On a funny, telling story that was way ahead of its time.
In the course of her long and very diverse
literary career, one that stretched from the early 1820s through the outset
of the Civil War, I don’t think Catharine Maria Sedgwick topped Hope
Leslie (1827), which is on my short list for the most complex and
crucial works of American historical fiction. But if we remember Sedgwick only
for that novel, or for any of her other interesting historical and moral fictions
(such as her debut novel A
New-England Tale [1822]), we might well lose sight of her equally
significant ability to engage with contemporary stories and issues, and in a
style and voice as fresh and vital as those topics. I don’t know that any story
of hers, or any other antebellum American literary work for that matter, does
so more successfully than “Cacoethes
Scribendi” (1830).
Sedgwick’s Latin title translates roughly as the “insatiable desire to
write,” or perhaps even the “incurable disease of writing,” and her story
features at least three characters who seem to suffer from versions of that
malady: her two romantic protagonists, Alice and Ralph (especially Alice, but
Ralph likewise dabbles in writing among many other pursuits); and, most
complicatedly, Alice’s mother, Mrs. Courland, who “had imbibed a literary taste
in Boston” and “had some literary ambition too,” but “had been effectually
prevented, by the necessities of a narrow income, and by the unceasing wants of
five teasing boys, from indulging her literary inclinations.” As the story
unfolds, Alice similarly finds herself torn between her own literary ambition
and her blossoming romance with Ralph—and Mrs. Courland finds herself torn once
more, this time between her hopes for her daughter’s career and her dreams of
her daughter’s marriage.
I won’t spoil the ending (to this or any of the week’s works), and will
simply add that all those questions of writing and marriage, professional and
familial roles, are given yet another layer of meaning when we consider that
Sedgwick herself remained unmarried throughout her career, and late in that
career published a somewhat didactic novel entitled Married
or Single (1857) that tackles such questions head on. But what
truly distinguishes “Cacoethes” is that it’s as funny as it is pointed, as wry
(skewing and sympathizing with all of its focal characters in turn) as it is
weighted. More than a century and a half before Ally
McBeal famously portrayed a
woman torn between career and family, work and love, Sedgwick did it with just
as much wit and wisdom, and helped inaugurate 19th century New
England women’s writing in the process.
Next writer and work tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think? Other under-read writers or works you’d share?
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