Illustrated Essay
Poetess Poetry
Laura Mandell
TO MELANCHOLY. (1811)
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To Matilda Betham From a Stranger (1802, published 1905).
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These two poems span the era of the poetess whose mind could never be feminine enough to escape the barrenness to which she is condemned by living a life of the mind. The women writer's barrenness is emphasized in poems about Joan of Arc, Corinne of Italy, and Sappho of Lesbos written by writers in the poetess tradition. The barreness is implied earlier, in 1802, by Coleridge's poem in which his "sweet Hope" is that the "poetess" will be a "Maid" with a "holier mind" than Sappho, holier because of what she has done -- holier "in deed," to miquote the poem slightly:
The "happier fate" even contains a kind of veiled threat: if you aren't a Maid and you write poetry, beware -- you'll have to die like Sappho. |
The Poetess (1834) Maria Abdy's poem of that title
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Frontispiece (1838) eroticized femininity
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Frontispiece (1837) eroticized femininity
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Despite the alleged chastity of the poetess (insisted upon in that poetry), these frontispieces to annuals present eroticized femininity. |
Inscription Page (1844) erotic
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Frontispiece (1847) This image is explicitly erotic, resembling a frontispiece to Fanny Hill
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Felicia Hemans's Properzia Rossi and L.E.L.'s Improvisatrice, eponymous heroines of these tragic poems, die regretting their chastity which seems to have been enforced, or caused, by their devotion to their art. But despite the barrenness of women poets in the eponymous poems written about them by women writers of the annuals, the frontispieces to these literary annuals distinctly portray women as erotic. What’s not really clear is erotic for whom: the worry may be that the poetesses and female readers of the annuals care more about each other. In that case, their barreness is not due to having been spurned by a male lover, as so many poems assiduously protest, but by choice. In this way, the choice to become an artist – Properzia Rossi’s, for instance, in Felicia Hemans’s poem of that name – somehow entails or resembles the choice to love only women. This ambiguity is the legacy of Sappho, as Robinson’s sanitizing gloss makes clear:
In Dangerous Intimacies, Lisa Moore situates “Sapphic love†on the eighteenth-century ideological landscape, and Yopie Prins shows the figure’s evolution in nineteenth-century verse. |
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