The Hermit's Parish Jeanne Le Ber and Cather's Legacy from Jewett
ANN ROMINES
American literature is full of male characters who cultivate solitude
as a means of (self) discovery. Natty Bumppo in the forest, Thoreau at
Walden, Nick Adams fishing the big two-hearted river: all have, like Whitman,
somehow turned their backs on "houses and rooms" to "loafe and invite"
their souls, necessarily alone.
Few women characters in American fiction share this situation; the solitary
woman is far more often an absent or cautionary figure. Even the extraordinary
Hester Prynne, with her heroic powers of transformation and self-knowledge,
gives off vibrations of danger and loss. When she returns to her New England
hermitage and resumes the scarlet letter, her solitary presence becomes
a magnet for troubled women, whose needs she apprehends but is helpless
to satisfy.
If we turn to nineteenth-century fiction by women, looking for portrayals
of a solitude in which a woman might invite her soul, we encounter, instead,
other hedged and fumbled efforts. Whatever her other achievements, Kate
Chopin's Edna Pontellier fails as a living solitary; the only act she can
complete, alone, is her suicide. Mary Wilkins Freeman again and again poses
female solitude as a problem (and occasionally as an achievement); readers
still hotly debate whether Louisa Ellis, the "New England Nun" of Freeman's
best-known story, in renouncing her engagement for the pleasures of solitary
housekeeping, is indeed selling "her birthright" for a mess of pottage.
Louisa Ellis's experience suggests a pattern that is archetypal in literature
by and about women. She finds her solitude, necessary as food, not by "lighting
out" for some externalized territory that might also be emblematic of inner
possibilities but by literally and metaphorically "going in"—into a house
and housekeeping.
Thus, an American woman writer coming of age at the end of the nineteenth
century, as Willa Cather did, found herself the possessor of a complex
heritage if she became interested in probing the enigma of "the solitary
woman."[1] This was particularly true for a writer who, like Cather, might
continue the American romantic tradition, with its many chronicles of male
experiments in antidomestic withdrawal.[2] Such withdrawals—those of Whitman
in "Song of Myself," Thoreau in Walden, Hawthorne in "The Custom
House," or Cather's own autobiographical male narrator in My Ántonia—typically
became sources of art; through them a (male) voice was discovered. The
best-known fictional portrayals of female solitaries, such as Hester Prynne,
suggest the possibility that withdrawal mutes and diminishes the woman
who chooses it, disqualifying her for life and for art. That suggestion
must have seemed especially significant to a woman writer who believed
that her art might require her to become a solitary.
Sarah Orne Jewett, in the famous 1908 letter that was so duringly important
to Cather, had enjoined her younger friend that "to work in silence and
with all one's heart . . . is the writer's lot; he is the only artist who
must be a solitary, and yet needs the widest outlook upon the world" (Letters
250). As Cather left journalism and began to write about her "own country,"
she was putting into practice Jewett's uncompromising advice. But it took
longer for her to come to terms with Jewett's most stringent condition:
that the writer, while amassing worldly experience and knowledge, must
also, in some essential sense "be a solitary." Cather's personal difficulties
with that condition may explain some of her apparently abrupt alternations
in domicile and life style. And in the fiction of the 1920s she began to
turn to worldly characters, all artists in some sense, who found themselves
contending with solitude: Marian Forrester, Godfrey St. Peter, Myra Henshawe.
In the mid-1920s, she also edited a collection of Jewett's fiction, for
which she wrote a critical preface. Thus, when she began Shadows on
the Rock in 1928, Jewett's work as well as her advice were relatively
fresh in Cather's mind.[3] Shadows, published in 1931 as her tenth
novel, is the first in which she attempts a central examination of domestic
ritual as practiced by a female protagonist, twelve-year-old Cécile
Auclair, in seventeenth-century Quebec. This book is Willa Cather's first
full exploration of a world that was central to Jewett's fiction: the parish
of conventional women.
As she turned to domestic life as a central subject, Cather also turned
to another version of female solitude. Cécile, an only child, was
removed from the convent school at eight, when her mother became fatally
ill. Thereafter, she spent most of her days alone in her father's house,
performing the domestic tasks her mother taught her. Recent speculation
on the origins of domestic life suggests that housekeeping as a specialized,
solitary female activity developed in seventeenth-century Holland, concurrently
with the concept of interior life, "the deepening human recognition that
the sense of reality exists within" (Lukacs 29-30). According to Witold
Rybcyzynski, "Homely domesticity depended on the development of a rich
interior awareness . . . that was the result of the woman's role in the
home" (75).
No nineteenth-century American writer conveys a richer sense of the
interwoven domestic and psychic aspects of this "interior awareness" than
Jewett. In her first work, The Country of the Pointed Firs, she
traces a nameless woman writer's complex relation to a remote Maine village
where she spends a summer. Through her herbalist—landlady, Mrs. Todd, the
narrator is inducted into the pervasive domestic rhythms of the village's
life. Those rhythms are made and kept by housekeeping women who work alone,
and the writer-narrator discovers that they are her true subject. She cannot
write about them unless she experiences them—but if she gives herself and
her solitude up to such experience, she fears she cannot write.
The central episode of The Country of the Pointed Firs is the
telling of the story of the hermit, "poor Joanna." Her history emerges
as the narrator whiles away an evening with Mrs. Todd (Joanna's cousin
by marriage) and a visitor, elderly widows and lifelong friends. Jilted
by her fiancé, Joanna Todd had "commited the unpardonable sin" by
the "wickedness" of her thoughts toward God in her disappointment. As penance,
she signed away her shore property and moved to a shack on small barren
Shell-heap Island, to live out her life. When Mrs. Todd, then a young woman,
"entreated" Joanna to return to shore life, Joanna replied, "Tell them
I want to be alone" (75-76).
This tale throws disturbing light on the circumstances of the three
single women who tell and hear it. Mrs. Todd and Mrs. Fosdick, thirty years
later, are still perplexed by how Joanna managed her housekeeping: "What
did she do for risin' for her bread, or the piece bag that no woman can
live long without. . . . or company," they ask (58). Mrs. Todd reports
that Joanna tended flowers and decorated her house with them; that she
braided rush mats and sandals and kept a pretty dress "for best in the
afternoons" (74). This seems housekeeping performed for its own, solitary
sake: is Joanna's life a rejection or an apotheosis of housekeeping? Is
the hermetic life on Shell-heap Island a denial or a fulfillment of female
selfhood?
While such unspoken questions emerge, the writer-narrator recedes more
and more deeply into reflective silence, and Joanna's tale ends. But in
the next chapter she takes up the quest for Joanna herself, making a solitary
pilgrimage to the hermit's island grave. Earlier, she had rather superciliously
dismissed such a retreat as "something mediaeval" (69); now she concludes
that Joanna's islanded life represents a universal heritage: "We are each
the uncompanioned hermit and recluse of an hour or a day; we understand
our fellows of the cell to whatever age of history they may belong" (82).
When the narrator returns to her writier's life in a contemporary city,
she carries an heirloom given her by Mrs. Todd: a coral pin that had belonged
to the hermit Joanna.
Before Joanna's tale, Jewett's narrator tended to oversimplify the domestic
life she found in the Maine village. Either she turned her back on it,
hiring the schoolhouse for a nondomestic place to write, or she sentimentalized
it, investing Mrs. Todd's mother and her home with idyllic sweetness. But
the hermit's story, physically and thematically central to the book, initiates
a complex meditation, both communal and solitary, on the nature of the
shelter. When the narrator visits Joanna's grave, she has identified with
its occupant so completely that she confidently report Joanna's thoughts:
"I knew, as if she had told me" (82). Like the older women, she must acknowledge
Joanna Todd's retreat both as an endlessly compelling mystery and as a
central part of herself.
Shadows on the Rock, with its subtly experimental form and its
domestic focus, resembles The Country of the Pointed Firs in many
telling ways.[4] Set in the "close air" ("On Shadows on the Rock"
16) at the Auclair hearth, it is Cather's meditation on the nature of shelter,
counterpointed by tales of the undomesticated Canadian wilderness. She
too places at the physical center of her book the tale of a hermetic woman
who never appears directly in the action: the recluse nun, Jeanne Le Ber.
Jeanne's story is the center of the novel's central book, "The Long Winter,"
comprising the various narratives of elsewhere that engage and nourish
Cécile through the hard, cold months. The tale of Jeanne, her favorite,
is the only account of a woman in this section.
Jeanne Le Ber was a beautiful Montreal heiress, surrounded by loving
family and suitors, who at the age of twelve (Cécile's age) began
a withdrawal from that life. Under her "gay dresses . . . she wore . .
. a little haircloth shirt" (131), and at seventeen she took vows of chastity.
Eventually, despite her family's wished, her ample dowry financed a chapel
for the Sisters of the Congregation of the Blessed Virgin. Behind the altar
she had a three-level cell constructed for herself "from which she would
never come forth alive" (134). There she lives, a young woman still-seeing
only her confessor, eating coarse food, spurning much of the comfort that
domestic life can offer, even in Quebec and even to a nun (the other nuns
who figure in this novel lead comfortable, social lives). Alone in her
workroom, Jeanne spins, knits, and works at artful ecclesiastical embroidery.
Of course, the tales of Joanna Todd and Jeanne Le Ber differ in some
ways. Cather's character is more clearly an exemplar of conscious choice:
Joanna is rejected by a man, whereas it is Jeanne herself who rejects her
father's wishes and the men who vie for her hand. But the similarities
are more numerous and compelling. Both characters have wills so powerful
that they can reshape the patterns their respective societies offer women.
They turn their backs on conventional sexual and domestic life, yet both
of them project passion, and many of their occupations—Joanna's weaving,
Jeanne's embroidery—are quintessentially domestic. Their meticulously ordered
housekeeping is raised to a state of ardent awareness that becomes highly
conscious art.
As a girl, Jeanne often knelt at her window, gazing at the spark of
the perpetually burning lamp her father and uncle had placed on the altar
of the parish church. "She used to whisper, 'I will be that lamp; that
shall be my life'" (131). Instead of conventionally tending the male-given
lamp, in patient housewifery, Jeanne chose instead to become that symbolic
object. Thus she claimed for herself immortality and meaning, while forfeiting
the knowable particulars of a shared, finite domestic life. Even the sound
of her voice was subsumed into mystery; Euclide Auclair says, "We cannot
know what her voice is like now" (180).
By their withdrawals, Joanna and Jeanne paradoxically give themselves
to the very communities they left; they become their own mysterious legends,
which nourish and sustain the villagers who perpetuate them. Jewett underlines
this fact by the way Joanna's history emerges in her narrative: through
the interchange of question, report, and invention, interspersed with reflection.
Jeanne's story emerges in a fashion equally complex—Blinker brings the
latest "news from Montreal" (128) of two angels who mend Jeanne's spinning
wheel. Cécile quizzes him eagerly, and in bed that night she goes
over the story in her mind, as she has pieced it together from many sources,
adding the new "miracle." Like the other Quebec colonists, she will repeat
and reflect on the tale again and again, embroidering it with "loving exaggeration"
(136). It becomes her possession, her creation—a gift by which, Jeanne
confirms her own artistry and conveys it to every receptive hearer.
In the constrained circumstances of Cécile's life, which all
the colonists share to some degree, such tales are an "incomparable gift,"
ravishing as "a blooming rose-tree, or a shapely fruit-tree in fruit" (137).
Such a gift does what art can do: it affirms and extends the regenerative
powers of imaginative life, even in the coldest world. Cécile acts
out her own small miracles as she keeps the parsley alive through the long
winter and dreams of seeing an orange tree bear fruit in Quebec.
"Miracles" such as those generated by Jeanne Le Ber provide a form
for "the vague worship and devotion of the simple-hearted. . . . From being
a shapeless longing, it becomes a beautiful image," and thus "the experience
of a moment . . . is made an actual possession and can be bequeathed to
another" (137). Such language powerfully describes the experience of art.
By making herself a solitary, Jeanne has become an artist as well as an
art object. Like Joanna Todd, she has created a life so emblematic that
it can be perceived as symbol and as art.
But the price these women pay for their apotheosis is the rich, shared
particularity of their individual lives. The lack of such particulars pushes
their devotees to affectionate invention. Mrs. Fosdick, for example, disturbed
by the loneliness that she is sure Joanna felt, satisfies herself by deciding
that she must have assuaged it by "making folks" of her chickens. Mrs.
Todd's last word about Joanna is bleaker, and wiser; she both affirms the
hermit's singular identity and acknowledges her own inability to penetrate
it with explanation—"No, Joanna was Joanna, and there she lays on her island"
(Pointed Firs 78).
Against Cécile's rapt version of Jeanne's legend, Cather pits
another version: that of Pierre Charron, Jeanne's former favored suitor
and the man Cécile will later marry. To Pierre, younger and more
extravagantly ardent than Mrs. Todd, Jeanne's life is an unforgivable waste—worse
than death. He admits that he has twice violated her cloistered privacy.
The first time, she spoke gently to him in "her own voice" bidding him
to marry and promising to pray for him, always. Later, when he hid in the
locked chapel and listened to her prayers, that dear particular voice had
become "harsh and hollow like an old crow's—terrible to hear" (180). The
recluse whom Pierre glimpsed there was swathed in black and gray; with
"a stone face; it had been through every sorrow" (182). Stripped of color
and detail, transfigured, this embodiment of Jeanne is more than Pierre
can bear. He cannot let go of her former identity without renouncing his
own: "There is a such a thing as kindness; one wouldn't like to think of
a dog that had been one's playfellow, much less a little girl, suffering
from cold those bitter nights. You see, there are all those early memories;
one cannot get another set; one has but those" (181). Pierre hears with
rage and despair the groans and sighs that punctuate Jeanne's prayers.
He will not grant her the universality and the distance that would allow
her to be "that lamp," a shining object of art and use, to him. He demands,
"Why is she unhappy, I ask you? She is, I know it!" (183).
Through Pierre's responses Willa Cather adds another and profoundly
disturbing dimension to her meditation on the shelter of solitude. We may
see Pierre as the ravenous male ego that cannot allow a loved woman to
claim and live her own separate story. But Pierre is also a decent and
loving man, a solicitous friend who speaks for some of the best, simplest
values of the communities Jeanne and Joanna reject: "There is such a thing
as kindness." He mourns that deep human loss which occurs when someone
who has shared one's most intensely felt experiences chooses to absent
herself, forever, and to discontinue that particular communion. Pierre
Charron's private outburst forces us to contemplate the morality of reclusion
from yet another angle. His story reminds us that Jeanne Le Ber is still
a complex, living woman; her groans are a mystery that can neither be solved
nor forgotten. The charming legends she generates, rich with flowers and
fruit, are not the whole story.
Pierre tells his tale only to Cécile's father, carefully shutting
a door so that "the little one cannot hear" (180). Jeanne is never again
mentioned in the novel's remaining chapters, yet she remains an unforgettable
presence; as Judith Fryer says, "her story lingers in the reader's mind
like a fragment of a melody" (330). By the novel's end it is clear that
Cécile cannot be shut away from the complex meaning of Jeanne's
life; she must experience that meaning herself.
Jewett's narrator was in some sense the heir and successor of Joanna
Todd. The hermit's solitude, her housekeeping ambivalence, and her emblematic
power were incorporated into the narrator's life as woman artist, and in
leaving Dunnet Landing she carried them with her, as she carried the symbolic
coral pin, "a visible sign of female inheritance and attachment" (O'Brien
415). Cécile, similarly, is the heir of Jeanne Le Ber. In the book's
last chapters, after her passionate realization of the depth of her commitment
to the domestic rituals her mother taught her, we see feeling more and
more alienated from that world of male authority, personified in the Count
and her father, which hands down decisions that she must obey. Now she
feels the impulse to retreat, reclusively: "Often [she] wished she could
follow the squirrels into their holes and hide away with them for the winter"
(Shadows 229). And now the Canadian martyrs command her imagination;
she longs to seek out the "very places" in the wilderness where they died,
avowing, "I would rather go out there than—anywhere" (134). It is increasingly
apparent that Cécile, at least at this moment of her adolescence,
shares Jeanne's extreme and passionately ardent nature. Judith Fryer notes
her sensuous imagination (329). Many of the most rapturously beautiful
passages of description in this novel are filtered through the girl's receptive
sensibility, which certainly could be the sensibility of an artist.
Throughout this novel, Cécile has seemed an exceptionally educable
and tractable child, qualities that have prompted readers such as James
Woodress to see her as "priggish" (237), and Susan Rosowski reads Shadows
on the Rock, quite plausibly, as the ultimate female saint's legend:
an account of the education of the Virgin (184-87). In the novel's epilogue,
set fifteen years later, Cécile, most complex and central of the
surviving characters, is maddeningly inaccessible. She is mentioned, in
conversation between the Bishop and her father, only as the wife and mother
of males and seems already to have become a figure of legend. Even her
father describes her in such language, reporting that she is "bringing
up four little boys, the Canadians of the future" (278). Literally, Cécile
inherits the man Jeanne rejected and instructed to marry another woman.
In her marriage she is as remote as the legendary recluse, but her recession
into unstoried privacy, unreachable via official, male culture, has been
in fact the usual state of affairs for a woman in North America.[5] We cannot
know the inner landscape of Cécile's adult life any more than we
can interpret Jeanne's sighs. Finally, we must perceive her as we do the
hermit, as symbol.
Thus, by the narrator's and Cécile's relations to Joanna and
Jeanne, both The Country of the Pointed Firs and Shadows on the
Rock finally imply a fertile, enigmatic relation among hermit, artist,
and housekeeping woman. The fact that Jewett returned to the setting and
characters of Dunnet Landing in four important additional stories, scattered
through the few remaining years of her writing life, indicates that the
heritage of Joanna Todd was still alive and problematic for her; each of
those stories deals somehow with the narrator's perception of an emblematic,
isolated, hermetic woman.[6] The implications of Cather's ending are even
more enigmatic. For in this book, bearing the wide experience of her rich,
intense life in the world, Cather returned to the traditional parish of
women to probe the meanings it might yield to a woman artist. The finest
fiction of her last years, "Old Mrs. Harris" and Sapphira and the Slave
Girl, continues those explorations. No figure among her American literary
predecessors could have offered more support and impetus for such work
than the advice and example of Sarah Orne Jewett.
Cather's explorations have been continued and extended in this century's
literature by American women. There the female solitary remains a striking,
emblematic presence. She is the embattled countrywoman of Ellen Glasgow's
Barren Ground, the fumbling explorer of Anne Sexton's last confessional
poems, the defiant girl-woman of Toni Morrison's Sula, the reflective
persona of May Sarton's published journals, such as the enormously popular
Journal of a Solitude. In such works, again, the acts and language
of art and housekeeping are suggestively, speculatively combined. Each
evokes a story, like Sula's, of a profoundly "experimental life."
Joanna Todd and Jeanne Le Ber lived such experiments. For them, a hermit's
room could be a world-and the life one kept in that room, steeped in domestic
ritual, could be an art that flowered into symbol. To Jeanne, her "chambre,"
which she designed and purchased, was a "paradis terrestre . . . mon
centre . . . mon élément." She preferred it above all
other earthly places, whatever power or prestige they might confer: "point
de Louvre, point de palais . . . me soit plus agréable. Je préfère
ma cellule à tout le reste de l'univers" (136). That assurance,
that confidence in the validity and the value of her own solitary female
world, is the heart of Cécile's heritage from Jeanne Le Ber, and
of Willa Cather's heritage from Sarah Orne Jewett.
NOTES
1. Although Emily Dickinson's domestic retreat provides American literature's
most telling example of a withdrawal that served the emergence of a female
voice, I base my speculations here on American writers whose work we know
Cather read and admired: Hawthorne, Whitman, Twain, Jewett, Freeman, Chopin.[go back]
2. Woodress, e.g., places Cather in an American romantic tradition,
drawing a line from "Emerson to Whitman to Willa Cather" (159).[go back]
3. Lewis confirms that Cather kept Jewett's letters until her death,
as she did those of only one other correspondent, and that they seemed
to become "a permanent inhabitant of her thoughts" (178, 67). Cather's
admiration for Jewett is expansively expressed in "Miss Jewett," in her
preface to Jewett, Country of the Pointed Firs (in which she quoted
from the letters), and in interviews collected in Willa Cather in Person.[go back]
4. Cather also considered her oblique portrayal of Jeanne Le Ber to
be part of a formal experiment in this novel ("On Shadows on the Rock"
15), and here again she may have been influenced by Jewett. She often recalled
Jewett's advice: "If you have to create a new medium, have the courage
to do it" (In Person 34). O'Brien provides the most complete current
discussion of Cather's relationship with Jewett (324-63); however, she
does not discuss the influence of that relationship on Shadows.[go back]
5. Rabuzzi suggests that "what traditional women do with their time
is so minimally perceived by most males that it simply has not registered
with much impact upon our culture" (163-64).[go back]
6. The additional stories are "The Queen's Twin," "A Dunnet Shepherdess,"
"The Foreigner," and "William's Wedding," all collected in the Norton edition
of Jewett cited here.[go back]
WORKS CITED
Cather, Willa. "Miss Jewett." Not Under Forty. New York: Knopf,
1936. 76-95.
——. "On Shadows on the Rock." On Writing: Critical Studies
on Writing as an Art. New York: Knopf, 1949.
——. Preface. The Country of the Pointed Firs and Other Stories.
By Sarah Orne Jewett. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1956. N. pag.
——. Shadows on the Rock. New York: Knopf, 1931.
——. Willa Cather in Person: Interviews, Speeches, Letters. Ed.
L. Brent Bohlke. Lincoln: U of Nebraska P, 1986.
——. The World and the Parish: Willa Cather's Articles and Reviews,
1893-1902. Ed. William M. Curtin. 2 vols. Lincoln: U of Nebraska P,
1970.
Chopin, Kate. The Awakening. 1899. W. W. Norton: New York, 1976.
Freeman, Mary Wilkins. "A New England Nun." A New England Nun and
Other Stories. 1891. Ridgewood, N.J.: Gregg, 1967. 1-17.
Fryer, Judith. Felicitous Space: The Imaginative Structures of Edith
Wharton and Willa Cather. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1986.
Jewett, Sarah Orne. The Country of the Pointed Firs and Other Stories.
Ed. Mary Ellen Chase. New York: Norton, 1981.
——. Letters of Sarah Orne Jewett. Ed. Annie Fields. Boston: Houghton,
1911.
Lewis, Edith. Willa Cather Living: A Personal Record. New York:
Knopf, 1953.
Lukacs, John. "The Bourgeois Interior." American Scholar 39 (1970):
620-30.
O'Brien, Sharon. Willa Cather: The Emerging Voice. New York:
Oxford UP, 1987.
Rabuzzi, Kathryn Allen. The Sacred and the Feminine: Toward a Theology
of Housework. New York: Seabury, 1982.
Rosowski, Susan J. The Voyage Perilous: Willa Cather's Romanticism.
Lincoln: U of Nebraska P, 1986.
Rybcyzynski, Witold. Home: A Short History of an Idea. New York:
Viking, 1986.
Woodress, James. Willa Cather: Her Life and Art. New York: Pegasus,
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