Mrs. Gaskell is in the canon now, but that wasn’t always the case. Years ago, on a visit to my boyfriend’s parents, I was reading her unfinished novel, Wives and Daughter, which I’d bought at a university bookstore.

And then Somebody’s Boyfriend (I can’t remember to whom he belonged) mocked Mrs. Gaskell.
“What are you reading?”
I looked over my glasses. “It’s a rediscovered classic by Mrs. Gaskell, a Victorian writer.”
“Gotta be careful of those rediscovered writers.” He thought it was a scream that anyone would read Mrs. Gaskell. “It’s a con to sell books.”
I said coolly. “It’s a great book. Want to look at it?”
He did not take up this challenge. He thought it was too, too funny.
This is the kind of interaction women used to have with men about women’s literature. The professors (mostly male then) were vague about women writers. Occasionally they’d teach Jane Austen or Emily Dickinson. It was in Women’s Studies classes that you readSusanna Rowson, Kate Chopin, Tillie Olsen, and Dorothy Richardson.
I am a great fan of the liberal arts. I graduated with honors in School of Letters (a major long ago eliminated by the university), with an emphasis on classical languages. I was so attuned to Latin that I won the Latin Prize. But it’s when you start dreaming in Latin that you realize you’ve been enchanted by Roman magic.

And then I went to graduate school to get my M.A., in classics, a mystic, if rigorous experience. I was elated by the strange sound and sense of lucid, mysterious Greek tragedy but I relate more to the exquisite Rpman poetry. In graduate school, I taught first-year Latin and Virgil as a T.A., then worked for a year as a Visiting Lecturer.
How can I explain the enchantment of the classics? In T. S. Eliot’s brilliant essay, “What Is a Classic?”, he vigorously claims Virgil’s Aeneid is the only classic in the Western canon. He believes the Latin language was at the height of maturity in the first century BCE, and Roman civilization at its apex during Augustus’s reign.
And so I was devastated to read in a newspaper that the state university is considering cutting six low- enrollment programs, among them classical languages, Italian, Russian, women’s studies, African-American studies, and applied physics.
IT CAN’T HAPPEN HERE. The university has hung on to classics for years, even when some eastern colleges eliminated it.
We don’t believe in signs in the yard, but I may be the first on the block with a SAVE THE LIBERAL ARTS sign.
To celebrate and promote the endangered classics, I am posting a link below to an essay I wrote in 2022 about Ovid’s two poems about abortion (Amores). These are, to my knowledge, the first poems about abortion.
https://thornfieldhall.blog/ovid-on-his-mistresss-abortion-2/














