Mabel Loomis Todd

Mabel Loomis Todd

Mabel Loomis as a young girl, c. 1866
Born November 10, 1856
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Died October 14, 1932(1932-10-14) (aged 75)
Hog Island, Maine
Occupation writer and editor
Nationality U.S.
Subjects Emily Dickinson

Mabel Loomis Todd or Mabel Loomis (November 10, 1856 – October 14, 1932) was an American editor and writer, and the wife of the astronomer David Peck Todd. She is remembered as the editor of posthumously published editions of Emily Dickinson.

Contents

Biography

Todd was born Mabel Loomis in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She graduated from Georgetown Seminary in Washington, D.C., then studied music at the New England Conservatory in Boston.

On March 5, 1879, she married astronomer David Peck Todd, with whom she had one daughter, Millicent. Mabel Loomis Todd had a passionate sexual nature and wrote freely about it. She wrote soon after her marriage: "Sweet communions. Oh joy! Oh! Bliss unutterable" and "A little Heaven just after dinner." In May 1879, the day she got pregnant, she noted: "A very happy few minutes of love in our room."

She later had an affair with Austin Dickinson, the (married) brother of Emily.[1] According to Peter Gay's book, as reviewed in Time Magazine of January 23, 1984, Todd kissed Austin Dickinson after he had died, kissed "the dear body, every inch of which I know and love so utterly." As described by Lyndall Gordon, the affair—romanticized by Todd descendants—actually devastated Sue Dickinson, the wife of Austin, and impacted the writing of Emily, who is said to have had to witness audibly the ongoing affair, and to have been routinely displaced from her place of creative work to provide it an ongoing venue.[2]

Mabel Todd never met Emily Dickinson in person, and though the two women exchanged letters, it has been said that "Mabel effectively destroyed the Dickinson family".[3] It is also fair to say that without Mabel Loomis Todd, Dickinson's poetry would never have been published in book form and would never have reached a world-wide audience. After Emily's death in 1886, hundreds of her unpublished poems were discovered and Todd took to herself the task, with Dickinson family consent, to copy and organize the poems. The first volume of Poems by Emily Dickinson was published in 1890, and included many alterations by Todd and Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Higginson collaborated with Todd on Poems: Second Series in 1891. Higginson withdrew from further editorial collaboration so Todd edited a two volume set of Dickinson's letters (1894) and Poems: Third Series (1896) on her own.

In 1896, Todd and the Dickinson family had a falling-out over a legal battle regarding property owned by Austin Dickinson. As a result, Emily Dickinson's manuscripts were split between the two families. In 1945, Todd's daughter Millicent published some of the poems from Todd's portion of the manuscripts.[4]

Todd was a member of the Audubon Society.

Mabel Loomis Todd died in Hog Island, Maine.

Own works

External links

References

  1. ^ Austin and Mabel: The Amherst Affair & Love Letters of Austin Dickinson and Mabel Loomis Todd (ISBN 0-374-10716-5)
  2. ^ "Lives Like Loaded Guns: Emily Dickinson and Her Family Feuds, Viking Press, 2010
  3. ^ "Emily Dickinson, Sweeping up the Heart, Book Review, The Economist, 7 August 2010, p. 83.
  4. ^ Smith, Martha Nell. “Dickinson’s Manuscripts.” The Emily Dickinson Handbook. Ed. Gudrun Gabher, Roland Hagenbuchle, and Cristanne Miller Amherst, MA: U of Massachusetts P, 1998. 113-137. Print.