WOMEN POETS OF AMERICA
PHOEBE CARY • ALICE CARY
LUCY LARCOM • LOUISE CHANDLER MOULTON
LYDIA H. SIGOURNEY • ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH
LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY.
PIONEER FEMALE POET OF AMERICA.
RS. SIGOURNEY, was among the first, and is the most voluminous of all the early female poets of America. In fact she has been, up to this date, one of the most prolific of all the women writers of our country, having published fifty-six volumes of poetry and prose, the first appearing in 1815, and the last in 1863, [♦]forty-eight years later. Her most successful efforts are her occasional poems, which abound in passages of earnest, well expressed thought, and exhibit in their graver moods characteristics of a mind trained by exercise in self-knowledge and self-control. Her writings possess energy and variety, while her wide and earnest sympathy with all topics of friendship and philanthropy was always at the service of those interests. Mr. Edward H. Everett in a review of Mrs. Sigourney’s works declared: “They express with great purity and evident sincerity the tender affections which are so natural to the female heart and the lofty aspirations after a higher and better state of being which constitute the truly ennobling and elevating principles in art as well as in nature. Love and religion are the unvarying elements of her song. If her power of expression were equal to the purity and elevation of her habits of thought and feeling, she would be a female Milton or a Christian Pindar.” Continuing he says: “Though she does not inherit
‘The force and ample pinion that the Theban eagles bear,
Sailing with supreme dominion through the liquid vaults of air,’