Milcah Martha Moore (1740-1829) lived and flourished in the
Philadelphia area during its peak, when it was the center of
commerce, politics, social life, and culture in the young republic.
A well-educated woman, disowned by her Quaker Meeting for an
unauthorized marriage, Moore knew and corresponded with many of the
leading lights of her day. From her network of acquaintances, she
created a commonplace book, which is published here for the first
time.
Moore compiled her commonplace book during the American
Revolution, carefully selecting works of poetry and prose that she
and her friends most enjoyed reading and wanted to remember.
Contained are 126 works of prose and poetry by at least sixteen
different authors, mostly women. Catherine Blecki and Karin Wulf
have edited and reproduced the entire collection, adding helpful
annotations and interpretive essays that set the collection in
historical and literary context.
Moore's Book will be a treasure trove for feminist and early
American scholars, for it includes two of the most avidly
sought-after bodies of writing from British America: sixteen new
poems (twenty-four in all) by the Quaker polymath Susanna Wright
and a previously lost portion of the journal kept by Elizabeth
Graeme Fergusson during her trip to England. There is also a
remarkable selection of pieces by Hannah Griffitts, the Quaker
moralist and wit who commented on politics, society, and
domesticity during the Revolution. Moore also included writings by
Benjamin Franklin, Patrick Henry, and Samuel Fothergill.
While scholars have speculated about the extent to which elite
women exchanged ideas through reading and writing during this
period, Moore's Book is the richest surviving body of evidence
revealing the nature and substance of women's intellectual
community in British America. The quality of the writing is high
and reflects a range of popular literary genres including religious
and meditational poetry, elegies, verse epistles and extempore
verse, hymns, occasional poems, letters, and journal writing.
Topics range from family and friends to religion and mortality, to
politics and war--belying the notion that women's concerns were
limited only to a domestic sphere. Taken as a whole, Moore's
collection presents an unparalleled view of the interests and
tastes of educated women in early America.
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