MARIA EDGEWORTH [1767–1849]
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2011
Summary
‘Exceeding wise, fairspoken, and persuading.’
–Hen. VIIIEarly Days
Few authoresses in these days can have enjoyed the ovations and attentions which seem to have been considered the due of many of the ladies distinguished at the end of the last century and the beginning of this one. To read the accounts of the receptions and compliments which fell to their lot may well fill later and lesser luminaries with envy. Crowds opened to admit them, banquets spread themselves out before them, lights were lighted up and flowers were scattered at their feet. Dukes, editors, prime ministers, waited their convenience on their staircases; whole theatres rose up en masse to greet the gifted creatures of this and that immortal tragedy. The authoresses themselves, to do them justice, seem to have been very little dazzled by all this excitement. Hannah More contentedly retires with her maiden sisters to the Parnassus on the Mendip Hills, where they sew and chat and make tea, and teach the village children. Dear Joanna Baillie, modest and beloved, lives on to peaceful age in her pretty old house at Hampstead, looking through tree-tops and sunshine and clouds towards distant London. ‘Out there where all the storms are,’ I heard the children saying yesterday as they watched the overhanging gloom of smoke which veils the city of metropolitan thunders and lightning.
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- Information
- A Book of SibylsMrs. Barbauld, Miss Edgeworth, Mrs Opie, Miss Austen, pp. 51 - 148Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1883