Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 January 2017
The diaries and other papers of the Oxford classics teacher Arthur Sidgwick (1840–1920) show how men like Sidgwick used ancient Greek to demarcate the boundaries of an elite male social, emotional, and educational sphere, and how that sphere became more porous at the turn of the twentieth century through processes such as university coeducation. Progressive dons like Sidgwick stood by women's equality in principle but were troubled by the potential loss of an exceptional environment of intense friendships forged within intellectually rigorous single-sex institutions. Several aspects of Sidgwick's life and his use of Greek exemplify these tensions: his marriage, his feelings about close male friends, his life as a college fellow, his work on behalf of the Oxford Association for the Education of Women, and his children's lives and careers. The article recovers a lost world in which Greek was an active conversational language, shows how the teaching of classics and the inclusion of women were intimately connected in late-nineteenth-century Oxford, and suggests some reasons why that world endured for a certain period of time but ultimately came to an end. It offers a new way of explaining late-nineteenth-century cultural changes surrounding gender by placing education and affect firmly at their center.
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23 Arthur Sidgwick, letter to Henry Sidgwick, n. d., c. December 1875, Add. Ms. c. 95, fol. 75, Trinity College, Cambridge (hereafter TC); Charlotte Sidgwick, letter to Henry Sidgwick, n. d., c. December 1875, fol. 76; Henry Sidgwick, letter to Mary Sidgwick, December 1875, Add. Ms. c. 105, fol. 19; James M. Wilson, James M. Wilson: An Autobiography (London, 1932), 238–39.
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29 “γυμνούμενοι δὲ σώματ’ ἐς λίμνην τάχα, / συνῇσσον ἁνήρ θ’ ἥ τ’ ἐπήρατος γυνή / ὡς ἐν ῥοαῖς φύγωσι καύμαθ’ ἡλίου / χαράν τ’ ἔχωσι σωμάτων ἀμφι πτυχαῖς,” Sidgwick, Diaries, 3:103. I am grateful to Will Guast for assistance with this translation.
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45 Ibid., 69–83.
46 Schultz, Henry Sidgwick, 489.
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68 Sidgwick, “On Stimulus,” 46.
69 Sidgwick, “School Subjects Utilised for Moral Instruction,” 144.
70 Hardie, Corpus Christi College, 73.
71 For the Pelican Essay Club poem see “ΤΕΙΡΕΣΙΑΣ ΚΟΡΠΥΝΤΙΟΣ,” Pelican Record 4, no. 4 (June 1898): 103–5.
72 Hardie, Corpus Christi College, 23.
73 Pelican Essay Club Minute Books, 1881–1914, E/5/1–4, 145, 157, Corpus Christi College, Oxford (hereafter CCC); Owlet Club Minute Books, 1889–1914, E/6/1–9, CCC, see esp. vol. 2, 97, and vol. 3, flyleaf. Sidgwick, Diaries, 3:231, notes Pelican and Owlets annual dinners on 16 and 17 June 1892.
74 E.g., Pelican Minute Books, 151; Owlet Minute Books, 53, 58–59.
75 Joyce, The State of Freedom, 330–32.
76 Pelican Minute Books, 1:151, 2:62, 71, 109.
77 Stray, Classics Transformed, 146.
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79 Anonymous poem in Pelican Record 7, no. 1 (December 1903): 9: “In prose and verse, in Latin & in Greek, / We've one as deep in Home Rule as in Homer; / Dodona's oaks he sugars once a week; / His rooms are fragrant with bacchic aroma; / Through him the Pelican has learnt to speak— / ‘Sidgwickian Zeus’, it said; ‘tis no misnomer. / From Cambridge we appointed this divinity, / Adviser–general to the whole community”; Hardie, Corpus Christi College, 73.
80 Sidgwick, Diaries, 3:130, 272, 274, 4:102, 107, 120, 138, 5:22.
81 Sidgwick, “The Teaching of Classics as Literature”; idem, Teaching of Composition.
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85 “AEW Annual Report,” October 1879, AEW Records 1/1, St. Anne's College, Oxford.
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89 Sutherland, Faith, Duty, and the Power of Mind, 95–96; “Minutes of the AEW,” 50.
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98 “AEW Minutes,” 50, 146.
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101 Sidgwick, Diaries, 3:161, 4:9, 62–3, 67, 95, 97, 165.
102 “Visit of the British Educational Mission to the United States” (pamphlet), 1918, MS Eng. misc. c. 706d, 18, BL; Margery Fry, “In Memoriam. Rose Sidgwick,” 1919, MS Eng. misc. c. 706, fol. 3, BL; Muirhead, “Miss Rose Sidgwick” (typescript copy of address), 31 January 1919, MS Eng. misc. c. 706, fols. 4–7, BL.
103 Rose Sidgwick, “Diary of US trip,” Margery Fry Papers, Box 30 Folder 3, Somerville.
104 For examples see Caroline Spurgeon, “University Women and World Friendship” (typescript), September 1922, Caroline Spurgeon Papers PP7/6/3, Royal Holloway University London; Mrs. Cummings, Willoughby, “A Women's League of Nations,” Montreal Listening Post (6 May 1924), Spurgeon Papers, PP7/6/5/1Google Scholar.
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106 “Mr. Frank Sidgwick (obituary),” Times, 15 August 1939, 14; Papers of Sidgwick and Jackson, MSS Sidgwick and Jackson, 1–381, BL; A. Hugh Sidgwick, letter to Margaret Sidgwick, 29 June 1917, MS Eng. lett. c. 473, fol. 111, BL; Gilbert Murray, letter to Ethel Sidgwick, 21 July 1917, MS Gilbert Murray 168, fols. 127–28, BL.
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110 See, for instance, a scholarly article that Housman, A. E. wrote entirely in Latin on sex in Greek and Latin poetry: “Praefanda,” Hermes 66, no. 1 (January 1931): 402–12Google Scholar.
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112 Deslandes, Oxbridge Men, 197; Arthur Sidgwick, letter to the editor, Oxford Magazine 2, no. 7 (5 March 1884): 140.
113 Joyce, The State of Freedom, 309.
114 For a vivid evocation of this principle see Hilliard, English as a Vocation, 251–58.