, Vol. 23, No. 5.
29
[A woman] has constantly changing domestics, with all varieties of temper and
habits, whom she must govern, instruct, and direct; she is required to regulate the
finances of the domestic state, and constantly to adapt expenditures to the means and
to the relative claims of each department. She has direction of the kitchen, where
ignorance, forgetfulness, and awkwardness are to be so regulated, that the various
operations shall each start at the right time, and shall be in completeness at the same
given hour. She has the claims of society to meet, calls to receive and return, and the
duties of hospitality to sustain...
124
For the most part, this is a role that women were supposed to accept upon marriage. “In
America, the independence of woman is irrevocably lost in the bonds of matrimony…” Alexis de
Tocqueville wrote. “[I]n the United States, the inexorable opinion of the public carefully
circumscribes woman within the narrow circle of domestic interests and duties, and forbids her
to step beyond it.”
125
Although Elizabeth is unmarried until the end of the novel, Cooper circumvents this
problem by posting her in a de facto role of “lady of the house.”
“My daughter has now grown to woman’s estate, and is from this moment
mistress of my house,” said the Judge; “it is proper that all who live with me address
her as Miss Temple.”
“Do tell!” exclaimed Remarkable, a little aghast; “well, who ever heerd of a young
woman’s being called Miss? If the Judge had a wife now, I shouldn’t think of calling
her anything but Miss Temple; but—”
“Having nothing but a daughter you will observe that style to her, if you please, in
future,” interrupted Marmaduke.
126
Cooper has allowed Elizabeth to assume the role of mistress of the house without yet
being married, a device that allows him to demonstrate the role of women domestically without
sacrificing her role later in the novel as the future wife of Oliver. Through her character we can
therefore view the tangible domestic role of women as well as their moral
domesticating
role in
the new republic. This dualistic role of women in early American society was critical in that it
allowed women to begin to function as political actors, without yet putting them on the political
stage. Linda Kerber, who coined the term “republican mother,’ wrote that the concept “altered
the female domain in which most women had always lived out their lives...” Women now had a
124
Catherine Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe, The American Woman's Home, c. 1841, Project Gutenberg
Ebook, December, 2002
125
Heffner 235-236
126
Cooper 101
30
quasi-political role –as moral influences on men and on their children. “The concept began to fill
the gap left by the political theorists of the Enlightenment.”
127
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