Knowledge Base Glossary    Contact Us
Search  
   
Browse by Category
Knowledge Base .: Archives Fiction and Non-Fiction Reviews .: Poetry .: Major Voices: 19th Century American Women’s Poetry

Major Voices: 19th Century American Women’s Poetry

 

Selected and introduced by Shira Wolosky

 Publisher: The Toby Press

 ISBN: 1 59264 040 0

“Major Voices: 19th Century American Women’s Poetry” showcases the work of 10 female American poets – most of them quite notable in their own time but rarely considered or anthologized since.  Observing 19th century America through the lense of its female poets is an intriguing experience: many of the poems included here delineate the social issues of the time in a powerfully immediate – and of course, poetic – way. 

For instance, Francis Watkins Harper’s account of a slave auction in “The Slave Mother” contains more stark emotive power than many other contemporary narratives: 

            His lightest word has been a tone

            Of music round her heart

            Their lives a streamlet blent in one–

            Oh, Father!  Must they part?

            They tear him from her circling arms

            Her last and fond embrace . . .

Lydia Huntley Sigourney  – the first professional female poet in America – takes respectful notice of the diminishing Native American in her poems “Indian Names,” “Our Aborigines,” “Indian Girl’s Burial, ”and “Funeral of Mazeen.”   “Funeral of Mazeen,” portrays the end of a royal lineage (that of the Mohegan Nation) and invites the reader to observe the profound sadness of a great nation in decline: 

            With the dust of kings in this noteless shade,

            The last of a royal line is laid.

            In whose stormy veins that current roll’d

            Which curb’d the chief and the warrior bold;

            Yet pride still burns in their humid clay,

            Though the pomp of the sceptre hath pass’d away.

Most 19th century American female writers could not comfortably balance marriage and the writing life so some chose to simply avoid matrimony.  Phoebe Cary, whose poems delineate matrimonial difficulties in a humorous and pointed way, was one of these single writers.  In her poem, “Kate Ketchem” (get it?), she notes the foolishness of marrying for monetary reasons:

            He married her for her father’s cash

            She married him to cut a dash

            But as for paying his debts, do you know

            The father couldn’t see it so.

                                                           

            She wedded him to be rich and gay

            But husband and children didn’t pay

            He wasn’t the prize she hoped to draw

            And wouldn’t live with his mother-in-law.

Cary, like many others presented in this collection, adds a powerful voice to the growing rumblings of the women’s movement.  In her bitingly satirical dialogue poem “Was He Henpecked?” a husband responds to his wife’s desire for equality thus:

            ‘Now why,’ he said, ‘can’t such as you

            Accept what we assign them?

            You have your rights, ‘tis very true

            But then, we should define them!’

            ‘I’d keep you in the chicken yard,

            Safe, honored and respected;

            From all that makes us rough and hard,

            Your sex should be protected.’

“Major Voices” also gives a fresh perspective on the most currently celebrated 19th century American female poet: Emily Dickinson.  Her poems are presented here in their raw, unpublished form; there are no titles and her original plethora of dashes are included, granting her poems a striking immediacy.

Providing an extensive and literary-slanted introduction to each writer and including a substantial selection of each one’s work, “Major Voices” presents a fascinating glimpse of 19th Century America through the eyes of its female poets.

The above review was contributed by: Kathryn Atwood: Click Here To View More Of Kathryn's   Reviews:

Kathryn Atwood's poetry, reviews and essays have appeared in numerous online and print journals, including "The Aurora Review,", "Afterimage," "Void Magazine," "Wild Violet," and "PopMatters."  When she's not writing or driving her three kids around somewhere, she's usually teaching at a local music studio or givng vocal performances with her husband on the  subject of American song.

      

 

Related Articles

article A Chorus of Voices (Genre Poetry) by Kurt Messick
The Following review was contributed by: Molly Martin The poems presented within the covers of A Chorus of Voices are grouped into First Poems, where the offerings include a thought provoking I am not ee cummings, the poignant I saw two men, hope in a friend is (any) sadness in love is a prison and one engaging work I particularly enjoyed stars. Sonnet Sequence, runs a gamut from nature, man, god, night, stars, my own particular favorite in this grouping was the first with its view of the...

(No rating)  10-11-2004    Views: 5836   
article This Day: Diaries from American Women by Joni B. Cole: Rebecca Joffrey: B.K. Rakhra (Editors)
Have you ever looked out of an airplane and wondered about the people living in the match- box houses below? Who are these people? What were they doing when you just flew over them? Feeling down one day, writer Joni B. Cole decided to email a few women from different circles of her life and ask what a day in their life was actually like? I guess this would be something akin to looking down from my airplane. As she points out, “the responses they sent back were illuminating. Part...

(No rating)  1-1-1970    Views: 2508   
article Masters: Art Quilts—Major Works by Leading Artists
Click Here To Purchase Masters: Art Quilts—Major Works by Leading Artists Author: Martha Sielman, curator and authorISBN-10: 1600591078 ISBN-1

(No rating)  5-2-2008    Views: 2969   
article TV a-Go-Go: Rock on TV from American Bandstand to American Idol
Author: Jake AustenISBN: 1-55652-572-9The following review was contributed by:  Kathryn Atwood: Click Here To View More Of Kathryn's   ReviewsAccording to author Jake Austen, televised rock music is in some ways an impossible combination . . . and one that he absolutely adores.  Rock music is essentially "wild, raw, and dangerous" but when Bo Didley first performed it on the Ed Sullivan show in 1955, television and rock music began a long partnership which proved,  according to...

(No rating)  12-31-2005    Views: 4498   
article Theater Voices: Conversations On The Stage
Author: Steve CapraPublisher: Scarecrow Press, IncISBN: 0810850478The following review was contributed by:  NORM GOLDMAN:  Editor of Bookpleasures &CLICK TO VIEW  Norm Goldman's Reviews   

(No rating)  4-18-2005    Views: 3955   
article Voices Airy by Catherine Karp
The following review was contributed by: TAMY BRADY The year is 1918. World War One is rumored to end any day now. The influenza is running rampant. Death and chaos is a common companion. For seventeen-year-old Lucy Crumb, life has never been more uncertain. Her father unexpectedly died of a heart attack. Now she would be living with her older sister whom she hadn't seen for a number of years, since her sister was sent away to a home for unwed mothers. There were other rumors about...

(No rating)  1-1-1970    Views: 2031   
article Voices of America: St. Petersburg An Oral History
Compiled by Scott Taylor HartzellPublishers: Arcadia Publishing and imprint of Tempus Publishing IncISBN: 0-7385-1425-X The following review was contributed by:  NORM GOLDMAN:  Editor of Bookpleasures. CLICK TO VIEW  Norm Goldman's Reviews      Prior to 1888, St Petersburg, Florida was a tiny fishing village where deer, bear, raccoons, panthers, wildcats, gators and rattlesnakes roamed the area. Not exactly what we would imagine if we traveled to the sunshine city today.In 1880 a Rus

(No rating)  6-6-2006    Views: 3349   
article Algonquin Voices by Gaye I. Clemson
Canada’s Algonquin Park located about a 3-4 drive from Toronto was first created in 1893 as a wildlife sanctuary and to conserve the headwaters of the rivers that flow out of the park. Located on the edge of Canada’s “shield” or wilderness, it is Ontario’s oldest and largest park. From the time of its existence the Park’s astounding beauty has attracted many worldwide artists including Canada’s famous Group of Seven. This group comprised seven Canadian artists whose speciality was the...

(No rating)  1-1-1970    Views: 2012   
article Nod’s Way (The First New Ancient Oracle of the 21st Century)
Click Here To Purchase From Amazon Nod’s Way (The First New Ancient Oracle of the 21st Century) Author: Robert D. Lewis Publisher: Dalton PublishingISBN: 978-0-9740703-9-1  You can make anything into what you want if you really try and when I first got hold of Nod’s Way that was my first thought.

(No rating)  2-3-2008    Views: 2047   
article How to Love the Job You Hate: Job Satisfaction for the 21st Century
Author: Jane Boucher ISBN: 0967959101 The following review was contributed by: Paul Lappen: CLICK TO VIEW Paul Lappen's Reviews For a variety of reasons, everyone seems to hate their job these days. This bookshows how to discover just what the problem may be, and how to fall back in lovewith your job.What sort of personality do you have? Are you a detail-person, interested inanalysis and interpretation of information, who finds yourself in apeople-person job? Are you a support-person, best...

(No rating)  1-9-2006    Views: 2318   

User Comments

No comments have been posted.


.: Powered by Lore 1.5.2