Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

Let Them Be Sea-Captains subscriber-only content

Megan Marshall

  • Margaret Fuller: An American Romantic Life: The Public Years by Charles Capper  Buy this book

In ‘Margaret Fuller Drowned’, a sonnet of the early 1970s, Robert Lowell, whose ancestor James Russell Lowell had been skewered by Fuller’s pen more than a century earlier, sums up what’s commonly known about Fuller. ‘You had everything to rattle the men who wrote,’ he begins, addressing her as ‘the first American woman?’ (emphasis on the question mark). Then he shifts to the deck of the merchant ship Elizabeth, en route from Livorno to New York City in 1850, whose passengers included the 40-year-old Fuller, ‘in a white nightgown, your hair fallen long’, with her young Italian lover (to whom she may or may not have been married) and their one-year-old son. All three died when they were swept overboard in a storm after an agonising 12-hour wait for rescue when their ship foundered on a sand bar within sight of shore at Fire Island, near New York.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Megan Marshall, who teaches at Emerson College, Boston, is the author of The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Gatsby of the Boulevards
Hermione Lee on Morton Fullerton

Reach-Me-Down Romantic
Terry Eagleton: For and Against Orwell

Nobel Savage
Steven Shapin on Kary Mullis

Unpranked Lyre
John Mullan: The Laziness of Thomas Gray

Self-Made Man
Ruth Bernard Yeazell: Edith Wharton’s Domestic Arrangements