Constance Naden
Constance Caroline Woodhill Naden (24 January 1858 – 23 December 1889) was an English writer, poet and philosopher. She studied, wrote and lectured on philosophy and science, alongside publishing two volumes of poetry. Several collected works were published following her death at the young age of 31. In her honour, Robert Lewins established the Constance Naden Medal and had a bust of her installed at Mason Science College (now the University of Birmingham). William Ewart Gladstone considered her one of the 19th century's foremost female poets.
Early life
Born 24 January 1858[1] at 15 Francis Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham, England to Thomas Naden, an architect, later president of the Birmingham Architectural Association, and Caroline Ann Woodhill Naden who died within two weeks of giving birth.[2] She was brought up by her mother's parents, Caroline and Josiah Woodhill,[3] from 12 days old until her grandparents' deaths.[1] Naden's well read and devout baptist grandparents lived at Pakenham House, Edgbaston.[2][4] Her father also lived with the Woodhills for many years.[1] At age 8 Naden was sent to a local Unitarian day school, where she developed a talent for painting.[2][4] She submitted some paintings to the Birmingham Society of Artists, one of which (titled ‘Bird’s Nest and Wild Roses’) was accepted for display at the Society's Spring Exhibition in 1878.[2]
Education
She became interested in philosophy, languages and the sciences. In 1879, Naden attended the Birmingham and Midland Institute to study botany and French,[2][4] and from 1881 to 1887 attended Mason Science College to study physics, geology, chemistry, physiology, and zoology,;[2][4] she also became a member of the Birmingham Natural History Society.[2] Naden also edited the Mason College magazine.[5]
From the late 1870s ownwards Naden developed a philosophy called Hylo-Idealism in collaboration with Robert Lewins, MD, who she first met in 1876 and corresponded with for the rest of her life. The key principle of this philosophy is that "Man is the maker of his own Cosmos, and all his perceptions - even those which seem to represent solid, extended and external objects - have a merely subjective existence, bounded by the limits moulded by the character and conditions of his sentient being." [6] She was interested in Herbert Spencer's concept of a unifying philosophy that sought to explain the universe through the principles of evolution.[7] In his work The Social Organism (1860), Spencer compares society to a living organism and argues that, just as biological organisms evolve through natural selection, society evolves and increases in complexity through analogous processes.[8] Naden agreed with this, since the theme of unity is central to Hylo-Idealism, which seeks to reconcile materialism and idealism, poetry and science, the self and other.
Writing career and adult life
In 1881, Naden published her first volume of poetry Songs and Sonnets of Springtime.[2][4] This is a diverse collection, and her sonnet sequence that describes the changing of the seasons is particularly notable.[9] In 1885 she won the "Paxton prize" for an essay upon the geology of the district.[2] She published a second volume of poetry A Modern Apostle, the Elixir of Life, the Story of Clarice, and other Poems in 1887. In this volume appear her best known poems, the 'Evolutional Erotics', which are written from a comic anthropological perspective about human relationships, using Darwin's theory of sexual selection as a basis. She also wrote in the Journal of Science, Knowledge, The Agnostic Annual and other periodicals.[2][4] She authored many of her scientific and philosophical essays under the signatures of CN, CA and Constance Arden.[5]
Also in 1887, she won the "Heslop" gold medal for her essay, Induction and Deduction. Her Grandmother Woodhill died on 21 June 1887[nb 1] and she inherited a considerable fortune, which allowed her to travel to Constantinople (Istanbul), Palestine, India, and Egypt[2][4] with her friend, Madeline Daniell. While in India she became interested in its society, particularly regarding equality and the position of women.
She returned to England in June 1888 and bought a house on Park Street, Grosvenor Square,[2] which she shared with Daniell.[3] She raised funding to allow Indian women to study medicine and became a member of the National Indian Association.[3] She joined the Aristotelian Society, endeavoured to form a Spencer society, and belonged to various societies of benevolent aims. On 22 Oct. 1889 she delivered an address upon Mr. Herbert Spencer's Principles of Sociology to the sociological section at Mason College.[2] She also spoke about the need for women's suffrage at public events, as recorded by reports in the Women's Penny Paper.[10][11]
Naden was described as:
slight and tall, with a delicate face and ‘clear blue-grey eyes.’ She was regular and active in her habits. She had a penetrating voice, and was thoroughly self-possessed in public speaking.[2]
She possessed the tendency to be somewhat aggressive and sarcastic in discussion, but was well-loved and had very warm personal and intellectual friendships.
Illness and death
In 1889 a diagnosis of infected ovarian cysts was deemed to require surgery; on the 5 December she was operated on by Lawson Tait, and while initially this was a success, on 23 December she died of a related infection.[12] Naden's last letter to Robert Lewins, which is printed on the opening pages of the 1891 essay collection Further Reliques of Constance Naden details the circumstances of the surgery and her worries regarding it.[13] She was buried in the nonconformist Key Hill Cemetery, Birmingham.[14]
Remembrance
She was lauded after her death for her philosophical writings, by Robert Lewins, M.D.,[15] her contributions to poetry, her support of the women's suffrage cause in popular women's periodicals,[16] and for her "Pantheistic view of immortality" by William Ewart Gladstone,[17] in which he ranked her among the nineteenth century's top female poets.[18] Lewins founded the Constance Naden Medal at Mason College in her honour,[17] which is awarded each year, first for the "best competitive philosophical essay" and now for the best Faculty of Arts Master's degree thesis.[19] Lewins also commissioned a bust of Naden which he presented to Mason's College. It sits on a plinth of three books, the spine of which are inscribed "Songs and Sonnets of Springtime and A Modern Apostle, The Elixir of Life, etc." on the front and "Induction and Deduction and Hylo-Idealism" on the back.[19] It was originally placed in the college's library. The school is now the University of Birmingham, and the bust stands in the Cadbury Research Library Reading Room.[19]
On 14 December 2009, the Birmingham Civic Society provided a commemorative blue plaque which was unveiled by the Lord Mayor. It is located at her childhood home, Pakenham House 20 Charlotte Road. The inscription reads "Constance C.W. Naden 1858-1889 Poet, Scientist and Philosopher lived here for most of her life."[20]
Posthumous publications
Three books were published posthumously, Induction and deduction, and other essays (1890), Further Reliques of Constance Naden (1891) and The Complete Poetical Works of Constance Naden (1894).[2][21] Herbert Spencer, who had been an important scientific and philosophical influence on her work, remarked: "I can think of no woman, save 'George Eliot,' in whom there has been this union of high philosophical capacity with extensive acquisition. Unquestionably her subtle intelligence would have done much in furtherance of rational thought; and her death has entailed a serious loss."[22]
Notes
References
- 1 2 3 William Richard Hughes; Charles Lapworth; Sir William Augustus Tilden; Robert Lewins (1890). Constance Naden: A Memoir. Bickers & Son. p. 6. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Naden, Constance Caroline Woodhill". Dictionary of National Biography. 40. London: Smith, Elder & Co. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike Licence.
- 1 2 3 "Featured New Women: Constance Naden (1858-1889)". The Latchkey - Journal of New Women Studies. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Christine L. Krueger (1 January 2009). Encyclopedia of British Writers, 19th and 20th Centuries. Infobase Publishing. p. 251. ISBN 978-1-4381-0870-4. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
- 1 2 Marion Thain, "Scientific Wooing": Constance Naden's Marriage of Science and Poetry' Victorian Poetry, 41.1 (2003), pp.151-169
- ↑ Constance Naden, ‘The Brain Theory of Mind and Matter’, in Induction and Deduction (London: Bickers & Son, 1890), p. 157
- ↑ "Constance Naden". University of Guelph. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
- ↑ Herbert Spencer (1860). "The Social Organism". The Westminster Review. reprinted in Herbert Spencer (1892), Essays: Scientific, Political and Speculative, London and New York
- ↑ Clare Stainthorp, 'Songs of Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter', Changeful yet Changeless blog (7 Jan 2015)
- ↑ 'Women Voters for the County Council', Women's Penny Paper, 12 Jan 1889, p.2
- ↑ 'The Women's Suffrage Question in Parliament', Women's Penny Paper, 15 Feb 1890, p.194
- ↑ Constance Naden: A Memoir, ed. William R. Hughes (London: Bickers & Son, 1890), p.56
- ↑ Further Reliques of Constance Naden, (London: Bickers & Son, 1891)
- ↑ 'Famous graves of Key Hill Cemetery in the Jewellery Quarter', Birmingham Mail, 7 Nov 2014.
- ↑ "Foreword". The Complete Poetical Works of Constance Naden. London: Bickers & Son. 1894. p. viii.
- ↑ Women's Penny Paper reports, 1889-90
- 1 2 Frederic Boase (1897). Modern English Biography: I-Q. Netherton and Worth. pp. Section 1, 1810. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
- ↑ Patricia Murphy (1 January 2006). In Science's Shadow: Literary Constructions of Late Victorian Women. University of Missouri Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-8262-6557-9. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
- 1 2 3 "Constance Naden (1858-1889)". National Recording Project. Public Monuments & Sculpture Association (PMSA). Retrieved July 2013. Check date values in:
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(help) - ↑ "Blue Plaque for Birmingham's Constance Naden". Birmingham Perspectives. Birmingham Civic Society newsletter: 12. Spring and Summer, 2010. Check date values in:
|date=
(help) - ↑ "The Complete Poetical Works of Constance Naden". The Victorian Women Writers Project (online version). 1894.
- ↑ William Richard Hughes; Charles Lapworth; Sir William Augustus Tilden; Robert Lewins (1890). Constance Naden: A Memoir. Bickers & Son. pp. 89–90. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
Further reading
- Virginia Blain (15 September 2009). Victorian women poets: a new annotated anthology. Pearson Longman. pp. 235–236. ISBN 978-1-4082-0498-6.
- E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. (1891), Constance Naden and Hylo-Idealism, London: Bickers & Son
- Julie S. Gilbert (1994), "Women Students and Student Life at England's Civic Universities Before the First World War", History of Education: 405–422
- William Ewart Gladstone (1890), "British Poetry of the Nineteenth Century", The Speaker (1): 34–35
- William R. Hughes, ed. (1890), Constance Naden: A Memoir, London: Bickers & Son
- George M. McCrie (27 June 2012), Further Reliques of Constance Naden: Being Essays and Tracts for Our Times (reprint), Forgotten Books, ASIN B008N5H048
- A.H. Miles (1893), Poets of the century, viii, pp. 571–578
- J. Jakub Pitha (1999), "Constance Naden", Dictionary of Literary Biography 199: Victorian Women Poets, Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Research, pp. 211–215
- R.K.R. Thornton, Marion Thain, ed. (1997), Poetry of the 1890s, London: Penguin
External links
- The Complete Poetical Works of Constance Naden
- Constance Naden: A Memoir (1890)
- Constance Naden's Year in Sonnets
- Works by Constance Naden at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)