In the early 1980s, soon after I had moved alone to the coast of Maine where my life unexpectedly expanded and deepened, my daughter gave me a copy of The Little Locksmith. Behind the misleading title (this is definitely not a children’s book), among the discards in the forty-eight-cent bin of New York City’s largest secondhand bookstore, she had discerned a rare treasure and, after reading it, inscribed it to me for my birthday. The story of a woman who, in defiance of all expectations for someone of her circumstances and gender, buys a house on the Maine coast and transforms a life of doom into one of triumph was a perfect gift to me.
Holding its own among the best spiritual autobiographies of our time, this “story of the liberation of a human being,” as its author describes it, so moved me that I wanted to shower copies of it on my friends, promote its republication, teach it to my students, and find out all I could about its author, her life and work. Fortunately, secondhand copies were easy to come by since the book had been a bestseller in 1943 and a main selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club and had even been excerpted in the Atlantic Monthly before publication, during the dark days of World War II. But like so many valuable literary works by women, not many years after the author’s death (at age fifty-two, on the very eve of the publication of her memoir), the book languished in attics and was forgotten. I began to buy up enough copies to supply my classes, bless my friends, and quell my fear of running out. But sometimes I found myself down to my last copy and had to begin collecting again. It is therefore with relief, as well as enthusiasm, that I now, these many years after my first memorable encounter with The Little Locksmith, relish the opportunity to introduce to a whole new spectrum of readers Katharine Butler Hathaway’s masterwork. And how fitting that The Feminist Press, an institution that has faithfully returned to print so many important forgotten books by women, is its new publisher.
Born in 1890 into a loving, well-to-do Massachusetts family, Katharine Butler came of age as a member of that bold generation of educated, somewhat bohemian modern women who were the first to bob their hair, openly embrace sex, question marriage, revere art, and claim a right to every sort of experience and accomplishment. But because Katharine’s tubercular spine did not grow normally (though the “terrible”—and, to her, unspeakable—word hunchback was not among such self-descriptions as “deformed,” “invalid,” “belonging to the company of the queer, the maimed, the unfit,” and, most delicately, “a very small childish spinster”) it was not expected that she would participate in the vital social and sexual passions of her times. When the teenaged Katharine, having spent the central decade of her childhood bedridden and strapped to a stretcher, realized the limitations that would be imposed upon her life, she was stricken with despair.
Not that she lacked the spirit, talent, or discipline to achieve her burgeoning ambition of asserting herself through writing. (And among the many charms of this book are passages of uncommon wisdom about the writing vocation: the need for patience, humility, solitude, and devotion. Not for nothing did she choose Flaubert as her master.) But the grotesque disparity between her own “sparkling,” expansive sense of herself in solitude and the “painful narrow … identity that had been created for me by others”—views that she knew “could not exist inside the same body at the same time”—presented an excruciating challenge. To meet that challenge, to “outwit fate” by asserting her own self-created vision in the face of the world’s cruel dismissal and her own shame and fear and anguish, became the central drama of her life, which is recounted in this powerful and inspiring work.
This is also a book about a house—a surprisingly large one for “a very small childish spinster”—overlooking Penobscot Bay in Castine, Maine. There, in her thirties, after a lifetime of being hovered over and protected like a child, Hathaway took control of her own destiny by using a legacy to purchase a house where, she exults, she could at last be “alone and free.” Having acquired her house without advice or help from family or friends—indeed against all their expectations—she determined “to find out what I really was” and “begin to live.” In an era when it was still an act of defiance for a woman—even a woman mature enough to be labeled “spinster”—to choose to live alone according to her own unconventional lights, Hathaway’s adventure was dense with symbolic meaning, so much so that twice I made the pilgrimage to Castine to experience firsthand the site of her extraordinary spiritual triumph and literary mastery.
The very style she perfected there, somehow spare and extravagant at once, exudes her expanding sense of accomplishment. Eschewing the frivolous or trifling in order to distill the pure emotional essence of her experience, she renders into words both subtleties and extremes of feeling seldom encountered outside the bravest spiritual autobiographies. Each event she recounts is full of consequence. This strategy keeps the intensity of her narrative mounting page by page. Seven years in the writing (1935–42), this riveting account of the transformation of a life ends with an epilogue in which Hathaway forthrightly confesses, “I love this book and can hardly bear to leave it.” Rereading it yet again, I know just what she means.
There is in fact much more to know of Katharine Butler Hathaway after the events of the final chapter of this book (for which she planned two sequels): the long denied sexual fulfillment, a stint in expatriate Paris among the avant-garde artists and bohemians she considered her true peers, romance and marriage, and finally the literary recognition she craved. But although another volume of her writing does exist—a posthumously edited miscellany of journal entries, poems, letters, and drawings—there is no sequel to The Little Locksmith.
No matter. This single profound work is treasure enough.
Alix Kates Shulman
Long Island, Maine
September 1999