Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- The Descendant (1897)
- Phases of an Inferior Planet (1898)
- The Voice of the People (1900)
- The Battle-Ground (1902)
- The Freeman and Other Poems (1902)
- The Deliverance (1904)
- The Wheel of Life (1906)
- The Ancient Law (1908)
- The Romance of a Plain Man (1909)
- The Miller of Old Church (1911)
- Virginia (1913)
- Life and Gabriella (1916)
- The Builders (1919)
- One Man in His Time (1922)
- The Shadowy Third and Other Stories (1923)
- Barren Ground (1925)
- The Romantic Comedians (1926)
- They Stooped to Folly (1929)
- The Sheltered Life (1932)
- The Old Dominion Edition of the Works of Ellen Glasgow (1929-33)
- Vein of Iron (1935)
- The Virginia Edition of the Works of Ellen Glasgow (1938)
- In This Our Life (1941)
- A Certain Measure (1943)
- Index
They Stooped to Folly (1929)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- The Descendant (1897)
- Phases of an Inferior Planet (1898)
- The Voice of the People (1900)
- The Battle-Ground (1902)
- The Freeman and Other Poems (1902)
- The Deliverance (1904)
- The Wheel of Life (1906)
- The Ancient Law (1908)
- The Romance of a Plain Man (1909)
- The Miller of Old Church (1911)
- Virginia (1913)
- Life and Gabriella (1916)
- The Builders (1919)
- One Man in His Time (1922)
- The Shadowy Third and Other Stories (1923)
- Barren Ground (1925)
- The Romantic Comedians (1926)
- They Stooped to Folly (1929)
- The Sheltered Life (1932)
- The Old Dominion Edition of the Works of Ellen Glasgow (1929-33)
- Vein of Iron (1935)
- The Virginia Edition of the Works of Ellen Glasgow (1938)
- In This Our Life (1941)
- A Certain Measure (1943)
- Index
Summary
“Stoopers to Folly,” Time, 14 (29 July 1929), 39
Milly Burden became pregnant in a small Virginia town. Her lover, Martin Welding, a nerve wracked U. S. soldier, had returned to France after the War. Yet Lawyer Littlepage, to whom Milly was secretary, forbore to dismiss her despite her flippancy, her sullen desire to live her own life regardless of the opinions of others. Furthermore Milly reminded Lawyer Littlepage of his daughter, Mary Victoria. Encouraged by softness, Milly confided her worry over Welding's nerves. In return, Lawyer Littlepage had Mary Victoria, who was in Europe, look Welding up.
This Mary did, so successfully and with such persistence and missionary zeal that the two returned from Europe as man and wife. Soon Mary Victoria was pregnant, too, but that did not prevent Welding from deserting her “to find a place where there are high mountains and snows that never melt and nothing else except loneliness.” Mary Victoria remained with her father because “even though I have lost love, I may become a power for good in the life of my child.” Milly went to New York on the trail of “something worth loving.”
Other folly-stoopers in the story are Aunt Agatha, still mourning in a thirdstory back bedroom because she was “betrayed by a Southern gentleman who moved in the best circles but was married already”; and Mrs. Dalrymple, divorced for infidelity.
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- Ellen GlasgowThe Contemporary Reviews, pp. 293 - 320Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992
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