Talk:Ella Rhoads Higginson
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The contents of the Ella Higginson page were merged into Ella Rhoads Higginson. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page. |
from merged biography
editBiography
editIn addition to her poetry, she also published novels and short story collections, including The Flower that Grew in the Sand (1896), The Forest Orchid and Other Stories (1897), Mariella-of-Out-West (1902), Alaska the Great Country, and From the Land of Snow Pearls.[1][2] In 1902 she published a poetry collection, When the Birds Go North Again, which the New York Times praised for its "depth and delicacy of feelings".[2] She published the poetry collection The Vanishing Race and Other Poems in 1911.[2] Her best known work is the poem "Four Leaf Clover", which was first published by West Shore Magazine in 1890.[1][3]
The Ella Higginson Papers are open to the public and are held at the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Heritage Resources, Western Washington University.[1]
The royal scandal
editHigginson heard of the story alleging a secret marriage between a young British prince and the daughter of a high-ranking naval officer. She retold it, with poetic licence, in Alaska (1909). In her version, when the young prince had to renounce this marriage, his beloved was given the royallest of exiles: near the City of Vancouver "in the western solitude, lived for several years -- the veriest remittance woman -- the girl who should now, by the right of love and honor, be the Princess of Wales, and whose infant daughter should have been the heir to the throne."[4]
The radical publisher Edward Mylius was charged under English law with criminal libel for publicising the story in 1910, as journalism not poetic legend, just as George V was about to be crowned. The The International Socialist newspaper of Sydney, Australia, then offered a new twist on this. Alaska: The Great Country had been acquired by the city's library in 1910. The newspaper mischievously opined that Lord Mayor Allen Taylor, as head of the City Council and thus responsible for its library, was as guilty as Mylius in publishing " the same statement with a cheerful disregard for the possibility of things", informing its readers that "the issuing of [a library book] constitutes publication under the law".
"Mylius's libel wasn't any stronger, and this paper declares that what is sauce for the Mylius goose should also be sauce for the Lord Mayor gander, and it is hereby demanded that the Lord Mayor and the City Librarian and various other persons be prosecuted for 'libelling the king,' and that they each be given one year's hard labor, and taken to Goulburn Jail in leg-irons.
It is needless to say that ' Alaska' will be withdrawn from the Free Library immediately after this article appears; therefore, those who wish to get the book and verify the libel for themselves will have to call early to avoid the crush."[5]
References
editReferences
- ^ a b c "Guide to the Ella Higginson Papers 1870-1940". Retrieved November 27, 2014.
- ^ a b c "Ella Higginson". Retrieved November 27, 2014.
- ^ Four-Leaf Clover, as published in Horner's Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature
- ^ Higginson, Ella (1909). Alaska: The Great Country.
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(help) - ^ "The King Again Libelled". Sydney, NSW, Australia: The International Socialist. 18 Mar 1911.
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Sources for expansion
editSee three stories from the Seattle Times from 2018, by Ron Judd, highlighting (among other things) the efforts of scholar Laura Laffrado to resurrect Higginson's legacy. -Pete Forsyth (talk) 17:23, 7 September 2020 (UTC)