L. S. Bevington

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Louisa Sarah Bevington (born St John's Hill, Battersea, Surrey, now London Borough of Wandsworth, 14 May 1845; died Lechmere Road, Willesden Green, Middlesex, now London Borough of Brent, 28 November 1895) was an English anarchist, essayist and poet.

Early life and works

Bevington was the oldest of eight children (seven daughters) born into the Quaker family of Alexander Bevington and his wife Louisa. Her father's occupation was described as "gentleman", and in 1861–71 he was a member of Lloyd's.[1] Details of her education are unknown, but in the 1861 England census she is listed among the thirty scholars at a school run by a Miss Eliza Hovell at Marlborough House, Winchcombe Street, Cheltenham, while her parents and siblings are listed as residing at Walthamstow (with four house servants and a coachman). She began to write poetry at an early age, and probably made her verse debut with two sonnets in the Friends' Quarterly Examiner in October 1871.[2]

Bevington's first collection, Key Notes, a mere 23 pages, was published in London in 1876, under the pseudonym Arbor Leigh.[3] A second publication, Key-Notes: 1879,[4] appeared under the name L. S. Bevington and seemed to query some established Christian codes of conduct. A further volume of verse, Poems, Lyrics and Sonnets (1882) contained metrical experiments and remarks on the moribund state of Christianity.[5]

One prominent London weekly[6] wrote admiringly of a poem in Bevington's 1879 Key-Notes, describing it as "an exposition of the theory, physical and moral, of Evolution, which she entitles, 'Unto This Present'. If it were nothing else, it would be quite remarkable, as a literary tour de force, for the extraordinary ingenuity and success with which the writer has reduced to verse that never ceases to have a certain smoothness and even harmony, an argument bristling, so to speak, with philosophical terms. But it is more than this. It is a very eloquent and lucid philosophical statement, which, we take it, a scientific teacher would allow to give a clear and well-defined outline of the theory." Another reviewer, however, found that Bevington's style was one for which, "in the present condition of the English language, there is no vocabulary, but which exactly corresponds to the peculiar qualities known as 'goodiness,' 'cant,' and 'unctuosity,' when the writer or speaker happens to be content with the faith of his or her fathers. To us the style is equally offensive, whatever may be the opinions of the stylist, and we have rarely come across a more offensive example of it than these Key Notes … [Although] In the midst of this come a series of poems on the months, and a few miscellaneous songs which possess great simplicity, melody, and truth."[7]

More widely read and appreciated were her prose arguments on similar subjects. In an article in The Nineteenth Century in October 1879, entitled "Atheism and Morality", Bevington took a clear secularist position that provoked a clerical response. In December the same year, Bevington concluded a two-part essay entitled "Modern Atheism and Mr. Mallock", reacting to an attack on atheism in the same paper by a young Oxford graduate by putting forward a spirited defence of secular morality: "So far as human life is worth living, so far is it worth protecting. So far as it is not worth living, so far is it needful to ameliorate it. Duty, on secular principles, consists in the summarized conduct conducive to the permanent protection and progressive amelioration of the human lot.... Religion's foster-child, Society, must eventually learn to trust her own two feet of civil and moral law, and run alone."[8]

A further contribution to this debate was prompted by a letter to Bevington from the philosopher Herbert Spencer, pointing out that rationalists showed greater humanity than adherents of organized religion.[9] Her exposition of this appeared in The Fortnightly Review in August 1881 under the title "The Moral Colour of Rationalism". The discussion continued as an altercation between Spencer and the historian Goldwyn Smith in The Contemporary Review.

In 1883 Bevington travelled to Germany, where on 2 May that year she married the artist Ignatz Guggenberger in Munich.[10] In 1888, however, writing under her maiden name, she complained that "The minor and superficial domesticities of the hour are [the German woman's] only field of aspiration; klatsch [gossip] with her feminine acquaintances, or hanging out of window, are the most usual delights of her leisure hours; and even within the province assigned to her she habitually shrinks from the smallest mental departure on her own account … [The] majority of German women are decidedly poor company, and the German home is humdrum and barren of all attraction for the other sex."[11] Her marriage lasted only until 1890, when she returned to London. There she began to move in anarchist circles and continued to use her maiden name.[12] (In 1891 she commented to an unknown correspondent that she preferred "L. S. Bevington" to "Miss Bevington", as she routinely objected to "Mrs" and "Miss", and suggested that her married name, Guggenberger, would have value only as an afterthought in a German publication. The letter was signed "L. S. Guggenberger".)[13]

Anarchist writings

Bevington quickly came to know many London anarchists and gain a name as an anarchist poet. This was probably achieved through Charlotte Wilson, who with Peter Kropotkin had founded the anarchist paper Freedom in 1886. However, Bevington rejected the tactics of bombs and dynamite and became associated with another paper, Liberty, edited by the Scottish anarchist and tailor James Tochatti (1852–1928), for which she wrote numerous articles and poems. She also contributed to The Torch, which was edited by Helen and Olivia Rossetti, nieces of the painter. She also wrote an Anarchist Manifesto distributed in 1895 for the short-lived Anarchist Communist Alliance, and translated an essay on the Paris Commune by Louise Michel, who became a friend.[12]

Shortly before her death as a result of dropsy and mitral heart disease on 28 November 1895 at the age of fifty, Bevington wrote further articles for Liberty and had a final collection of poems published,[12] of which some were later set to music.[14] One of the poems she contributed to Liberty that year was "The Secret of the Bees", which includes the lines, "What man only talks of, the busy bee does;/Shares food, and keeps order, with no waste of buzz."[15]

Among those attending the funeral of Louisa Sarah Bevington at Finchley cemetery were Tochatti, Kropotkin, and the Rossetti sisters.[12]

The Collected Essays of L. S. Bevington were reprinted in 2010.[16]

External resources

References

  1. 'Bevington, Colin Corry', at http://www.bishopburton.org.uk/s1/attachments/article/410/CC%20Bevington.pdf.
  2. Orlando project biography. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  3. British Library Catalogue. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  4. British Library Catalogue. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  5. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English, eds Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 91.
  6. The Spectator, 18 October 1879.
  7. The Examiner, 12 April 1879.
  8. The Nineteenth Century, December 1879, pp. 1001 and 1015. Quoted in Barbara Gates: Victorian Suicide: Mad Crimes and Sad Histories (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1988), p. 153. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  9. Letter of 18 May 1881, quoted in David Duncan: The Life and Letters of Herbert Spencer (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014 [1908]), p. 216. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  10. 'Marriages', Sussex Agricultural Express, 8 May 1883.
  11. L. S. Bevington, 'Women in Germany', Woman's World, August 1888, as quoted in the Dorking and Leatherhead Advertiser, 11 August 1888.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 "Bevington, Louisa Sarah, 1845–1895" Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  13. Summary of a letter of 25 December 1891 to 'Dear Sir' in the Allison-Shelley manuscript collection of Pennsylvania State University Libraries.
  14. British Library Catalogue. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  15. Quoted in Laurel Brake and Marysa Demoor: Dictionary of Nineteenth-century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland (Gent: Academia Press/London: British Library, 2009), p. 53. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  16. Bevington, L. S., and Jackie Dees Domingue: Collected Essays of Louisa Sarah Bevington (1879–1896) (Ann Arbor, Mich: Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 2010).