Hannah More
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Standard Name: More, Hannah
Birth Name: Hannah More
Nickname: Nine
Pseudonym: A Young Lady
Pseudonym: The Author of Percy
Pseudonym: H. M.
Pseudonym: Will Chip, a Carpenter
During her long and phenomenally productive career HM
wrote plays, poems, a single novel and much social, religious, and political commentary. She was the leading conservative and Christian moralist of her day. Her political opinions were reactionary, and her passionate commitment to educating the poor and lessening their destitution has been judged as marred by its paternalist tone. But she was a pioneer educator and philanthropist, with enormous influence on the Victorian age.
Orlando gratefully acknowledges help with this document from Mary Waldron. Any flaws or errors are, of course, not hers.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Ann Yearsley | Again one of Yearsley's most perceptive readers was Anna Seward
, who wrote to Helen Maria Williams
on Christmas Day 1787 that Yearsley and Burns
were both miracles . . . . Perhaps she has... |
Literary responses | Anna Letitia Barbauld | Frances Burney
thought this the best of all Barbauld's poems. Hannah More
wrote to thank ALB
for writing so well on a subject so near her, More's heart, Paul, Lissa. The Children’s Book Business. Routledge, 2011. 111 |
Literary responses | Mary Deverell | Among those who felt the sermon genre was inappropriate to a woman was apparently Hannah More
, whose use of the word parsoness for Deverell (quoted by Anne Stott
in the Oxford Dictionary of National... |
Literary responses | Caroline Norton | John Abraham Heraud
, reviewing for the Athenæum, looked somewhat askance on CN
's having taken on herself (like Hannah More
before her in Hints Towards Forming the Character of a Young Princess... |
Literary responses | Helen Maria Williams | |
Literary responses | Mary Deverell | Hannah More
, who heard MD
read from her poem in 1782, experienced the performance as burlesque. She claimed to have listened through 1,800 lines and took exception to Deverell's claims both to the genre... |
Literary responses | Elizabeth Hamilton | Memoirs of Modern Philosophers was warmly praised by the Anti-Jacobin, which paid EH
the supreme compliment of likening her to Hannah More
. It received more moderate praise from the Critical Review. Critical Review. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall, 5 series. 2nd ser. 29 (1800): 311-13 |
Literary responses | Elizabeth Hamilton | The Critical Review took occasion from this work to link EH
with Hannah More
and Maria Edgeworth
as three distinguished female writers who do honour to the countries of England, Ireland, and Scotland; but its... |
Literary responses | Charlotte Maria Tucker | Marshall's prediction proved true: CMT
's audience disappeared as the Victorian age ended. However, the Dictionary of Literary Biography acknowledges that her successful introduction of imaginative richness into didactic literature influenced other authors and established... |
Literary responses | Mariana Starke | The Critical Review was unappreciative. It thought that letters were the wrong form for this information and that while MS
's account of her own travels had merit, her catalogues of churches, pictures, amenities, and... |
Literary responses | Elizabeth Carter | Ann Thicknesse
dedicated to Carter the first version of her Sketches of the Lives and Writings of the Ladies of France, 1778, saying she wanted to head a work which celebrated French talent with... |
Literary responses | Ann Batten Cristall | The Critical Review discerned in the collection considerable merit and the hand of genius: so much so that it felt it safe to overlook a few blemishes (though it mentioned some for the sake... |
Literary responses | Elizabeth Smith | Hannah More
praised the recently-dead ES
in Coelebs in Search of a Wife, setting her in the distinguished company of Elizabeth Carter
for acquirements which would have been distinguished in an University, meekly softened... |
Literary responses | Charlotte Lennox | Samuel Johnson
pronounced in conversation that CL
was worthy to rank with the exceptional women Carter
, More
, and Burney
: more yet, she was superiour to them all. Boswell, James, 1740 - 1795. Boswell’s Life of Johnson. Editors Hill, George Birkbeck and Laurence Fitzroy Powell, Clarendon, 1934, 6 vols. 4: 275 |
Literary responses | Stéphanie-Félicité de Genlis | Notices in the British Review and other English journals were fairly appreciative, but quick to compliment British women writers at the expense of the French, as if the book had been a challenge to their... |
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