Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Series Editor's Preface
- Introduction
- 1 ‘A wentche, a gyrle, a Damsell’: Defining Early Modern Girlhood
- 2 Roaring Girls and Unruly Women: Producing Femininities
- 3 Female Infants and the Engendering of Humanity
- 4 Where Are the Girls in English Renaissance Drama?
- 5 Voicing Girlhood: Women's Life Writing and Narratives of Childhood
- Epilogue: Mass-Produced Languages and the End of Touristic Choices
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Voicing Girlhood: Women's Life Writing and Narratives of Childhood
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Series Editor's Preface
- Introduction
- 1 ‘A wentche, a gyrle, a Damsell’: Defining Early Modern Girlhood
- 2 Roaring Girls and Unruly Women: Producing Femininities
- 3 Female Infants and the Engendering of Humanity
- 4 Where Are the Girls in English Renaissance Drama?
- 5 Voicing Girlhood: Women's Life Writing and Narratives of Childhood
- Epilogue: Mass-Produced Languages and the End of Touristic Choices
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In 1598, an eight-year-old Anne Clifford composed a letter to her father George, requesting his blessing and assuring him of her daughterly duty. Although brief, the letter was written on beautifully decorated paper with a border of colourful flowers, clearly indicating that it was an elaborate offering rather than a casual note. She wrote:
I humbly intreate your blessing and euer comend my duety and seruice to your Lo: praying I may be made happy by your loue I comend my seruice and leaue my trobling of your Lo: being your
Daughter in all
obedient duety
Anne Clifford
The tone of this letter is difficult to determine. The formality of addressing her father as ‘your Lordship’ follows early modern protocols of respect between aristocratic children and their parents, and it could indicate either a coldly official relationship or warm daughterly affection. It could be the writing of a girl going through the motions of pleasing an adult, or it could be the genuine expression of a passionate child. My own initial reaction to the letter was that it gives us very little insight into the child Anne's subjectivity, but I had to rethink my perspective when I came across a brochure for a June 2012 embroidery retreat in honour of Lady Anne Clifford where the internationally renowned needleworkers Phillipa Turnbull, Jane Nicholas, OAM, and Meredith Willett offered to teach students the techniques necessary to reproduce designs from early modern Britain, including one inspired by the flowers on Anne's letter to her father.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Girlhood of Shakespeare's SistersGender, Transgression, Adolescence, pp. 179 - 201Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2013