The Power of Sympathy
{{short description|1789 American novel by William Hill Brown}}
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| name = The Power of Sympathy
| image = The Power of Sympathy.jpg
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| caption = Title page of the first edition
| author = William Hill Brown
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| country = United States
| language = English
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| genre = Sentimental novel, Epistolary novel
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| publisher = Isaiah Thomas
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| pub_date = January 21, 1789
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The Power of Sympathy: or, The Triumph of Nature is a 1789 American sentimental novel written in epistolary form by William Hill Brown and is widely considered to be the first American novel.For an extended discussion of the critical debate surrounding the claims to this title, see Cathy Davidson, Revolution and the Word (153–156) and Carla Mulford's introduction to the 1996 Penguin edition of the text, among other sources. The Power of Sympathy was Brown's first novel. The characters' struggles illustrate the dangers of seduction and the pitfalls of giving in to one's passions, while advocating the moral education of women and the use of rational thinking as ways to prevent the consequences of such actions.
Characters
- Thomas Harrington
- Myra Harrington, sister to Thomas
- Harriot Fawcet, illegitimate sister to Thomas and Myra
- Jack Worthy
- Mrs. Eliza Holmes, common friend of the Harringtons and Harriot
- Mr. Harrington, Thomas and Myra's father
- Maria, Mr. Harrington's mistress and Harriot's mother
- Martin and Ophelia{{who?|date=January 2022}}
Plot summary
The opening letters between Thomas Harrington and Jack Worthy reveal that Thomas has fallen for Harriot Fawcet, despite the reservations of his father. Harriot resists Thomas's initial advances, as he intends to make her his mistress; readers also find that Jack encourages Thomas to abandon his licentious motives in favor of properly courting Harriot. However, when Thomas and Harriot become engaged, Eliza Holmes becomes alarmed and exposes a deep family secret to Thomas's sister Myra: Harriot is in fact Thomas and Myra’s illegitimate half-sister. Mr. Harrington's one time affair with Maria Fawcet resulted in Harriot's birth, which had to be kept a secret to maintain the family’s honor. Thus, Eliza’s mother-in-law, the late Mrs. Holmes, took Maria, Thomas and Harriot into her home. After Maria’s death, Harriot was raised by a family friend, Mrs. Francis.
Upon receiving the news of this family secret, Harriot and Thomas are devastated, as their relationship is incestuous and thus forbidden. Harriot falls into a grief-stricken consumption (a condition now referred to as tuberculosis), from which she is unable to recover. Thomas spirals into a deep depression and commits suicide after learning of Harriot's death.
Subplot in historical context
A subplot in the novel mirrors a local New England scandal involving Brown's neighbor Perez Morton's seduction of Fanny Apthorp; Apthorp was Morton's sister-in-law. Apthorp became pregnant and committed suicide, but Morton was not legally punished.Davidson, Cathy. Revolution and the Word. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2004. p. 7. The scandal was widely known,Walser, Richard. "Boston's Reception of the First American Novel". Early American Literature 17(1): 65–74. p. 66. so most readers were able to quickly identify the "real" story behind the fiction: "in every essential, Brown's story is an indictment of Morton and an exoneration of Fanny Apthorp",Davidson, Cathy. Revolution and the Word. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2004. p. 175. with "Martin" and "Ophelia" representing Morton and Apthorp, respectively.
Publication history
The Power of Sympathy was first published by Isaiah Thomas in Boston on January 21, 1789,{{cite web|url=http://bnreview.barnesandnoble.com/t5/Daybook/Brown-s-Power-of-Sympathy/ba-p/4067|title=Brown's Power of Sympathy|last=King|first=Steve|date=January 21, 2011|publisher=Barnes & Noble|accessdate=20 January 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140222142607/http://bnreview.barnesandnoble.com/t5/Daybook/Brown-s-Power-of-Sympathy/ba-p/4067|archive-date=22 February 2014}} and sold at the price of nine shillings.The Power of Sympathy, [https://www.questia.com/read/85858493/the-power-of-sympathy bibliographical note] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230409/https://www.questia.com/read/85858493/the-power-of-sympathy |date=2016-03-03 }} The novel did not sell well.{{cite book |last1=Seelye |first1=John |editor1-last=Elliott |editor1-first=Emory |title=Columbia Literary History of the United States |date=1988 |publisher=Columbia UP |location=New York |page=172 |chapter=Charles Brockden Brown and Early American Fiction}}
The novel was first published anonymously, but was popularly attributed to Boston poet Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton because of the resemblance between the plot and a scandal in her family; Brown was not correctly identified as the author until 1894.{{cite book |last1=Gray |first1=Richard |title=A History of American Literature |date=2004 |publisher=Blackwell |page=92}}
Critical discussions
The novel has ties to American politics and nationhood, just as many early American sentimental novels can be read as allegorical accounts of the nation's development.For a few scholars' accounts of this linkage between novel and nation, see Jay Fliegelman, Prodigals and Pilgrims: The Revolution Against Patriarchal Authority and Elizabeth Barnes, States of Sympathy: Seduction and Democracy in the American Novel.{{page number|date=January 2021}} These critics have argued that these novels' use of moral education as a means to avoid seduction functions as a way to show readers the virtues and education most needed by the new American nation. Elizabeth Maddock Dillon complicates this standard reading by locating the novel within a global context marked by "forces of colonialism, mercantile capitalism, and imperialism".Dillon, Elizabeth Maddock. "The Original American Novel, or, The American Origin of the Novel". A Companion to the Eighteenth-Century English Novel and Culture. Eds. Paula Backscheider and Catherine Ingrassia. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005. 235–260. p. 235. In this reading, the workings of the novel (incest and miscegenation specifically, Dillon argues) are read not necessarily as indicative of the formation of the American nation but as representative of the effects of colonialism in the New World.
As the novel's title indicates, sympathy is the driving force behind several characters' actions. The excesses of sympathetic thought lead to tragedy; it is implied that Harrington's suicide, for example, is spurred on by an over-identification with The Sorrows of Young Werther, a copy of which is found alongside his body.Brown, William Hill. The Power of Sympathy. New York: Penguin Books, 1996. p. 100. These excesses are contrasted with the rational thinking of characters like Worthy, who strives to uphold normative social and moral ideals. While the overly sympathetic characters do not survive the course of the novel, the rational characters do survive, suggesting that at the very least, a balance of sympathy and rational thinking (or the use of reason to overcome passion) are necessary for a productive, successful member of society.{{according to whom?|date=January 2017}}
Another scholarly discussion surrounding the text is the question of its ability to serve as a didactic text for 18th-century readers, with earlier critics unquestioningly discussing the novel's didactic intent;Walser, Richard. "Boston's Reception of the First American Novel". Early American Literature 17(1): 65–74. p. 72. more recent scholars, however, have questioned the novel's ability to teach morality yet frankly discuss seduction and incest. The novel's preface claims that it is:
{{quote|Intended to represent the specious causes, and to Expose the fatal CONSEQUENCES, of SEDUCTION; To inspire the Female Mind With a Principle of Self Complacency, and to Promote the Economy of Human Life.}}
Brown claimed that the purpose of his text was to teach young women how to avoid scandalous errors. Although discussions of seduction and incest are included to illustrate their potential dangers, some scholars{{who|date=January 2020}} have asserted that these issues overshadow the morality lesson and argue that 18th-century readers read such novels for the thrill of taboo discussions, not moral guidance.{{according to whom?|date=January 2017}}
Notes
{{reflist|colwidth=33em}}
References
- Brown, William Hill and Hannah Webster Foster. The Power of Sympathy and The Coquette. (Penguin Classics, 1996)
- Byers Jr., John R. A Letter of William Hill Brown's (in Notes). American Literature 49.4 (January 1978): 606–611.
- Ellis, Milton. The Author of the First American Novel. American Literature 4.4 (January 1933): 359–368.
- Lawson-Peebles, Robert. American Literature Before 1880. London: Pearson Education, 2003.
- Martin, Terrence. William Hill Brown's Ira and Isabella. The New England Quarterly 32.2 (June 1959): 238–242.
- Murrin, John M. et al. Liberty, Freedom, and Power: A History of the American People. Volume I., 4th ed. pp. 252–253. (Wadsworth, 2005)
- Shapiro, Steven. The Culture and Commerce of the Early American Novel: Reading the Atlantic-World System. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2008.
- Walser, Richard. More About the First American Novel. American Literature 24.3 (November 1952): 352–357.
- Walser, Richard. The Fatal Effects of Seduction (1789) Modern Language Notes 69.8 (December 1954): 574–576.
External links
- [https://archive.org/details/cu31924021986306 The Power of Sympathy] at the Internet Archive
- {{librivox book | title= The Power of Sympathy | author=William Hill Brown }}
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