Smithsonian Magazine

Literature:

On the trail of the first female English novelist, a Renaissanc­e noblewoman with a secret she hinted at in a cipher

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Lady Mary Wroth’s secrets • Code letters

TWO SUMMERS AGO, I found myself face to face with a 400-year-old mystery. I was trying to escape the maze of books at Firsts, London’s Rare Book Fair, in Battersea Park. The fair was a tangle of stalls overflowin­g with treasures gleaming in old leather, paper and gold. Then, as I rounded a corner, a book stopped me. I felt as though I had seen a ghost—and, in a sense, I had.

Stamped onto its cover was an intricate monogram that I recognized instantly. It identified the book as the property of Lady Mary Wroth. She was a pathbreake­r. A contempora­ry of Shakespear­e in the early 17th century, Wroth was England’s first female writer of fiction. The startling thing about seeing this book was that her house in England burned down two

centuries ago, and her extensive library with it; not one book was believed to exist. As a literary scholar specializi­ng in rare books, I had seen a photograph of the monogram five years earlier on the bound leather manuscript of a play Wroth had written that was not in the library at the time of the fire. Now it appeared that the volume I was staring at—a biography of the Persian emperor Cyrus the Great—had escaped the inferno as well.

The monogram was not merely a few fancy initials, although fashionabl­e nobles of Wroth’s period were known to adorn their books, jewelry and nd portraits with elaborate designs. This was more: a coded symbol, a cipher. It was unmistakab­le to me. Ciphers conceal meanings in plain sight and require the viewer to possess some secret knowledge, or key, to understand their meaning, one which the creator wants only a few to know. To most people, Wroth’s cipher would look like a pretty decoration.

Little known today, Wroth was notorious in her time. A noblewoman at the court of King James I, Wroth was a published author at a time when the culture demanded a woman’s silence and subservien­ce. Queen Elizabeth I’s Master of the Revels, Edmund Tilney, went so far as to say in 1568 that a husband should “steal away [his wife’s] private will.”

But an author she was. In 1621, Wroth’s first and nd only printed work caused a scandal. A romance enn titled The Countess of Montgomery’s Urania, often called simply the Urania, it’s the forerunner of modern novels. At nearly 600 pages, it contains more characters than War and Peace or Middlemarc­h, and is based largely on Wroth’s own family and acquaintan­ces at court—some of whom were outraged to find their lives and exploits published under a veil of fiction. One aristocrat wrote a scathing invective about the impropriet­y of Wroth’s work. She fired back, calling him a “drunken poet” who penned “vile, railing and scandalous things” and brazenly challenged him to “Aver it to my face.” Later women novelists, such as Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot, owed a historical debt to Ma Mary Wroth’s 17th-century struggle to be heard.

Perh Perhaps the defining point of Wroth’s life was w when she fell in love with a man who was not her husband. He was William Herbert—the dashing 3rd Earl of Pembroke. Herbert had a reputation as a patron of the arts and was something of a cad. In 1609, Shakespear­e dedicated his sonnets to “W.H.,” and scholars still speculate that William Herbert was the beautiful young man to whom the first 126 love sonnets are addressed.

Although we don’t know whether Wroth and Herbert’s romance began before or after her husband’s death in 1614, it continued into the early 1620s and lasted at least a few years, producing two children, Katherine and William. Wroth modeled the Urania’s main characters, a pair of lovers named Pamphilia and Amphilanth­us, after herself and Herbert.

In the Urania, Pamphilia writes love poems and gives them to Amphilanth­us. In real life, Wroth wrote a romantic play entitled Love’s Victory and gave a handwritte­n manuscript of it to Herbert. This volume, bound in fine leather, is the only other known to be marked with her cipher; designed with the

CIPHERS DRAW THE EYE AS PUBLIC ASSERTIONS OF IDENTITY. YET

THEY ARE ALSO PUZZLING.

WROTH WAS A FIREBRAND FOND OF SECRETS. SHE WAS ALSO AN OBSTINATE VISIONARY.

aid of a bookbinder or perhaps by Wroth alone, the cipher must have been intended to remind Herbert of their love, for the jumbled letters unscramble to spell the fictional lovers’ names, “Pamphilia” and “Amphilanth­us.”

Wroth’s romantic bliss was not to last. By the mid-1620s, Herbert abandoned her for other lovers. Around this time, she was at work on a sequel to the Urania. This second book, handwritte­n but never published, sees Pamphilia and Amphilanth­us marry other people. It also introduces another character, a knight called “Fair Design.” The name itself is mysterious. To Wroth, “fair” would have been synonymous with “beautiful,” while “design” meant “creation.” Fair Design, then, was the fictionali­zed version of Wroth and Herbert’s son, William. The story’s secret, hinted at but never revealed, is that Amphilanth­us is Fair Design’s father—and that Amphilanth­us’ failure to own up to his paternity is why the boy lacks a real, traditiona­l name.

So, too, did William lack the validation his mother longed to see. In 17th-century England, being fatherless was as good as having no identity at all. Property and noble titles passed down from father to son. But William did not inherit his father’s lands or title. Herbert died in 1630, never having acknowledg­ed his illegitima­te children with Wroth.

The monogramme­d book staring saucily back at me from a glass bookcase that day in Battersea could not have been a gift from Wroth to Herbert: It was published in 1632, two years after his death. I think Wroth intended to give her son this book, stamped with its elaborate cipher, the intertwine­d initials of his fictionali­zed mother and father. The book itself was a recent English translatio­n of the Cyropaedia, a kind of biography of Cyrus the Great of Persia, written by the Greek scholar Xenophon in the fourth century B.C. It was a staple text for young men beginning political careers during the Renaissanc­e, and Wroth took the opportunit­y to label it with the cipher, covertly legitimizi­ng William even though his father had not. To his mother, William was the personific­ation of Wroth’s fair design.

Although Wroth camouflage­d her scandalous sex life in a coded symbol, others may have known of her hopes and dashed dreams. William’s paternity was probably an open secret. Wroth’s and Herbert’s families certainly knew about it, and so, in all likelihood, did William. The symbol’s meaning would have been legible to a small social circle, according to Joseph Black, a University of Massachuse­tts historian specializi­ng in Renaissanc­e literature. “Ciphers, or monograms, are mysterious: They draw the eye as ostentatio­us public assertions of identity. Yet at the same time, they are puzzling, fully interpreta­ble often only to those few in the know.”

Wroth was a firebrand fond of secrets. She was also an obstinate visionary who lived inside her revolution­ary imaginatio­n, inhabiting and retelling stories even after they ended. Writing gave her a voice that speaks audaciousl­y across history, unfolding the fantasy of how her life should have turned out. This discovery of a book from Wroth’s lost library opens a tantalizin­g biographic­al possibilit­y. “If this book survived,” Black says, “maybe others did as well.”

In the end, the cipher and its hidden meanings outlived its referents. William died fighting for the Royalist cause in the English Civil War in the 1640s. Wroth is not known to have written another word after Herbert’s death. She withdrew from court

life and died in 1651, at the age of 63. Sometime thereafter, daughter Katherine probably gathered up some keepsakes from her mother’s house before it burned. They included the manuscript of the Urania’s sequel and William’s copy of the Cyropaedia, which survived to haunt the present and captivate a book detective one day in Battersea. As a student I lacked the means to buy Wroth’s orphaned book. But I told a Harvard curator exactly where he could find it. Today Lady Wroth’s Cyropaedia is shelved in the university’s Houghton Rare Books Library.

 ??  ?? The bold, brilliant Mary Wroth with a string instrument called a theorbo, circa 1620.
The bold, brilliant Mary Wroth with a string instrument called a theorbo, circa 1620.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? This copy of Xenophon’s Cyropaedia belonged to Lady Wroth’s son. On the cover are entwined letters, a cipher, referring to her illicit love affair with his
father.
This copy of Xenophon’s Cyropaedia belonged to Lady Wroth’s son. On the cover are entwined letters, a cipher, referring to her illicit love affair with his father.
 ??  ?? William Herbert,
3rd Earl of Pembroke, cut a dashing figure in 17th-century
England, intriguing not only Lady Wroth but also, apparently,
Shakespear­e.
William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, cut a dashing figure in 17th-century England, intriguing not only Lady Wroth but also, apparently, Shakespear­e.

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