This section contains 6,724 words (approx. 23 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Fussell, Edwin Sill. “Wieland: A Literary and Historical Reading.” Early American Literature 18, no. 2 (fall 1983): 171-86.
In the following essay, Fussell suggests that Clara Wieland's struggle to produce the narrative of her family story parallels Brown's struggle to produce a new American literature.
I entreated him to tell me … what progress had been made in detecting or punishing the author of this unheard-of devastation.
“The author!” said he; “Do you know the author?”
“Alas!” I answered, “I am too well acquainted with him. The story of the grounds of my suspicions would be painful and too long.”1
Dark Transitions
Born January 17, 1771, in the proprietary colony of Pennsylvania, a presumably loyal subject of the crown; five years old when the American Revolution broke out; twelve years old when the Treaty of Paris was signed; eighteen years old when the Constitution was ratified: if not in 1776 or 1783 then certainly in...
This section contains 6,724 words (approx. 23 pages at 300 words per page) |