Constance Fenimore Woolson (1840–1894) is remembered for work that demonstrates an authoritative sense of place. No matter where she was, in the United State or in Europe, where she lived later in life, she wrote from the point of view of the outsider discerning local mores and in that sense mirrored her close friend Henry James. Indeed, her work was often in conversation with his, and her story “In Sloane Street” not only parodied the narrator of James’s “The Lesson of the Master” but also offered a feminist view of marriage and artistic success. A grandniece of James Fenimore Cooper, she was born in New Hampshire and raised in Ohio. Memorable work includes the collection Miss Grief and Other Stories and the novella For the Major.

Miss Grief

A Story

by Constance Fenimore Woolson

“A conceited fool” is a not uncommon expression. Now, I know that I am not a fool, but I also know that I am conceited. But, candidly, can it be helped if one happens to be young, well and strong, passably good-looking, with some money that one has inherited and more that one has earned—in all, enough to make life comfortable—and if upon this foundation rests also the pleasant superstructure of a literary success? The success is deserved, I think: certainly it was not lightly gained. Yet even with this I fully appreciate its rarity. Thus, I find myself very well entertained in life: I have all I wish in the way of society, and a deep, though of course carefully concealed, satisfaction in my own little fame; which fame I foster by a gentle system of non-interference. I know that I am spoken of as “that quiet young fellow who writes those delightful little studies of society, you know”; and I live up to that definition.

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