Marmee & Louisa (56 page)

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Authors: Eve LaPlante

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308
Temple School students: ABA, December 3, 1868,
Journals
, 389. The Quincy child was Mayor Josiah Quincy’s grandson, who like his father and grandfather became Boston’s mayor.

309
“not myself prepared to say”: Peabody,
Record of a School
, Preface.

310
“more genius for education”: displayed at Orchard House School of Philosophy, July 2011.

311
“methods of discipline”: Shepard,
ABA Journals
, footnote, 476.

312
3 Somerset Court: Beacon Hill and Mount Vernon had already been leveled by 1834, when the Alcotts returned to Boston, but Pemberton Hill was not leveled until 1835. Somerset Court runs off Somerset Street, just below the State House. It is now Ashburton Street.

313
“particularly” Louisa: Shepard,
ABA Journals
, 47, footnote.

314
“has more sympathy”: ABA, “Researches on Childhood,” HAP.

315
“Some habits, I regret”: ABA, September 19, 1835,
Journals
, 65.

316
“delicate and yet necessary”: ABA, October 26, 1834,
Journals
, 47.

317
“domestic and parental relations”: ABA, January 21, 1835,
Journals
, 55.

318
“If the Divinity wills”: ABA, May 3, 1835,
Journals
, 56.

319
another “Record”: ABA, June 24, 1835,
Journals
, 57.

320
“Abba is in trouble”: SJM to LFM, August 14, 1835, MFPCL.

321
“most precarious contingencies”: AMA to Mary Tyler Peabody, September 2, 1835, courtesy of Megan Marshall.

322
built “towers and bridges”: LMA, “Recollections of My Childhood,”
Lulu’s Library
, vii.

323
“children are importunate”: AMA to SJM, September 9, 1834, family letters, HAP.

324
“importance of
moral
education”: AMA to SJM, September 1834, family letters, HAP.

325
“amount of mischief”: Ibid.

326
“friend to the colored”: LMA, “Recollections of My Childhood,” in Shealy,
Alcott in Her Own Time
, 33.

327
“Newfoundland”: Ibid.

328
“she had become so eager”: SJM,
Memoir
, 23.

329
“accompany her to visit”: ABA, Oct. 21, 1835,
Journals
, 69.

330
Garrison’s pregnant wife: Helen Benson Garrison, at whose 1833 wedding SJM presided.

331
“the good man who helped”: LMA, “Recollections of My Childhood,”
Lulu’s Library
.

332
“Some of your family”: AMA to SJM, February 22, 1835, family letters, HAP.

333
Mobs in Rhode Island: Nye,
Fettered Freedom
, 125, 202.

334
“Private assassins”: Ibid., 202.

335
Garrison stepped out: Ibid., 201.

336
mainstream Northern press: Ibid., 198, 103.

337
Samuel Joseph came to Boston: Ibid., 143–44.

338
American newspapers reported: Ibid., 177.

339
“the
higher classes
”: William Goodell, ibid., 194.

340
America’s “united South”: James Freeman Clark,
Memorial History of Boston
.

341
“not made for . . . turmoil”: SJM to LFM, May 13, 1835, MFPCL.

342
“one of the best men”:
Portland Magazine
review in Matteson,
Eden’s Outcasts
, 67.

343
“a wise man”: Ralph Waldo Emerson to Frederic Henry Hedge, Concord, July 20, 1836,
Emerson’s Letters
, II, 29.

344
“dispenser of moral truth”: ABA, September 18, 1835,
Journals
, 63.

345
“an oracular style”: Theodore Dahlstrand, talk on ABA, Orchard House School of Philosophy, July 2011.

346
“my little one”: ABA, September 30, 1835,
Journals
, 67.

347
“As I was queen of the revel”: LMA, Cheney,
LMA’s Life, Letters and Journals
, 27.

348
“a happy breakfast”: LMA,
Little Women
, chapter one.

349
“I could not!”: AMA, quoted in EPP to Mary Peabody, April 1836, Bruce Ronda, ed.,
Letters of EPP
, 163.

350
“made her very angry”: EPP to Mary Peabody, April 1836, ibid., 161.

351
“heavy-handed”: Ibid., 157.

352
this “breach of honour”: EPP to Mary Peabody, May 15, 1836, ibid., 168.

353
arrogant “self-estimation”: EPP to Mary Peabody, April 1836, ibid., 157–163.

354
Samuel Joseph baptized: ABA, Mary 22, 1836,
ABA’s Journal for 1836
, in
Studies in the American Renaissance, 1878
, Myerson, ed., 59.

355
generally “dissatisfied”: ABA, October 5, 1828,
Journals
, 13.

356
abandoned formal religion: Odell Shepard, ed.,
ABA Journals
, 3.

357
“Your Ascended Father”: ABA to AAP,
Letters
, 97. See also ABA, September 22, 1826,
Journals
, 5.

358
“read about Jesus”: AAP journal entry, October 1839, quoted in Caroline Ticknor,
May Alcott, A Memoir
, 8.

359
“Yes, often”: ABA, in Matteson,
Eden’s Outcasts
, 92

360
“I preach the Gospel”: ABA, February 1837,
Journals
, 84.

361
“commune with God”: ABA, June 24, 1835,
Journals
, 57.

362
“Sabbath exercises”: AMA, January 8, 1843, in
ABA Journals
, 150.

363
“my own spirit”: ABA, December 20, 1835,
Journals
, 71–72.

364
“feminine subculture”: Kornfeld,
Margaret Fuller
, 10.

365
“We women”: Margaret Fuller, ibid., 20.

366
to support her mother: Blanchard,
Margaret Fuller
, 107.

367
“distrust of Mr. Alcott’s”: Kornfeld,
Margaret Fuller
, 90.

368
class had shrunk: Herrnstadt,
ABA Letters
, xxii.

369
“age hath no”: ABA, November 1837,
Journals
, 96.

370
“severely censured”: ABA, April 1837,
Journals
, 88.

371
identified with martyrs: ABA, January 1838,
Journals
, 98.

372
“doomed”: ABA, October 1837,
Journals
, 92.

373
“I see not my way”: ABA, May 1837,
Journals
, 90.

374
visited with Emerson: Shepard, Note on 1837,
ABA Journals
, 80–81.

375
“Write!”: ABA, May 1837,
Journals
, 90. Bronson quotes a letter from Emerson.

376
“in a large room”: AMA, Memoir of 1878, HAP.

377
spent two weeks: LFM to SJM, June 13, 1838, MFPCL.

378
“native hills”: ABA, March 13, 1839,
Journals
, 117.

379
“boarders and pupils”: ABA, March 1838,
Journals
, 100. AMA to SJM, December 22, 1833, family letters, HAP, describes AMA’s dislike of boarders.

380
“influences of Nature”: ABA, March 13, 1839,
Journals
, 117.

381
“Mammon-king”: ABA, February 26, 1839,
Journals
, 117.

382
finances: ABA, June 1838,
Journals
, 100.

383
Alcott House: Shepard,
ABA Journals
, footnote, 169.

384
“Friends in England”: ABA to his mother, December 28, 1839,
Letters
, 44.

385
“cross the water”: ABA quoting AMA, ibid.

386
ban of my scissors: ABA quoting AMA, February 2, 1839,
Journals
, 114.

387
closed school: ABA to his mother, March 17–18, 1839, transcribed in
Journals
, 118.

388
“short respite”: ABA, March 23, 1839,
Journals
, 120.

389
“Every day we sewed”: LMA to Louise C. Moulton, n.d., family letters, HAP.

390
Grandfather May’s house: According to NEHGS register, Colonel JM and his second wife in early 1835 moved from the house on Federal Court to a house at the corner of Washington and Oak streets, where Elizabeth Alcott would have stayed in 1840. AMA to SJM, February 22, 1835, HAP, begins, “Dear Brother, The old house in Federal House is empty and desolate enough, and I never want to go there again.”

391
“the creative jet!”: ABA, March 31, 1839,
Journals
, 121.

392
“A young Hoper”: ABA to his mother, March 17–18, 1839,
Letters
, 42.

Chapter 5: This Sharp Sorrow

393
“fine boy, full grown”: AMA, 1839 journal, HAP.

394
message from God: see David Hall,
Worlds of Wonder, Days of Judgment
, and Eve LaPlante,
Salem Witch Judge
.

395
“death’s bitterest beaker”: AMA, journals, HAP.

396
“My thrill of Hope”: ABA, August 1841,
Journals
, 119.

397
“poisons the fountain”: ABA, April 1839, Ms. journals, HAP.

398
of the sixth generation: Harvard graduates in the four previous generations are Judge Samuel Sewall, Rev. Joseph Sewall, Samuel Sewall, and Rev. Samuel J. May. This legacy of access to higher education is an index of the Mays’ affluence: less than 3 percent of Americans had such access in 1870, and only 4 percent did in 1900.

399
Colonel May in 1839: Bedell,
The Alcotts
, indicates Colonel JM was now senile.

400
“I go forth”: ABA recounting dialogue with AMA, April 23, 1839,
Journals
, 125.

401
“Plato held”: ABA, November 10, 1852,
Journals
, 258.

402
under whose “ministry”: ABA, April 29, 1839,
Journals
, 126.

403
met fifteen years earlier: Lydia Maria Child to AMA,
Collected Correspondences of Lydia Maria Child, 1817–1880
, ed. Patricia G. Holland, Milton Miltzer, and Francine Krasno. Microform, 1980. 90/2398.

404
“Denied the education”: Karcher,
First Woman in the Republic
, 3.

405
“entirely the prerogative”: Ibid., 16.

406
“regarded as a
lady
”: Ibid., 2.

407
“toiling for the freedom”: Lydia Maria Child quoted in Deborah P. Clifford,
Crusader for Freedom: A Life of Lydia Maria Child
, 2.

408
“wrong, blind, and carnal”: Luther Lee,
Autobiography of Luther Lee
, 221–22.

409
“preach from their texts”: SJM to Garrison (BPL Ms. A.1.2.V8, 36), in Karcher,
First Woman in the Republic
, 259.

410
A Boston newspaper:
Boston Gazette
, March 9, 1838.

411
Grimké speech: SES,
Memoir of SES
, 130.

412
Lucretia’s opposition to the cause of women’s rights: In 1850, when her husband, her sister Charlotte G. Coffin, and her daughter, Charlotte, were conveners of the national women’s rights convention in Worcester, Massachusetts, Lucretia declined to join them.

413
“threatens the female character”: Crawford,
Romantic Days in Old Boston
, 133.

414
“country’s first feminists”: Yacovone,
SJM
, 4–5.

415
“are not appreciated”: ABA, June 22, 1839,
Journals
, 131.

416
never taught schoolchildren again: ABA to his mother, June 21, 1840,
Letters
, 48.

417
“the Book of Nature”: ABA, July 24, 1839,
Journals
, 133.

418
“I remember running”: LMA, “Recollections of My Childhood,” in
LMA’s Life, Letters and Journals
, 29.

419
the character she created [Mr. March]: Catherine Rivard said in an email to the author in 2009, “When Louisa conjured up the minister ‘Mr. March,’ she had [her uncle] Sam in mind.”

420
“black, white & grey,”: LFM to Joseph May, June 10, 1854, MFPCL.

421
Cold Water Brigade: the chants and newspaper coverage are from the collection of documents concerning SJM at the First Parish Church of Norwell, Massachusetts, formerly South Scituate.

422
“Self-Culture”: ABA, October 1838,
Journals
,105.

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