview 1182Global Englishes: The Spread of English in the Twentieth and Twenty-first

Centuries 1185Women’s Place in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries: Women in

Movement 1187Women’s Writing, 1900 to the Present: The Shape and Limitations of Modernism and

Postmodernism 1193Timeline 1199

ANNIE BESANT (1847–1933; England, India) 1212

From A Nation’s Rights 1213[The Foundation of Rights] 1213

Cultural Coordinates: A History of the Bra 1216EDITH WHARTON (1862–1937; United States, France) 1218

Library of Women’s Literature: House of Mirth (1905)

Roman Fever 1219

EDITH MAUD EATON (SUI SIN FAR) (1865–1914; England, United States,

Canada) 1218

In the Land of the Free 1229

Cultural Coordinates: Chinese American Women andImmigration 1236

CORNELIA SORABJI (1866–1954; India, England) 1238

From India Calling 1239Chapter 2, Preparation and Equipment: In India and England 1239

KATHERINE MAYO (1867–1940; United States) 1250

From Mother India 1251Chapter 8, Mother India 1251

Cultural Coordinates: The Memsahib 1256ELLEN GLASGOW (1873–1945; United States) 1258

Jordan’s End 1259

WILLA CATHER (1873–1947; United States) 1269

A Wagner Matinee 1270

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GERTRUDE STEIN (1874–1946; United States, France) 1275

Ada 1276

Preciosilla 1278

Susie Asado 1278

From Patriarchal Poetry 1279[Their Origin and Their History] 1279

Cultural Coordinates: Two Women Writers in Paris, Never Meeting 1285

ALICE DUNBAR-NELSON (1875–1935; United States) 1287

Sister Josepha 1288

I Sit and Sew 1292

SUSAN GLASPELL (1876–1948; United States) 1292

Trifles 1293

ZITKALA SA (GERTRUDE SIMMONS BONNIN) (1876–1938; Sioux:

United States) 1303

From School Days of an Indian Girl 1305The Cutting of My Long Hair 1305

Why I Am a Pagan 1306

Cultural Coordinates: Indian Boarding Schools 1309MARGARET COUSINS (1878–1954; Ireland, India) 1311

From The Awakening of Asian Womanhood 1311

Chapter 2, Indian Womanhood: A National Asset 1311

SAROJINI NAIDU (1879–1949; India) 1313

The Gift of India 1314

The Indian Gypsy 1315

Bangle-Sellers 1315

ROKEYA SAKHAWAT HOSSAIN (1880–1932; Bangladesh, India) 1316

Sultana’s Dream 1317

Cultural Coordinates: Purdah 1325MOURNING DOVE (HUMISHUMA/CHRISTINE QUINTASKET)(1882?–1936; Colville-Okanaga: United States) 1327

From Cogwea, the Half-Blood 1327[The Indian Dancers] 1327

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VIRGINIA WOOLF (1882–1941; England) 1330

Kew Gardens 1332

Mrs. Dalloway in Bond Street 1336

Library of Women’s Literature: Mrs. Dalloway (1925)

From A Room of One’s Own 1342[Shakespeare’s Sister] 1342[Peroration: Women Write!] 1346

A Haunted House 1350

ANZIA YEZIERSKA (c. 1885–1970; Poland, United States) 1351

Soap and Water 1352

Cultural Coordinates: Sweatshops 1357ISAK DINESEN (KAREN BLIXEN) (1885–1962; Denmark, Kenya) 1359

The Blank Page 1360

H.D. (HILDA DOOLITTLE) (1886–1961; United States, England, Switzerland) 1363

From The Walls Do Not Fall 13649 [Thoth, Hermes, the stylus] 136410 [But we fight for life] 1365

From Tribute to the Angels 13658 [Now polish the crucible] 13659 [Bitter, bitter jewel] 136611 [O swiftly, re-light the flame] 136612 [Swiftly re-light the flame] 136713 [“What is the jewel colour?”] 136719 [We see her visible and actual] 136820 [Invisible, indivisible Spirit] 136821 [There is no rune nor riddle] 136823 [We are part of it] 136928 [I had been thinking of Gabriel] 136935 [So she must have been pleased with us] 137036 [Ah (you say), this is Holy wisdom] 137039 [But nearer than Guardian Angel] 1371

From The Flowering of the Rod 13715 [Satisfied, unsatisfied] 13716 [So I would rather drown, remembering] 1372

MARIANNE MOORE (1887–1972; United States) 1373

The Fish 1374

The Paper Nautilus 1375

In Distrust of Merits 1376

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WILLA MUIR (1890–1970; Scotland) 1378

From Imagined Corners 1379Chapter 3 [Elizabeth Ramsay and Elizabeth Shand] 1379

JEAN RHYS (1890–1979; Dominica, France, England) 1382

Library of Women’s Literature: Wide Sargasso Sea (1966)

From Smile, Please 1384My Mother 1384Black/White 1386Carnival 1389

KATHERINE ANNE PORTER (1890–1980; United States) 1389

Virgin Violeta 1390

African American Women’s Blues 1397

GERTRUDE “MA” RAINEY (1886–1939; United States) 1398

Louisiana Hoodoo Blues 1399

Prove It on Me Blues 1399

ALBERTA HUNTER (1895–1984; United States) 1400

I Got Myself a Workin’ Man 1400

You Gotta Reap What You Sow 1401

BESSIE SMITH (1898?–1937; United States) 1402

Preachin’ the Blues 1402

Poor Man’s Blues 1403

Cultural Coordinates: A Blues Life—Billie Holiday 1404

ZORA NEALE HURSTON (1891–1960; United States) 1405

Sweat 1406

NELLA LARSEN (1891–1964; United States) 1414

Sanctuary 1415

Cultural Coordinates: Anti-Lynching Campaigns 1419EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY (1892–1950; United States) 1421

[I, being born a woman and distressed] 1421

From Sonnets from an Ungrafted Tree 14221 [So she came back into his house again] 142210 [She had forgotten how the August night] 1422

Justice Denied in Massachusetts 1423

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From Fatal Interview 142420 [Think not, nor for a moment let your mind] 142426 [Women have loved before as I love now] 1424

DJUNA BARNES (1892–1982; United States) 1424

Mother 1425

DOROTHY PARKER (1893–1967; United States) 1428

Lady with a Lamp 1429

Cultural Coordinates: Margaret Sanger, Abortion, andBirth Control 1435

MERIDEL LESUEUR (1900–1996; United States) 1437

Rite of Ancient Ripening 1437

EUDORA WELTY (1909–2001; United States) 1439

A Still Moment 1441

TILLIE OLSEN (1912–2007; United States) 1449

Silences 1450

ATTIA HOSAIN (1913–1998; India) 1461

After the Storm 1462

GWENDOLYN BROOKS (1917–2000; United States) 1464

the mother 1465

a song in the front yard 1466

The Sundays of Satin-Legs Smith 1466

the white troops had their orders but the Negroes looked like men 1470

The Lovers of the Poor 1470

LOUISE BENNETT COVERLEY (1919–2006; Jamaica, Canada) 1473

Home Sickness 1473

America 1474

DORIS LESSING (1919– ; Colonial: Iran, Zimbabwe, England) 1475

A Sunrise on the Veld 1476

HISAYE YAMAMOTO (1921– ; United States) 1481

Seventeen Syllables 1482

NADINE GORDIMER (1923– ; South Africa) 1491

Town and Country Lovers 1492

xxviii Contents

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DENISE LEVERTOV (1923–1997; England, United States) 1504

Advent 1966 1504

Tenebrae 1505

Witness 1506

MITSUYE YAMADA (1923– ; Japan, United States) 1506

P.O.W. 1507

Cincinnati 1508

Another Model 1509

Mirror Mirror 1509

BERYL GILROY (1924–2001; Guyana, England) 1510

From Black Teacher 1510[Inside London Schools] 1510

ANNE RANASINGHE (1925– ; Germany, England, Sri Lanka) 1516

Auschwitz from Colombo 1517

NAYANTARA SAHGAL (1927– ; India) 1518

From Prison and Chocolate Cake 1519[Walking with Gandhi] 1519

MAYA ANGELOU (1928– ; United States) 1529

From I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings 1530[Words] 1530

MARJORIE OLUDHE MACGOYE (1928– ; England, Kenya) 1536

From Coming to Birth 1536Chapter 1 [Lost in the City] 1536

ANNE SEXTON (1928–1974; United States) 1544

Little Girl, My Stringbean, My Lovely Woman 1546

Sylvia’s Death 1548

The Ballad of the Lonely Masturbator 1550

CYNTHIA OZICK (1928– ; United States) 1551

The Shawl 1552

URSULA LE GUIN (1929– ; United States) 1555

The Space Crone 1556

ADRIENNE RICH (1929– ; United States) 1558

Diving into the Wreck 1560

Vesuvius at Home: The Power of Emily Dickinson 1562

Contents xxix

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“It Is the Lesbian in Us . . .” 1581

A Woman Dead in Her Forties 1583

From Twenty-one Love Poems 15871 [Wherever in this city, screens flicker] 158711 [Every peak is a crater] 1587

LORRAINE HANSBERRY (1930–1965; United States) 1589

Library of Women’s Literature: A Raisin in the Sun (1959)

GRACE OGOT (1930– ; Kenya) 1589

Elizabeth 1590

TONI MORRISON (1931– ; United States) 1598

Recitatif 1599

Library of Women’s Literature: Beloved (1987)

Nobel Lecture (December 7, 1993) 1612

ALICE MUNRO (1931– ; Canada) 1617

Dance of the Happy Shades 1618

SYLVIA PLATH (1932–1963; United States, England) 1625

Metaphors 1626

Three Women: A Poem for Three Voices 1627

Daddy 1636

Ariel 1638

Lady Lazarus 1639

Cultural Coordinates: The Pill 1642AUDRE LORDE (1934–1992; United States) 1644

Black Mother Woman 1645

The Woman Thing 1645

How I Became a Poet 1646

CAROL SHIELDS (1935–2003; Canada) 1648

Dying for Love 1649

YASMINE GOONERATNE (1935– ; Sri Lanka, Australia) 1654

The Peace Game 1654

JOY KOGAWA (1935– ; Canada) 1655

From Obasan 1656Chapter 4 [How Naomi’s Parents Got Married] 1656

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LUCILLE CLIFTON (1936– ; United States) 1659

Admonitions 1660

[being property once myself] 1660

[at last we killed the roaches] 1661

homage to my hips 1661

wishes for sons 1661

poem to my uterus 1662

MARGE PIERCY (1936– ; United States) 1662

To Have Without Holding 1663

My Mother Gives Me Her Recipe 1664

Photograph of My Mother Sitting on the Steps 1665

The First Time I Tasted You 1666

BESSIE HEAD (1937–1986; South Africa, Botswana) 1666

Looking for a Rain God 1667

ANITA DESAI (1937– ; India) 1669

From Fasting, Feasting 1670Chapter 6 [Anamika] 1670

DIANE WAKOSKI (1937– ; United States) 1674

Blue Monday 1674

Overweight Poem 1676

Hummingbird Light 1677

JOYCE CAROL OATES (1938– ; United States) 1678

Nairobi 1679

BAPSI SIDHWA (1938– ; Pakistan, United States) 1684

From Cracking India 1685Ranna’s Story 1685

Library of Women’s Literature: Cracking India (1991)

Cultural Coordinates: Partitioning Women 1694TONI CADE BAMBARA (1939–1995; United States) 1695

Ice 1696

PAULA GUNN ALLEN (1939– ; Laguna: United States) 1700

Where I Come from Is Like This 1701

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MARGARET ATWOOD (1939– ; Canada) 1707

First Neighbours 1708

The Wereman 1709

1837 War in Retrospect 1710

The Double Voice 1710

Murder in the Dark 1711

Library of Women’s Literature: The Handmaid’s Tale (1985)

MAXINE HONG KINGSTON (1940– ; United States) 1712

No Name Woman 1713

BHARATI MUKHERJEE (1940– ; India, Canada, United States) 1721

A Wife’s Story 1722

OLIVE SENIOR (1941– ; Jamaica, Canada) 1732

Tears of the Sea 1733

GLORIA ANZALDÚA (1942–2004; United States) 1737

Linguistic Terrorism 1738

From La conciencia de la mestiza / Towards a New Consciousness 1740[A Tolerance for Ambiguity] 1740

Cihuatlyotl, Woman Alone 1742

To live in the Borderlands means you 1743

Canción de la diosa de la noche 1744

AMA ATA AIDOO (1942– ; Ghana) 1747

No Sweetness Here 1748

PAT MORA (1942– ; United States) 1759

Border Town: 1938 1760

Agua negra 1760

La Migra 1762

NANCY MAIRS (1943– ; United States) 1763

From Body in Trouble 1764[My Body] 1764

Cultural Coordinates: Women Writers and Disability 1771PAT PARKER (1944–1989; United States) 1773

For the white person who wants to know how to be my friend 1773

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EAVAN BOLAND (1944– ; Ireland) 1774

Athene’s Song 1775

Menses 1775

Anorexic 1777

Envoi 1778

BUCHI EMECHETA (1944– ; Nigeria) 1779

Library of Women’s Literature: Second Class Citizen (1974)

This New Thing 1780

Cultural Coordinates: Cutting Women 1785MERLE HODGE (1944– ; Trinidad, Grenada) 1786

From Crick Crack, Monkey 1786[Aunt Tantie’s Visit] 1786

ALICE WALKER (1944– ; United States) 1789

Everyday Use 1790

MICHELLE CLIFF (1946– ; Jamaica, United States) 1796

A Hanged Man 1797

MINNIE BRUCE PRATT (1946– ; United States) 1802

Not the End of the Story 1803

Sharp Glass 1803

LORNA GOODISON (1947– ; Jamaica, United States) 1804

On Houses 1805

I Am Becoming My Mother 1806

On Becoming a Tiger 1806

Cultural Coordinates: Sistren Theatre Collective 1808LINDA HOGAN (1947– ; Chickasaw: United States) 1809

Song for My Name 1809

The Grandmother Songs 1810

Sickness 1811

KERI HULME (1947– ; New Zealand: Maori) 1812

The Knife and the Stone 1813

DENISE CHAVEZ (1948– ; United States) 1819

Evening in Paris 1820

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NTOZAKE SHANGE (1948– ; United States) 1824

Five 1825

LESLIE MARMON SILKO (1948– ; Laguna: United States) 1827

From Ceremony 1828[Night Swan] 1828[Long time ago] 1832

ZOE WICOMB (1948– ; South Africa, Scotland) 1836

When the Train Comes 1837

Library of Women’s Literature: Playing in the Light (2007)

Cultural Coordinates: Women March against Apartheid 1845

DOROTHY ALLISON (1949– ; United States) 1847

A Question of Class 1847

JESSICA HAGEDORN (1949– ; Philippines, United States) 1852

Motown/Smokey Robinson 1852

JAMAICA KINCAID (1949– ; Antigua, United States) 1853

A Small Place 1855

Library of Women’s Literature: Lucy (1990)

JULIA ALVAREZ (1950– ; Dominican Republic, United States) 1860

I Want to Be Miss América 1861

Cultural Coordinates: Miss America 1866MERLE COLLINS (1950– ; Grenada, United States) 1868

Visiting Yorkshire—Again 1869

When Britain Had Its GREAT 1870

GRACE NICHOLS (1950– ; Guyana, England) 1870

Skanking Englishman between Trains 1871

The Fat Black Woman Goes Shopping 1872

Two Old Black Men on a Leicester Square Park Bench 1873

AHDAF SOUEIF (1950– ; Egypt, England) 1873

Returning 1874

MEENA ALEXANDER (1951– ; India, United States) 1882

Grandmother’s Mirror 1883

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No Man’s Land 1886

JOY HARJO (1951– ; Muscogee (Creek): United States) 1887

A Postcolonial Tale 1888

We Must Call a Meeting 1889

Strange Fruit 1889

The Bloodletting 1890

Day of the Dead 1891

The Book of Myths 1892

BELL HOOKS (1952– ; United States) 1893

Homeplace: A Site of Resistance 1894

CHERRÍE MORAGA (1952– ; United States) 1899

Loving on the Run 1900

Loving in the War Years 1902

AMY TAN (1952– ; United States) 1904

From The Joy Luck Club 1905Scar 1905

ABENA BUSIA (1953– ; Ghana, United States) 1909

Freedom Rides Quiz 1909

Altar Call 1910

SARA SULERI (1953– ; Pakistan, United States) 1911

From Meatless Days 1912Excellent Things in Women 1912

SANDRA CISNEROS (1954– ; United States) 1923

Library of Women’s Literature: The House on Mango Street (1983)

My Tocaya 1923

La Fabulosa: A Texas Operetta 1926

Cultural Coordinates: The Virgin of Guadalupe andFeminist Reclaimings 1928

LOUISE ERDRICH (1954– ; Ojibwe: United States) 1930

Saint Marie 1931

HELENA MARIA VIRAMONTES (1954– ; United States) 1940

The Moths 1940

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MARILYN MEI LING CHIN (1955– ; China, United States) 1944

How I Got That Name 1945

The Survivor 1947

Beijing Spring 1947

BARBARA KINGSOLVER (1955– ; United States) 1948

From The Poisonwood Bible 1949Ruth May 1949

ALISON BECHDEL (1960– ; United States) 1952

From Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic 1954Chapter 2, A Happy Death 1954

JHUMPA LAHIRI (1967– ; England, United States) 1983

When Mr. Pirzada Came to Dine 1984

Library of Women’s Literature: The Namesake (2003)

ZADIE SMITH (1975– ; England) 1994

From White Teeth 1995Chapter 1, The Peculiar Second Marriage of Archie Jones 1995

Acknowledgments 2009

Index 2015

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