Timeless Chautauqua
I have read almost all of Isabella Alden’s books, although I have only reviewed one that I bought as an e-book. Her other books I borrowed from the church library several years ago, and I always wanted to re-read them, but, as with so many good intentions, it never happened. This book happens to be one of the few I haven’t read before.
Mrs Martha Fenton, wife of Robert, and doting mother of son, Robert, is an excellent wife and mother, a housekeeper par excellence. Everything she does is for her family, especially her son, so one day when she can’t help him with a history question he asks her, she feels her lack of education deeply. Fortuitously, she hears that very day about a literary circle, the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle (those familiar with Alden’s books will know the background about Chautauqua), and it seems there are many CLSC branches across the country. Members study books, pledging themselves to forty minutes of study a day, and then they gather and discuss/debate what they have learned. Mrs Fenton is energised and decides to start a Literary Circle in Centreville, but how to go about it? After setbacks from a patronising pastor, and a class-conscious woman, Mrs Fenton gets encouragement from unexpected quarters, and at the first meeting of the Centreville Literary and Scientific Circle there is a good turnout with a diverse group of people. Included are three of the town’s “loafers”, eighteen-year old twins James (Jim) and Joseph (Joe) Ward, and nineteen-year old Paul Adams, as well as Caroline Raynor, Mrs Chester’s second girl (housemaid). The president of the Society is the Rev. Gilbert Monteith, D. D., a very eminent professor and an intellectual giant in Centreville.
Without going into details, the Circle is a success and has a profound impact upon many of those attending, and also upon the town as a whole. Come the season, a large number of the Centreville Circle journey to Chautauqua for the six- week programme, and if the Circle has a profound impact on some of the members, it is as nothing compared to the impact being in Chautauqua has. The speakers and preachers are distinguished and eloquent, including General Garfield (although this is election year 1880). Strangely, out of all those respectable members, the first two people to make a life-changing, eternity-changing decision are the least likely.
The characters are realistically portrayed and some of them show unlikeable qualities, but they also show the reality of the social divide of the time, and I became immersed in their stories. There are quite a number of humorous moments as well as some poignant ones, adding up to a very good story. As with all Mrs Alden’s books, her emphasis is on the gospel, and through her stories, she has ministered to an untold number of people; she is a missionary/evangelist through her novels, and I think this novel is possibly one of her best.
Footnote: digitisation has caused a problem with some words and names, the most common one seeming to be changing Fenton to Kenton (just saying).