Newes From The Dead
By onemorething
- 3885 reads
The title is from a title of a pamphlet written by Richard Watkins in 1651 which relays an account of the execution of Anne Greene on the 14th December, 1650. She was sentenced to death under a law relating to the deaths of 'bastards' because she had given birth to a stillborn, premature baby and hidden it after she had had sex with the 17 year old son of her master in the house where she was a scullery maid. It's not clear whether she was raped or it was consensual. She was 22 years old and when her secret was discovered she was taken to Oxford gaol and then sentenced to hang. This is despite evidence from midwives that the baby was so premature that it would not have been born alive. This is despite evidence from witnesses that Anne had not known she was pregnant. She did hang, she even asked friends and relatives to hang off her body to make the death swifter. She was beaten with the butt of a musket too. When she arrived with the anatomists in her coffin to be dissected, she was seen to be breathing, she was stamped upon to 'bring death about', but she was still breathing so William Petty, the anatomist, did his best to revive her and she did recover, was pardoned and took her coffin with her as a souvenir of her experience. She moves away, gets married, has three children and dies aged 37.
Anne had not meant to return from the dead,
in fact, she'd asked that if any was a friend of hers
then they'd pull hard on her legs as she swung
on the rope, to hasten the end, because ruddy
and fleshy and vulgar as men had described her,
god knows now, death could not be worse than life.
Ah, the advances of an entitled adolescent,
when she is merely scullery, washer, menial,
get thee to a nunnery, skullduggery.
And Anne went on because what else is there
to do except go on, until you are crouched
and bewildered in an outhouse with a stillborn,
which, afraid, you cover with the dust
that it must have come from.
To gaol with Anne then
for lewdness and murder,
to the gallows with Anne then
for the foul stain of infanticide,
but she is only almost dead,
still breathing despite being hung
and stamped upon,
she is only half dead and
revived beneath a dissector's scalpel
when she tells of a meadow at a riverside
and the music of angels, and
because there is little else to do, but go on,
she goes on, and she takes away her coffin as a souvenir.
Painting is from here: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Giuseppe_Maria_Crespi_-_The_Scullery_Maid_-_WGA5770.jpg
- Log in to post comments
Comments
A tragic and sad story. Hard
A tragic and sad story. Hard to imagine the harshness of those kind of laws now. You recount the tale and speak up for the wronged so eloquently.
- Log in to post comments
it was sadly quite common for
it was sadly quite common for servants to be treated as less than human, though I note you say it isn't known if it was consensual. l'm fairly sure too there was no punishment for the son of the house.
Anyway though, what an extraordinary ending and how bizarre that she kept the coffin. I hope her remaining years were kinder to her than the earlier ones.
She fully deserves to be celebrated as you've done so beautifully in this poem - thank you onemore!
- Log in to post comments
ghoulish and fascinating. No
ghoulish and fascinating. No wonder I fucking hate Downtown Abbey. (sorry ranting).
- Log in to post comments
I've never heard of this
I've never heard of this story before. The detail about hastening the end is especially grim as I guess it was known by people that the condemned were often still alive after the drop. Very evocative and deftly put together -- the coffin as a sovenir at the the end is perfect.
- Log in to post comments
This made me think of Teodora
This made me think of Teodora Vasquez in El Salvador, recently released early from 30 year sentence after a stillbirth. Greene is a perfect surname, she sounds like a plant which will not die no matter what is done to it, cutting it down, stamping on it to make a righteous path, poisoning with lies and fake faith. She sounds very resourceful, think what she could have been had she lived today!
- Log in to post comments
A very sad account of how a
A very sad account of how a poor woman suffered so badly. Your poem said it all.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
Can't believe I've never
Can't believe I've never heard of her before. An amazing story. I hope she found happiness in the years she reclaimed from all that brutality.
- Log in to post comments
Pick of the Day
This wonderful piece is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day! Please do share/retweet if you enjoy it too.
- Log in to post comments
The good old days?
Sure, we may be up manure creek without a paddle in so many ways, but at least we are beginning to recognise that women should be treated with complete equality. And if anyone ever says to me 'the good old days' ....I jest want to git ma gurn!!
A good poem, well done
Dougie Moody
- Log in to post comments
Congratulations, this is our Poem of the Week, 17 Mar 2023
Congratulations and well done.
- Log in to post comments
Thrilling to hear of her
Thrilling to hear of her survival. Hopefully it did make some think more carefully. Would be good to know more of her subsequent life!
I can't see any relation to the repeal of Roe v Wade though as there doesn't seem to have been any evidence that she killed or tried to kill her baby. Rhiannon
- Log in to post comments
There was no evidence
but as the pamphlet says that was effectively what she was accused of. If you can't see the parallels with what is happening in the USA, that worries me.
- Log in to post comments
This is such an unbelievable
This is such an unbelievable story - not in the cruelty but in the fact that she recovered and went on to do what life gave her. But what a story.
- Log in to post comments