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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2009
That Ellen Glasgow was the grande dame of One West Main Street, Richmond, Virginia, is a fact known to everyone. That as a novelist she was from the beginning a part of the modern southern literary tradition and that she was shaped by the same fundamental impulses which went to make the “Southern Renascence” has been less widely understood. This fact has resulted in part from the circumstance that much of her work was written early in this century and that before the spectacular upheaval in southern writing which marked the 1930s, she had established a secure position, which she did not elect to desert when the winds of a newer modernism began to blow.
1. Holman, C. Hugh, “Ellen Glasgow and the Southern Literary Tradition,” Southern Writers: Appraisals in Our Time, ed. Simonini, R. C. Jr (Charlottesville: Univ. Press of Virginia, 1964), pp. 103–23.Google Scholar
2. Rubin, Louis D. Jr., The Writer in the South: Studies in a Literary Community (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1972)Google Scholar; Simpson, Lewis P., “The Southern Novelist and Southern Nationalism” and “The Southern Writer and the Great Literary Secession,” both in his The Man of Letters in New England and the South (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Univ. Press, 1973).Google Scholar
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8. Ibid.
9. Glasgow, Ellen, The Woman Within (New York, 1954), p. 129.Google Scholar
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12. Ibid., p. 3–5, 48–49, 66–72, and passim.
13. Cabell, James Branch, As I Remember It: Some Epilogues in Recollection (New York: The McBride Co., 1955), pp. 219–21.Google Scholar
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15. Murr, Judy Smith, “History in Barren Ground and Vein of Iron: Theory, Structure, and Symbol,” Southern Literary Journal, 8 (Fall 1975), 39–54Google Scholar, despite its ostensible subject, does not deal with the issues of the relationship of history and fiction; rather, it deals with the synecdochical substitution of individual fictional lives for the larger sense of history.
16. Certain Measure, p. 72.Google Scholar
17. Woman Within, p. 104.Google Scholar
18. She declared that she realized on publishing her first book that she “needed a technique of writing” (Woman Within, p. 123)Google Scholar and A Certain Measure demonstrates her continuing concern with fictional technique.
19. Certain Measure, p. 11.Google Scholar
20. Woman Within, p. 24.Google Scholar
21. Ibid., p. 47.
22. Ibid., p. 120.
23. Certain Measure, pp. 16–17.Google Scholar
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27. Woman Within, p. 128.Google Scholar
28. Certain Measure, p. 16.Google Scholar
29. Ibid., p. 24.
30. Glasgow, Ellen, The Battle-Ground, Old Dominion edition (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran Co., 1929), p. vii.Google Scholar
31. Certain Measure, p. 12.Google Scholar
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33. Certain Measure, p. 20.Google Scholar
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35. Ibid., pp. 38–40, 64.
36. Simms, W. Gilmore, Mellichampe: A Legend of the Santee (New York, 1853), p. 30Google Scholar
37. [Simms, William Gilmore], “Ellet's Women of the Revolution,” Southern Quarterly Review, 17 (1850), 351.Google Scholar
38. Certain Measure, p. 21Google Scholar; The Battle-Ground (Old Dominion ed.), p. viii.Google Scholar
39. Certain Measure, p. 21.Google Scholar
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41. Santas, Joan Foster, Ellen Glasgow's American Dream (Charlottesville: Univ. Press of Virginia, 1965), p. 55n.Google Scholar
42. Certain Measure, p. 6.Google Scholar
43. Godbold, , p. 59.Google Scholar
44. Certain Measure, p. 21.Google Scholar
45. Ibid., p. 6.
46. Rouse, Blair, ed., Letters of Ellen Glasgow (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1958), p. 30.Google Scholar
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48. The Battle-Ground (Old Dominion ed.), p. viii.Google Scholar
49. An excellent, appreciative discussion of these two novels of Mary Johnston's is Nelson, Lawrence G., “Mary Johnston and the Historic Imagination,” in Southern Writers: Appraisals in Our Time, pp. 71–102.Google Scholar
50. Lively, Robert A., Fiction Fights the Civil War (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1957), pp. 32–33Google Scholar. The date of her birth represents a common error. She was born in 1873; see DAB, Supplement Three, p. 302.
51. The Battle-Ground (Old Dominion ed.), p. vii–viii.Google Scholar
52. Santas, Joan (p. 51)Google Scholar cites Page, Thomas Nelson's picture of southern Unionists who fought in the Confederate army, in The Old Dominion: Her Making and Manners (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1908), pp. 240–41Google Scholar, as evidence of the accuracy of the portrayal of Peyton Ambler.
53. Santas, Joan (p. 55)Google Scholar cites Bagby, George W.'s The Old Virginia Gentleman and Other Sketches (New York, 1910)Google Scholar, on the accuracy of this view of how young Virginians went off to war.
54. Certain Measure, p. 13.Google Scholar
55. Ibid.
56. Ibid.
57. Certain Measure, p. 22.Google Scholar
58. Ibid.
59. Lively, , pp. 63, 191.Google Scholar
60. The Battle-Ground (New York, 1902), pp. 442–43.Google Scholar
61. Ibid., p. 427.
62. Ibid., pp. 478–79.
63. Ibid., p. 484.
64. Ibid., p. 485.
65. In a speech before the Southern Writers Conference, cited in Godbold, , p. 244.Google Scholar
66. The Battle-Ground (1902 ed.), pp. 492–93.Google Scholar
67. Ibid., p. 494.
68. Letters, pp. 153, 154Google Scholar and her review of So Red the Rose in the 07 22, 1934Google Scholar, New York Herald Tribune Books; Letters, p. 214Google Scholar; Auchincloss, Louis, Glasgow, Ellen (Minneapolis: Univ. of Minnesota Press, 1964), p. 12.Google Scholar
69. Letters, pp. 113–15, 118–20, 123–35, 136–42.Google Scholar
70. Certain Measure, p. 66.Google Scholar