Kingdom of Matthias

by

Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Kingdom of Matthias makes teaching easy.
Ann Folger is married to Benjamin Folger. They are wealthy, established, active members of the New York evangelical community, which aims to reform Christianity to endorse more personal freedoms, especially for women. Despite her beliefs, Ann finds herself convinced to join a cult that celebrates strict fatherly authority (led by Matthias and supported by her acquaintance Elijah Pierson). Ann and Matthias get on very well, and she begins pursuing him romantically. Matthias decides that Ann is destined to be his wife and bear a holy child, so Ann marries Matthias (despite already being married to Benjamin) and takes up a leadership role as the cult’s “Mother.” She spends her days sleeping in, making love to Matthias, and shifting her domestic duties to the household servant, a Black woman named Isabella Van Wagenen. Ann still has sexual encounters with Benjamin out of pity. She also witnesses Matthias feed Elijah poisoned berries, and it seems like she might know what’s going on, as she only eats one or two berries that day, instead of a full bowl as usual. When the local villagers find out about the strange activities at Benjamin’s home (where the cult lives), they intervene. The cult flees to New York City and Ann starts to have feelings for Benjamin again. Eventually, she rejects Matthias, which implodes the cult. Matthias is charged with murder and assault. During the court case, Ann conceals her sexual relationship with Matthias but delivers a damning testimony that almost convinces the jury that Matthias killed Elijah. Nonetheless, Elijah is not charged with murder. Ann and Benjamin publish a book, claiming that they were innocent victims who were manipulated into joining the cult by the household servant, Isabella Van Wagenen. Even though Isabella successfully sues Benjamin for slander, Ann is able to convince the public that she was a good Christian woman all along, and she successfully resumes her life as a prominent member of her evangelical community.

Ann Folger Quotes in Kingdom of Matthias

The Kingdom of Matthias quotes below are all either spoken by Ann Folger or refer to Ann Folger . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Patriarchy, Family, and Society Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1: Elijah Pierson Quotes

Frances Folger and her friends were perfectionists […] to them, all time was holy, and women and men were being judged every day.

Related Characters: Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Sarah Stanford (Sarah Pierson), Frances Folger
Page Number: 30
Explanation and Analysis:

Elijah and Sarah prayed with the Holy Club for three years, and in 1828 Elijah began talking with the Holy Ghost. He had always been a man of prayer, and had always asked God for help when he had to make some decision. But it was only in 1828 that God began answering him in English.

Related Characters: Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Sarah Stanford (Sarah Pierson), Frances Folger
Page Number: 30
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3: The Kingdom Quotes

But with Ann’s ascendance in Matthias’s affections, [Isabella Van Wagenen] coupled her faith with her own notions of what was going on, notions that had to do less with divine patriarchy than with devilish lust.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: The Downfall Quotes

The bulk of the Kingdom’s household drudge work now fell on Isabella Van Wagenen, who was especially peeved that Mother and Father rose late in the day, which threw her back in her chores.

As life in the cult (or, as the cult members call it, the “Kingdom”) falls into a rhythm, it becomes clear that Isabella Van Wagenen—a Black woman who functions as the cult’s household servant—bears the brunt of the domestic labor. Other cult members, like Matthias (who informally refers to himself as “Father”) and Ann (who starts going by “Mother” after she begins a relationship with Matthias) barely do any work at all. They sleep all day and keep shifting more work onto Isabella’s shoulders. The cult is a patriarchal environment, and Isabella’s plight exposes how such environments tend to marginalize and oppress people who are undervalued. The cult’s most powerful white man (Matthias) and white woman (Ann) effectively exploit the only Black woman (Isabella Van Wagenen). Matthias organizes the cult to recreate the “traditional” way of life he experienced as a child in a rural community run exclusively by father-figures (patriarchs). Many situations that unfold in the cult thus symbolize dysfunctional aspects of patriarchal societies. Here, Isabella’s frustrations show that such environments tend to disenfranchise, marginalize, and exploit women of color the most. Isabella’s plight thus serves as a subtle commentary on the racism and sexism in “traditional” American society.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 128

There is too much changing of wives here […] l have a nice little woman, and I should not much like to lose her.

Related Characters: Mr. Thompson (speaker), Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Isabella Laisdell (Matthias’s daughter) , Catherine Galloway , Elizabeth Thompson
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:

On July 28, Matthias, Elijah Pierson, Ann Folger, and Catherine Galloway sat down to supper. At the end of the meal the Prophet spooned out plates of blackberries that he and Pierson had picked that day. Ann Folger ate only two berries. Catherine finished her plate, and Elijah wolfed his down and had another. Matthias had none at all. […] About four o’clock the next afternoon, Elijah […] suddenly collapsed. […] Matthias forbade any doctors or medicine to aid Elijah, and Elijah agreed: prayer and prayer alone could relieve his affliction. […] In the morning, Ann Folger told the waking disciples that Pierson was dead.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway
Page Number: 138-139
Explanation and Analysis:

What a devilish shame it is […] that a woman wants two or three men.

Related Characters: Catherine Galloway (speaker), Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 142
Explanation and Analysis:

Finally, Ann came downstairs for breakfast one morning and quietly addressed Benjamin as “husband.” […] Folger leaped at the situation and offered to pay any sum of money to make Matthias leave.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger
Page Number: 142-143
Explanation and Analysis:

Privately, [Benjamin Folger] instigated a rumor that Isabella [Van Wagenen] had tried to poison him and his family on the morning when she served up the undrinkable coffee. […] On Western’s advice, she initiated proceedings against Folger for slander, and gathered up signed testimonials attesting to her trustworthiness from several of her former masters and employers.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Margaret Wright (Margaret Matthews), Henry B. Western
Page Number: 147-148
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

I have got the truth and I know it, and I will crush them with the truth.

Related Characters: Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) (speaker), Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway , William Leete Stone
Page Number: 167-168
Explanation and Analysis:

Isabella confirmed all of [Vale’s] hunches about the Kingdom’s sexual arrangements, and much more besides. […] He was well aware that the black servant Isabella’s word, on its own, would not stand up against the Folgers’, given public prejudices. And so whenever possible, he supplemented her narrative with “white evidence” from his interviews and from the public record.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , William Leete Stone , Gilbert Vale
Page Number: 169
Explanation and Analysis:

And so the world would come to know her as the ex-slave Sojourner Truth.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger
Page Number: 179
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Kingdom of Matthias LitChart as a printable PDF.
Kingdom of Matthias PDF

Ann Folger Quotes in Kingdom of Matthias

The Kingdom of Matthias quotes below are all either spoken by Ann Folger or refer to Ann Folger . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Patriarchy, Family, and Society Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1: Elijah Pierson Quotes

Frances Folger and her friends were perfectionists […] to them, all time was holy, and women and men were being judged every day.

Related Characters: Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Sarah Stanford (Sarah Pierson), Frances Folger
Page Number: 30
Explanation and Analysis:

Elijah and Sarah prayed with the Holy Club for three years, and in 1828 Elijah began talking with the Holy Ghost. He had always been a man of prayer, and had always asked God for help when he had to make some decision. But it was only in 1828 that God began answering him in English.

Related Characters: Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Sarah Stanford (Sarah Pierson), Frances Folger
Page Number: 30
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3: The Kingdom Quotes

But with Ann’s ascendance in Matthias’s affections, [Isabella Van Wagenen] coupled her faith with her own notions of what was going on, notions that had to do less with divine patriarchy than with devilish lust.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: The Downfall Quotes

The bulk of the Kingdom’s household drudge work now fell on Isabella Van Wagenen, who was especially peeved that Mother and Father rose late in the day, which threw her back in her chores.

As life in the cult (or, as the cult members call it, the “Kingdom”) falls into a rhythm, it becomes clear that Isabella Van Wagenen—a Black woman who functions as the cult’s household servant—bears the brunt of the domestic labor. Other cult members, like Matthias (who informally refers to himself as “Father”) and Ann (who starts going by “Mother” after she begins a relationship with Matthias) barely do any work at all. They sleep all day and keep shifting more work onto Isabella’s shoulders. The cult is a patriarchal environment, and Isabella’s plight exposes how such environments tend to marginalize and oppress people who are undervalued. The cult’s most powerful white man (Matthias) and white woman (Ann) effectively exploit the only Black woman (Isabella Van Wagenen). Matthias organizes the cult to recreate the “traditional” way of life he experienced as a child in a rural community run exclusively by father-figures (patriarchs). Many situations that unfold in the cult thus symbolize dysfunctional aspects of patriarchal societies. Here, Isabella’s frustrations show that such environments tend to disenfranchise, marginalize, and exploit women of color the most. Isabella’s plight thus serves as a subtle commentary on the racism and sexism in “traditional” American society.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 128

There is too much changing of wives here […] l have a nice little woman, and I should not much like to lose her.

Related Characters: Mr. Thompson (speaker), Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Isabella Laisdell (Matthias’s daughter) , Catherine Galloway , Elizabeth Thompson
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:

On July 28, Matthias, Elijah Pierson, Ann Folger, and Catherine Galloway sat down to supper. At the end of the meal the Prophet spooned out plates of blackberries that he and Pierson had picked that day. Ann Folger ate only two berries. Catherine finished her plate, and Elijah wolfed his down and had another. Matthias had none at all. […] About four o’clock the next afternoon, Elijah […] suddenly collapsed. […] Matthias forbade any doctors or medicine to aid Elijah, and Elijah agreed: prayer and prayer alone could relieve his affliction. […] In the morning, Ann Folger told the waking disciples that Pierson was dead.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway
Page Number: 138-139
Explanation and Analysis:

What a devilish shame it is […] that a woman wants two or three men.

Related Characters: Catherine Galloway (speaker), Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger
Related Symbols: Cult
Page Number: 142
Explanation and Analysis:

Finally, Ann came downstairs for breakfast one morning and quietly addressed Benjamin as “husband.” […] Folger leaped at the situation and offered to pay any sum of money to make Matthias leave.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger
Page Number: 142-143
Explanation and Analysis:

Privately, [Benjamin Folger] instigated a rumor that Isabella [Van Wagenen] had tried to poison him and his family on the morning when she served up the undrinkable coffee. […] On Western’s advice, she initiated proceedings against Folger for slander, and gathered up signed testimonials attesting to her trustworthiness from several of her former masters and employers.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Elijah Pierson (Elijah the Tishbite) , Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Margaret Wright (Margaret Matthews), Henry B. Western
Page Number: 147-148
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

I have got the truth and I know it, and I will crush them with the truth.

Related Characters: Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) (speaker), Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , Catherine Galloway , William Leete Stone
Page Number: 167-168
Explanation and Analysis:

Isabella confirmed all of [Vale’s] hunches about the Kingdom’s sexual arrangements, and much more besides. […] He was well aware that the black servant Isabella’s word, on its own, would not stand up against the Folgers’, given public prejudices. And so whenever possible, he supplemented her narrative with “white evidence” from his interviews and from the public record.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger , William Leete Stone , Gilbert Vale
Page Number: 169
Explanation and Analysis:

And so the world would come to know her as the ex-slave Sojourner Truth.

Related Characters: Robert Matthews (Prophet Matthias), Isabella Van Wagenen (Sojourner Truth) , Benjamin Folger , Ann Folger
Page Number: 179
Explanation and Analysis: