Authors: Lyndall Gordon
Used in the âSources, Contents, Questions' section and in the Bibliography
Abinger | Wollstonecraft, Godwin, Mount Cashell and Shelley manuscripts, on loan from Lord Abinger to the Bodleian Library, Oxford | |
AR | Analytical Review | |
Beinecke | The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University | |
Bodleian | The Bodleian Library, Oxford | |
BW | Elizabeth (Eliza/Bess) Wollstonecraft (sister of MW) | |
CC | Clara Mary Jane (âClaire') Clairmont (stepsister of MW's two daughters, FI and MWS) | |
CCJ | The Journals of Claire Clairmont 1814â1827 | |
CiniâDazzi | The CiniâDazzi archive in the private library of Andrea and Cristina Dazzi in San Marcello Pistoiese, Italy | |
ClCor | The Clairmont Correspondence | |
EB | Elias Backman | |
Education | MW, | |
EW | Everina Wollstonecraft (sometimes Averina, sister of MW) | |
FI | Fanny Imlay | |
FR | MW, | |
GI | Gilbert Imlay (MW's American partner) | |
HF | Henry Fuseli (artist) | |
HMW | Helen Maria Williams (English friend of MW in France) | |
Houghton | The Houghton Library, Harvard University: the main repository for the Barlow Papers and those of Joel Barlow's wife, Ruth Baldwin Barlow | Â |
JB | Joel Barlow (American poet and diplomat) | |
JJ | Joseph Johnson (publisher) | |
KP | Charles Kegan Paul, | |
Mary | MW, | |
Memoirs | WG, | |
MM | Margaret King, later Lady Mount Cashell (âMrs Mason') | |
MW | Mary Wollstonecraft | |
MWCW | The Collected Writings of Mary Wollstonecraft | |
MWL | The Collected Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft | |
MWletters | The Collected Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft | |
MWSJ | The Journals of Mary Shelley | |
MWSL | The Letters of Mary Shelley | |
Pf | The Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection, papers of Shelley and his circle; letters of Mary Hays and Jane Williams; Cini Papers. New York Public Library | |
RB | Ruth Barlow (American friend of MW's, wife of JB) | |
Real Life | MW, | |
RM | MW, | |
RW | MW, | |
SC | Shelley and his Circle, 1773â1822 | |
SPP | Shelley's Poetry and Prose | |
Travels | MW, | |
WG | William Godwin (MW's husband) | |
WW | MW, |
1
VIOLENCE AT HOME
âI want to see
â¦
'
:
MWL
, 227;
MWletters
, 217.
âthe lash'
:
RM
. See below, ch. 7.
âI am
â¦
pushes me on'
:
MWL
, 164;
MWletters
, 139.
wildness
:
English Woman's Journal
, cited by Caine, âVictorian Feminism', 268. Harriet Martineau called her a âpoor victim of passion' in 1855.
âromantic sentiments'
:
RW
, ch. 13, sect. ii.
âfirmest champion' and âthe greatest ornament'
:
Memoirs
, ch. 9.
âEurope was rejoiced
â¦
'
:
The Prelude
, Book VI.
âEvery dayâ¦'
: Woolf, âMary Wollstonecraft'. 3â
a foolish consistencyâ¦'
: Ralph Waldo Emerson, âSelf-Reliance'.
âan experiment from the start'
: Woolf, âMary Wollstonecraft'.
âmad'â¦âlicentious'
: John Adams, marginalia in his copy of
FR
.
âlittle short of monstrous'
: âA Heart that Scorned Disguise',
Times Literary Supplement
(21 Apr. 2000), 36.
Ned Wollstonecraft
: Cousin to Edward Bland, who had been first officer on Grandfather Wollstonecraft's part-owned ship, the
Cruttendon
.
âapparent partiality'
:
Mary
, ch. 2.
âharsh'
: MW to BW (17 Aug. [1781?]),
MWL
, 76;
MWletters
, 31.
âwomenâ¦'
: Kames (1696â1782) participated in the Scottish Enlightenment as a writer on law, history and farming. His
Elements of Criticism
was published when MW was three years old.
divideâ¦between worker and gentleman
: A telling instance of this divide is what happened to John Ruskin when he arrived as an undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford, in 1837: though he had the gifts to be a scholar, his social-climbing parents had insisted on entering him instead for the higher class of gentlemen-commoners, who proceeded to ridicule Ruskin when his first essay was chosen to be read aloud. Gentlemen scorned work, and it was customary to bribe a scout (a college servant) to write the required weekly essay. (John Batchelor,
John Ruskin
:
No Wealth but Life
, London: Chatto, 2000, 36â7.)
âa gentleman's daughter'
: Jane Austen,
Pride and Prejudice
, ch. 56.
âan old mansionâ¦'
: Elizabeth Osborne,
The History of Essex
(1817), cited in
SC
, i, 40. Her information came from WG as well as hearsay.
New Farm and neighbours
: Alternatives could be Reeves Gate Farm or Hay Hill Farm. Todd,
Wollstonecraft
, assumes plausibly that Grandfather Wollstonecraft provided for this farm, and notes Mr Gascoyne's origins in London trade.
âreveries'
: MW,
Travels
, letter 8.
MW's attempts to protect her mother
:
Memoirs
, ch. 1.
âMary was continually in dread'
:
Mary
, ch. 2.
father beat her
: WG to JJ (11 Jan. 1798). Abinger: Dep. b.227/8.
status of women in Anglo-Saxon England
: Whitelock,
Beginnings
, 45, 87, 94, 150â1. Legal historian Anthony Honore tells me that slaves in the Roman Empire, women as well as men, had a mass of legal rights which we might think of as human rights.
The Lawes Resolutions
: Fraser,
Weaker Vessel
, 527.
Burney on marriage
:
Early Journals
, cited by Harmon,
Fanny Burney
, 72.
law and domestic violence
: The Hardwicke matrimonial law was only slowly unpicked in the latter half of the nineteenth century. As late as the end of the twentieth, legal redress and protection from domestic violence were still at issue.
farm at Walkington
: Todd,
Wollstonecraft
, 459, notes a local tradition that the farm was the present mixed farm of Broadgate just off the road from Beverley to York, but there is no firm evidence of this.
âa very handsome town
â¦
'
:
Memoirs
, ch. 1.
isolation of child victims of violence
: Herman,
Trauma
, 99â100, 105. I am grateful to Margaret Bluman for recommending this innovative study.
letters to Jane Arden while they were at school
:
MWL
, 51â64;
MWletters
, 1â18.
Yorkshire idiom
: Used to GI in 1794,
MWL
, 247;
MWletters
, 244.
on John Arden:
His granddaughter Everilda Gardiner,
Recollections
.
âThe good folks
â¦
'
:
MWL
, 66;
MWletters
, 23.
leaving Yorkshire
: Durant's Supplement, gives the date as Sept. 1774 though the date of Henry's apprenticing suggests 1775 as more likely.
Henry's fate
: Insanity or criminality suggested by Sunstein,
Wollstonecraft
, 36ff.
WG avoiding Henry's name
: WG does note that one of MW's brothers predeceased her; i.e. he tells us indirectly that Henry was dead when his memoir of 1798 cites the brothers and sisters of MW who âare still living'. How Henry died remains unknown.
Henry and Hoxton's asylums
: Todd,
Wollstonecraft
, 21.
âamiable Coupleâ¦took some pains'
: MW to Jane Arden,
MWL
, 66;
MWletters
, 24.
meeting Fanny
:
Memoirs
, ch. 2.
Blood family background
: Todd,
Wollstonecraft
, 23.
Flora Londinensis: Bodleian.
the Revd Mr Bishop
: EW to WG (Nov. 1797) distinguishes him from the Mr Bishop who was to marry BW in 1782.
MW's education
: Wagner and Fischer,
Pforzheimer Collection
, 25, suggest plausibly that education was more important for MW than feminism.
âthe prejudices'
:
Memoirs
, Appendix, 277. WG's revision of ch. 10 for the second edition.
2
âSCHOOL OF ADVERSITY'
âschool of adversity'
:
Education
,
MWCW
, iv, 36.
âkeen blast of adversity'
:
MWL
, 69;
MWletters
, 27.
âright of directing'
;
âforwardness'
:
WW
, ch. 7.
bequest from their Dickson grandfather
: MW sent âseveral letters' to a Mr Dickson in the summer of 1780 which, Wardle's notes to her letters suggested, had to do with money.
Balthazar Regis
: Educated at Trinity College, Dublin. Chaplain to the King 1727â57 and Canon of Windsor 1751â7. Died in 1757.
entering Bath
: There is a profusion of contemporary detail in Jane Austen's
Persuasion
, ch. 14.
â
flattery
â¦
wear a cheerful face
,
or be dismissed'
:
Education
, 25.
pay for companions
: Hufton,
History of Women
, 79.
MW's management of Mrs Dawson
:
Memoirs
, ch. 2.
âvery good understanding'
: To Jane Arden,
MWL
, 69;
MWletters
, 27.
âA mind accustomed
â¦
'
:
Education
, 48â9.
âWomen areâ¦'
: Lord Chesterfield,
Letters
i, 330. A play on Dryden's âMen are but children of another growth' in
All for Love
.
Waterhouse
: W. H. S. Jones,
St Catherine's College
, 129. In 1798, when he rigged votes so as to elect himself Master, Waterhouse instigated the worst quarrel in the history of the college. Three of the five Fellows who voted made the following declaration: âWe whose names are underwritten declare this to be no Election, no one of us having voted for Mr Waterhouse.' The Lord Chancellor declared against Waterhouse. In 1801 the Lord Chancellor was called in again over the diversion of a share in the dividends of a vacant fellowship into Waterhouse pockets. Ousted eventually from the college, he lost his glamour, and became mean and slovenly. As Rector of Little Stukely in Huntingdonshire, he was murdered on 3 July 1827 by Joshua Slade, a dismissed servant.
âI knew a womanâ¦': Education
, 29;
SC
, i, 46â7; Nitchie, âEarly Suitor', 163â9.
MW and the Ardens
: Quotations not noted separately below are from the second batch of letters to Jane Arden in 1779âc. 1783; see
MWL
, 64â80;
MWletters
, 19â39.
Jane Arden as governess
: Everilda Gardiner,
Recollections
.
âI should be glad
â¦
'
:
MWL
, 67;
MWletters
, 26.
visit to Southampton
: It's probable that she stayed with a Wollstonecraft relation.
MWL
, 70, notes the existence of an Edward Bland Wollstonecraft of Gloucester Square, Southampton, who died in 1795âlikely to be (as
MWletters
, 26, adds) the first officer of Grandfather Wollstonecraft's ship the
Cruttendon
, a share of which he, as a grandson, inherited.
âtruth
â¦
'
:
Education
, 16.
Gunning sisters
: Murray,
High Society
, 253.
stays
: It was considered indecent not to wear them. CC's mother and stepfather, WG, were relieved when she took to wearing stays in 1817 after she ran away (see below, ch. 17). The sense of indecency remained as late as the early years of the twentieth century. When the feminist Olive Schreiner walked without stays down Adderley Street in Cape Town, after the Boer War, she heard hoots and insults.
sombre grandeur
; â
measured pace of thought'
; â
Life�'
:
Travels
, letter 7.
MW's efforts for mother
:
Memoirs
, ch. 2.
father's view of mother's illness
; â
I shall not dwellâ¦disagreeable'
: Draws on
WW
, ch. 8.
date of Mrs Wollstonecraft's death
: Discovered by Tomalin,
Mary Wollstonecraft
.
Jamesâ¦went to sea
: Aboard HMS
Carysfoot
: Durant's Supplement, 155.
âthe dear County of Clare'
: To Jane Arden,
MWL
, 78;
MWletters
, 37.
âFew menâ¦'
:
Education
, 26.
Her favourite song
: MW to WG [3 July 1797],
MWL
, 402;
MWletters
, 426, notes: âAllan Ramsay's poem
The Kind Reception
, sung to the tune of
Auld Lang Syne
. It opens with “Should auld Acquaintance be forgot/ Though they return with Scars?”'.
âcanker
-
worm'
:
Mary
, ch. 5. Some details of the character Ann are based on Fanny's history.
marriage versus MW's wish to be free
: In English law the unattached woman was termed the
feme-sole
as distinct from the woman who had no legal existence apart from her husband, the
feme-covert
. To declare aversion to marriage was seen as resistance to performing the only functionâto propagate the speciesâfor which woman existed. To earn a living in trade, to be a mantua-maker for instance, was sometimes looked on as a form of prostitution. As late as the 1840s, Charlotte Brontë's friend Mary Taylor emigrated to New Zealand in order to start a business. It was still unthinkable in England for a woman to do so on her own, and though Mary Taylor did amass a modest sum in the new colony, she had to put up with jeers.
baby Mary
: The child's full name was Elizabeth Mary Frances, but she was called Mary according to a letter from MW to EW.
held Bess in her arms
: MW to BW (23 Sept. [1786]),
MWL
, 113;
MWletters
, 78: âI could have clasped you to my breast as I didâ¦when I was your nurse.'
Her ideas are all disjointedâ¦'
:
MWL
, 80;
MWletters
, 39 (replacing Wardle's (
MWL
) reading of âunconnected' thoughts with âuncorrected'). Wardle's makes better sense (in the context of senselessness) and fits the repetition of âunconnected' in the similar situation of
WW
, ch. 2.
âPoor Eliza's situation'
:
MWL
, 81;
MWletters
, 40.
âOne of the most terribleâ¦'
: Stone,
Marriage in England
, 168.