Pioneer Courage Sculpture, Blair Buswell and Edward Fraughton |
When Sayward sees that her brothers and sisters have grown
up, she gets lonesome. In their hijinks, a group of townsmen decide they should
marry off “the solitary.” “You can bring him to my cabin,” says Sayward. She
has noticed that though he drinks heavily, when Portius Wheeler makes a speech
on Independence Day, everyone takes note. An educated man, a “Bay State
lawyer,” no one knows why Portius is letting himself go to seed in their little
pioneer town.
Though Portius lights out the first night when the men try
to put him to bed with his new wife, he returns, telling her, “Let us not to
the marriage of true minds admit impediment.” He and Sayward make a good match
and have many children. At first they work together to clear trees and make a
farm. As the community grows, more people need Portius’ skill as a lawyer.
Sayward, who is illiterate, feels Portius should stick to his books and teach
the first school, making use of his education, while she works to enlarge the farm,
learning weaving and other skills.
After eight children, Sayward decides she doesn’t want any
more and says she won’t sleep in Portius’ bed. She is the last to know when Portius
takes up with a schoolteacher who has a child and is married off to Jake Tench,
one of the murkier characters of the town. When she does learn of it, Sayward
says nothing but goes out, yokes up the oxen and sets herself to plowing. “When
this inside of her wore off a little against Portius, she reckoned she’d better
move over here for the night … Of course, never had she thought she would sleep
in Portius’ off-the-floor bed, and rather she wouldn’t, but you didn’t go on
rathers in this life. She better go along quiet as she could now in her cherry
yoke and bear her load.” Sayward and Portius soon have two more children, but
the child the teacher bears also has a part in the story.
As the book continues, we see more of Sayward’s children.
The community is changing. The children listen rapt as Portius tries to talk
Sayward into giving up some land for a fine new house that Portius will put up
with money from his Bay State family. “Her eyes mutinied and her lips got
ropier, but never did she tell her true reason for not wishing to give up this
cabin. It was deep down, a part of her flesh and bones, and hardly would
Portius understand it, for he was of gentleman stock, used to riding and having
things done for him. Now she was of common stock, used to walking where she
wanted to go and working with her hands for what she got.”
When Portius runs out of money, Sayward is left to finish
the mansion house. It feels strange to her. “She would have given a good deal
to be back in the cabin, but she was only thankful she had a kitchen here. It
helped her to start a fire and feel her own pots and pans in her hands. Here
with the smell of mush and coffee over the fire, she believed she could come
when she got homesick and find relief.”
Perhaps I identify with Sayward as the oldest of a bunch of
siblings, but I also love her for her balance and sanity. Never for a moment
does Sayward forget who she is and who Portius was when she took him as a
husband. She has a lot to contend with in life, but she always stands on her
own two, and together, she and Portius are enormously productive. In the way of
my own family, hardly anything is discussed directly in Sayward’s family, but
everyone, through observation and custom, knows how each other feels. Often
what happens in a public gathering confirms what everyone knows is happening in
private.
Richter acknowledges his use of historical books and
manuscripts to develop the speech of the time. “This early, vigorous spoken
language, contrary to public belief, had its considerable origin in the
Northeastern states … [It should be] a living reminder of the great mother
tongue of early America,” says Richter. Though the point of view shifts, it is Sayward’s story which took over the book. It is a wonderful embodiment
of the history of the period. Richter was only ten years older than the much-admired Hemingway
and Faulkner. I am hard-pressed to find as wonderful a female character in
any of their work, however.
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ReplyDeleteMy favorite book. I read it again every few years. Although the TV mini-series was not as good, I still see Sayward and Portius as looking like Elizabeth Montgomery and Hal Holbrook. It was perfectly cast, just not as good as the books. I wish they would remake it and do all the chapters.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with you!! I re-read these books every so often, and would like to see a remake of this mini series also, but to tell the story closer to the books.
ReplyDeleteSometimes when life is hitting me real-bad-hard, I ask myself....."What would Sayward Luckett do!" I love it:))
I loved this mini-series and would love to read the books. Can't remember how her name was pronounced?
ReplyDeleteIt was pronounced Say-ard or Sardy.
ReplyDeletePortions pronounced it Sayward, because of its spelling, to which she agreed.
I love Sayward, and as several others have said, I reread this trilogy every few years.
ReplyDelete