Revolution and Romanticism

A facsimile reprint in the Revolution & Romanticism series chosen and introduced by Jonathan Wordsworth

ISBN 1 85477 194 9

200 x 127 mm 142 pages

JOANNA SOUTHCOTT

A Dispute between the Woman and the Powers of Darkness 1802

In 1792, when she was 42, Joanna Southcott began writing down her prophecies, sealing them against the day they were to occur. In 1801 her publications began to appear, written in a combination of prose - sometimes plain, sometimes incantatory - and primitive verse. This pamphlet of 1802 is a sample of the flood of writings which she poured forth until her death in 1814. Joanna is visited by Satan, or Apollyon, or a Friend of Satan, and disputes with him; she triumphs; she recounts her dreams of a flying horseman, a balloon, fires in the sky. A farmer’s daughter and one-time servant, she is a descendant of Bunyan in the period of Blake. Unlike Blake she reached a wide audience, speaking most directly to the poor and to women. Visionary, deluded, or mad, she was the object of veneration and focus of a large and devoted cult.

£25 $48

God is a liar. Thy writings are not true. Is Eastlake convinced, as the Spirit told thee? Is W. convinced, as the Spirit told thee? Is Pomeroy convinced, as the Spirit told thee? Is Moore convinced, as the Spirit told thee? Is Nutcombe convinced, as the Spirit told thee?
(page 67, Satan speaking)



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Poetry of the 1890s