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Little, Jack, I., ed. Love Strong as Death: Lucy
Peel=s Canadian Journal, 1833-1836. Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University
Press, 2001. Pp. 240.
A newly married couple from the lesser
English gentry, Lucy and Robert Peel arrived in the Eastern Townships in April
1833. Lucy Peel kept a letter journal that was sent in instalments to their
families. This edition of Peel=s accounts is based on transcriptions
probably copied for circulation among family members. The last extant entry
dates from December 1836, when the couple decided to return to England.
Although the journal can be read as a self-consciously literary product
B a genre of crafted life and travel
writing from a particular period
B
the content is often private and timeless: a young couple justifying their
choices as to where and how they would live; reassuring their families as to
their happiness and the success of their marriage; and detailing their domestic
concerns.
The introduction and footnotes to this
edition contextualize the entries and make many useful links both to people and
events in the Eastern Townships region and to broader cultural, social, and
political processes on both sides of the Atlantic. J. I. Little notes the ways
in which the Peels= experience and this journal resembled or
differed from those of other gentry immigrants of the time to British North
America or elsewhere. Little=s introduction supplements his 1999
article for the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association: AGender and Gentility on the Lower
Canadian Frontier: Lucy Peel=s Journal, 1833-36.@ Both analyze the journal as a source
for social history, with some themes developed more in the article, but the
introduction to this edition adds more discussion of Peel=s letters as literary works in a
particular cultural context. For example, Little situates Peel=s response to and representation of
landscape within English Romanticism, within North American travel and emigrant
writing, and within the scholarship on cultural production as A a colonizing act in itself@ (p. 5). Little reminds us that the
contents of the journal were preselected and shaped by Peel for family
consumption, and that what we read are further transcriptions. Nevertheless,
what remained is fascinating in and of itself. Praising the generosity and
gregariousness of most of her fellow travellers or neighbours, Peel=s letter journal nevertheless shows her
repeated attempts to maintain social distances and distinctions between herself
and those she regarded as her social inferiors, all the more challenging
because of this generosity and gregariousness. As she portrayed herself in her
journal, Peel did this through behaviour, language, and sociability B primarily through social relations and
only secondarily through work or consumption. Although the Peels were able to
employ domestic and farm labour, they also engaged in domestic and farm work
themselves. Peel=s own portraits of and relationships with
the women who worked for her (whether as a live-in domestic servant or as a
midwife) seem more favourable as the journal progresses. One can only
speculate whether this portrayal reflects the greater skills and compatibility
of the women who figure in the journal at this point compared with those
earlier, or whether it indicates changes in Peel herself.
But the primary themes of these letters
were not the immigration experience, or the nature of the community the Peels
settled in, but the experience of romantic love and companionate marriage, the
parenting of infants and very young children, death and bereavement. Lucy Peel
is both idealistic and realistic in her motherhood, exalting maternal love
within a hierarchy of human feeling, but regretting too closely spaced
pregnancies. Nearly all of the letters are from Lucy, but a few are from
Robert, and they show his equal preference for private domesticity over public
life. Her portrait of her husband and his letters suggest not only the
emotional intensity of his attachment to his children and assistance at their
birth and in their care, but that he resisted pressures to become involved in
local government and politics. Robert Peel=s periodic involvement in domestic work can be
interpreted as a reflection of their material circumstances as settlers, and
his occasional needlework on home furnishings as an extension of his carpentry;
in these respects, the immigration experience changed his work in terms of
gender expectations and social identity from that associated with his
occupational profile: a naval officer and aspiring gentleman farmer. At times,
these letters suggest that the Peels might have seen themselves in contrast
with other social models, as in, for example, Robert Peel=s implied critique of men who did not
stay with their wives throughout labour and childbirth.
The end of their honeymoon with
picturesque landscape, homemaking, and family bliss came with the sudden death
of their first child before her first birthday. Lucy Peel portrays their grief
as understandably overwhelming, and here the letters provide a useful contrast
with portrayals of infant death and its impact on families in a later period.
The Peels= bereavement was no less powerful, but as
described in these letters, their mourning was more private and less materially
manifest than the bereavement practices of families of their class much later
in the century in urban settings; the Peels predated the late Victorian cult of
death and mourning. Nevertheless, it is their separation from the grave of
their first child that is portrayed as the greatest sacrifice they made in
returning to England after their three years of relatively unprofitable
farming,
Periodic reflections on this death
inspired the relatively few passages on religion in these letter journals, a
clear contrast with the genre of spiritual history in the diaries kept by many
evangelical writers. Instead, Lucy Peel portrays herself as a serious adherent
of the Church of England, though not, as she reassures her mother, Aenthusiastic.@ Whether from the cultivation of domesticity or a
mild Sabbatarianism, she notes that she and Robert resisted their neighbours= attempts to persuade them to go visiting
on Sundays. A brief passage conveys the varying degrees of church involvement
found in other communities in nineteenth century North America. Lucy noted the
clergyman=s pre-Sunday visits to local families and
his sermon urging the congregation to remain for the whole service Aeven if they did not partake of the Holy
Communion@ but she regretted that Amany persons left notwithstanding all he
said@ (p. 161).
Only very briefly mentioned in the
introduction, the musical subthemes in these letters will be of interest to
historians of music and music-making in early British North America. Lucy Peel=s training in voice, keyboard, and harp
was fairly typical for her gender and social status in England, but these
letters also suggest considerable talent and commitment. Until the arrival of
her harp, perhaps one of the new double-action pedal harps manufactured between
1811 and 1835, Lucy Peel took up the guitar available at the home of one of her
elite neighbours. Social exclusiveness, however, appears to have prevented her
from having regular access to a piano for several years until these same
neighbours themselves purchased one. Until that time, the only local piano
belonged to another musician who gave lessons, but she was a Acobbler=s wife@
who kept Ano servant@ and bound Athe
shoes for her husband.@ By the winter of 1835-36, Peel noted
musical progress: a church organ, and a few more pianos in the community. Her
early letters note that she composed a few things, and had begun compiling a
book for her daughter entitled ACanadian
Airs@ (published volumes by others with this
form of title dated from the early 1820s). At her daughter=s death she packed her harp away for six
months, and although she returned to playing, the journal notes no further
entries on composition.
This journal=s inclusion in the series AStudies in Childhood and Family in Canada@ reflects its greater usefulness as a
primary source for one gentry family=s
experience of a short but intense stage of early married live and parenthood,
than as a source in immigration history. As Little shows, the journal supports
the revisionist arguments of recent studies of gender and family in the British
Isles and in North America that the valuation and cultural celebration of
domesticity was not exclusively female, middle class, or evangelical. As these
studies and this journal show, Victorian gender identities included
possibilities for both women and men to cultivate and express their
sensibilities as conscientious and emotionally involved parents, and to
experience both the mundane routines and the powerful joy and grief of
parenting at a time when infant mortality was still relatively high.
Hannah
M. Lane
University
of New Brunswick
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