Daughters of the Puritans: A Group of Brief Biographies
A Group of Brief Biographies
SETH CURTIS BEACH
Essay Index Reprint Series
BOOKS FOR LIBRARIES PRESS, INC. FREEPORT, NEW YORK
First published 1905 Reprinted 1967
THE HOME OF LYDIA MARIA CHILD AT WAYLAND, MASSACHUSETTS
CATHARINE MARIA SEDGWICK
During the first half of the nineteenth century, Miss Sedgwick would doubtless have been considered the queen of American letters, but, in the opinion of her friends, the beauty of her character surpassed the merit of her books. In 1871, Miss Mary E. Dewey, her life-long neighbor, edited a volume of Miss Sedgwick's letters, mostly to members of her family, in compliance with the desire of those who knew and loved her, that some printed memorial should exist of a life so beautiful and delightful in itself, and so beneficent in its influence upon others. Truly a life beautiful in itself and beneficent in its influence, the reader will say, as he lays down this tender volume.
Catharine Maria Sedgwick was born at Stockbridge, Mass., in 1789, the first year of the presidency of George Washington. She was a descendant from Robert Sedgwick, major-general under Cromwell, and governor of Jamaica. Her father, Theodore Sedgwick, was a country boy, born in 1746, upon a barren farm in one of the hill-towns of Connecticut. Here the family opened a country store, then added a tavern, and with the combined industries of farm, store and tavern, Theodore, most fortunate of the sons if not the favorite, was sent to Yale college, where he remained, until, in the last year of his course, he managed to get himself expelled. He began the study of theology, his daughter suggests, in a moment of contrition over expulsion from college, but soon turned to the law for which he had singular aptitude. He could not have gone far in his legal career when, before the age of twenty-one, he married a beautiful girl whose memory he always tenderly cherished, as well he might considering his part in the tragedy of her early death. He had taken small pox, had been duly quarantined and discharged but his young wife combed out the tangles of his matted hair, caught the disease, and died, within a year after marriage.
Seth Curtis Beach
Язык
Английский
Год издания
2008-05-24
Темы
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria, 1789-1867; Ware, Mary L. (Mary Lovell), 1798-1849; Child, Lydia Maria Francis, 1802-1880; Dix, Dorothea Lynde, 1802-1887; Fuller, Margaret, 1810-1850; Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 1811-1896; Alcott, Louisa May, 1832-1888; Women -- New England -- Biography