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Full Text:
A Little Literary Gem Tells Of A Local Writer's Newtown Retreat
(with book cover & photo)
BY SUZANNA NYBERG
The last decade of the 19th century was a heady one for students of
literature.
Bram Stoker wrote Dracula and Sigmund Freud finally published The
Interpretation of Dreams. After a series of glittering triumphs, Oscar Wilde
went to jail, only to emerge a broken man. The first newsstand magazine in the
United States was released, and the first narrative reports of baseball games
were written. Rudyard Kipling wrote the now infamous White Man's Burden ;
Yeats' poetic career was launched; Thomas Hardy abandoned the novel after
being vilified for Jude the Obscure.
In Newtown, Julia Sherman Hallock wrote and published a tiny volume, Broken
Notes From a Gray Nunnery.
Today, there are only three extant copies of this work.
The work is charming. Its charm lies in the sense of seclusion, the feeling of
religious rest that suffuses the writing, the solitude that is necessary to
reflect on the goodness of nature and enjoy the peace of God. It is not poetry
and yet it reads like verse. It is as touching as anything the local color
writers of the era ever wrote and it is as perceptive as Henry David Thoreau's
observations from Walden Pond.
"I treasure it as much as anything I have in my library," said Carolyn Stokes,
curator of the Booth Library. Another owner of the work rereads it every year.
An unusually literary diary, Julia's volume chronicles her departure from a
city to the Gray Nunnery, her friend Phyllis's old gray house that can still
be seen from Route 34. There she achieves a remarkable fullness of being.
Julia herself acknowledges the shift in perspective: "I was lingering in the
city, amid uncongenial surroundings," she writes of the time Phyllis summoned
her to the country. "At that time the fetters seemed to drop from my soul."
Later she remembers what it was like to have been throttled in captivity and
says that, "In my heart I must always keep a great pity for prisoners."
The Gray Nunnery became Julia's center, her London or Paris, the hub of her
universe. Indeed the house and its environs afford as much for her to talk
about as any metropolis.
Every day Julia plunges into a world where she finds more than she would have
in a cyclone of people. She sees so little and yet sees so much: marsh
marigold, wild fennel, swamp azalea, wild columbine; alarmingly purple and red
skies strike her blind; the chickadees receive her with tender chirps; Mrs
Phoebe disappears tragically and her mate waits broken-hearted, just as
Whitman's mockingbird did. It's enough to give one vertigo. Nothing is a bore,
and Julia's not in love.
Each entry begins with a comment on the weather: whether or not the skies were
serene, which way the winds blew, how it stormed. January was dark, cold and
snowy, but Julia never seemed tired of it. February was like January and the
lanes leading to the Nunnery were impassable. So she sat before the fire, the
wet snow falling from the sky, having tea with Phyllis. March was crowded,
working to get ready for spring, and when April came, the Nunnery had a genial
and blooming air.
Then, the Nunnery in the summer! On June 10, Julia writes:
This morning I went out to meet the sure welcome of the fields. The
sun-steeped grasses were breathing incense after the showers of last night,
and all the leaves and stems were full of fragrance. Ferns leaned out from the
gray wall's shelter, in happy family groups, bowing and beckoning all together
... A butterfly, all lilac and silver, spread buoyant wings and hovered along
the way alluringly. Eye-bright blossoms in the friendly grass shone blue and
pure as the glances of little children; venerable dandelions, stiff and tall,
were shaking hoary heads at their gay young sisters as if they had forgotten
their own coquettish youth.
To the reader's regret, the last months of the year run rapidly off Julia's
pen. Her knowledge blends so smoothly with the journal that its teachings are
almost hidden.
Autumn was active, but the weather turned cold and the days short. Julia's
pity does not end with the vertebrates. Even the mites, whom she carelessly
handled, are God's creatures, not less than dogs or sparrows. When she found
something that looked like a "coarse fringe" near some stonework:
Instead of standing reverently before this miracle, my idle curiosity put out
a careless hand, and with one little brush sent the whole frail wonder to
destruction. Then I discovered that each strand was a kind of dry hanging
well, walled with grains of earth and holding countless pale, naked mites that
wriggled feebly as they tried to extricate themselves from the ruins. If I had
been a genuine tornado I couldn't have felt meaner... How were those grains of
earth persuaded to hold so lightly together in the face of wind and damp and
the law of gravitation?
These sentiments, of course, are heresy, and 500 years ago Julia would have
been burned.
Human affairs offer nothing to interest Julia. She meets few people, gets no
news, hears no gossip. "As for our neighbors, they are all too far off to even
show us the smoke from their chimneys," she writes. She does not dine at
restaurants or go to concerts. She walks, and when she is not walking, she is
stretched in a hammock.
"Plenty of exercise and fresh air the well-being of my soul demands always,"
she declares. She seems quiet and contented and grown-up, as though she
refuses ever to be agitated. As long as she has something to do, life is not a
task.
Still, things are not always what they seem. Julia's surface conceals depths;
at the same moment that she is soothing, she is also disquieting. She slowly
reveals a hidden side, disclosing unexpected qualities in passionate
outbreaks. Contradictions are necessary; all life is filled with them and
Julia should not be any different.
Thanks to the work of resident genealogist Harlan Jessup, we may know
something of Julia's life. Records indicate that a Julia Sherman was born in
1847 and that she died in 1930. She married Egbert A. Hallock of Washington in
1875 when she was 28 and he was 25. Both were residents of Newtown at the time
of the marriage.
There are blank spaces in Julia's life, such as how many years she lived in
Newtown. Filling in the blanks can be left to future scholars: they can find
out who Julia was; they can trace her movements; they can date the years of
her life; and in the meantime, we can reread The Broken Notes, which sits
waiting for us in the Booth Library's collection of local authors.
To the very young, I do not recommend it. The young like narratives and need
action; but those who have lived a bit longer and are a bit tired can come
here and open the book and find rest.
