Anna Sewell
-
Standard Name: Sewell, Anna
Birth Name: Anna Sewell
AS
's only published work was the novel Black Beauty, 1877, which received immediate acclaim and has been celebrated both as a key text advocating animal welfare and other social and political causes and as a best-selling classic of children's literature and of writing about horses.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Education | Cecily Mackworth | She was at first educated at home by thirteen successive governesses. Her mother sometimes read aloud to her daughters: R. D. Blackmore
' Lorna Doone and Anna Sewell
's Black Beauty. After meeting Hardy |
Education | Enid Blyton | Enid later recalled in vivid detail the first school she went to, Tresco, which was run by the Misses Read in their private house. She recalled, too, the most important texts among her early reading:... |
Education | Beatrix Potter | Beatrix, educated at home and six years older than her brother, was a solitary child. She had few toys; but she became deeply interested in science, and was also, from an early age, devoted to... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Joanna Cannan | JC
's three daughters (Josephine
, Diana
, and Christine Pullein-Thompson
) all had successful writing careers, chiefly in the pony-book genre which their mother had originated. Like JC
and her sisters, they began... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Sarah Stickney Ellis | One of Sarah's sisters, Dorothy, married a man named Sewell, making Sarah a relation by marriage to the writers Mary Sewell
and Anna Sewell
. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Sewell | Mary Sewell
was living at 26 Church Plain, Yarmouth when she bore her daughter, Anna
, who became famous as the author of Black Beauty. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Sewell | MS
's daughter Anna
predeceased her. Stephen, Sir Leslie, and Sidney Lee, editors. The Dictionary of National Biography. Smith, Elder, 1908–2024, 22 vols. plus supplements. |
Friends, Associates | Sarah Stickney Ellis | In a letter written from Pau to her stepdaughter in March 1840, SSE
expressed a wish to see her friend (and relation by marriage), the physically disabled Anna Sewell
. She exclaimed: [o]h! how I... |
Friends, Associates | Sarah Stickney Ellis | Among her few writing friends were Mary Howitt
and her relations by marriage Mary
and Anna Sewell
. She greatly admired without personally knowing Elizabeth Fry
, and felt a personal connection to Charlotte Brontë |
Friends, Associates | Jean Ingelow | JI
had a small but distinguished circle of intimate friends. By 1863 she was a friend of Alfred Tennyson
and was also close to Dora Greenwell
. She admired and respected Robert Browning
(though she... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Shena Mackay | The book blends the ordinary and extraordinary. The two girls devour books: Anna Sewell
's Black Beauty, The Valley of Doom, Louisa May Alcott
's Little Women, Lucy Maud Montgomery
's Anne... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mary Sewell | When MS
was sixty she began her writing career in earnest. She showed some of her poems to the publisher Henry S. King
, whose opinion that This will do qtd. in Bayly, Mary. The Life and Letters of Mrs. Sewell. James Nisbet, 1889. 132, 141 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Beatrix Potter | Of the first three stories, Carrier's Bob tells how a waggoner's terrier, Bob, is neglected and ill-treated by the widow after his master's death; The Mole Catcher's Burying describes how, as a village mole-catcher lies... |
Textual Features | Frances Power Cobbe | It is, as the subtitle Reported by Her Mistress suggests, written in the voice of the author's Pomeranian. Cobbe, Frances Power. The Confessions of a Lost Dog. Griffith and Farran, 1867. prelims |
Textual Features | Caroline Norton | The Rebel, spoken by an imprisoned Irish harper who weep[s,] to think upon my country's chain, suggests both a sympathy with the cause of Ireland and the influence of CN
's friend Thomas Moore |
Timeline
1823: John Jarrold founded a press, with his wife...
Writing climate item
1823
John Jarrold
founded a press, with his wife and four sons, at 3 Cockney Lane, Norwich.
Rose, Jonathan, and Patricia J. Anderson, editors. Dictionary of Literary Biography 106. Gale Research, 1991.
106: 159-61
Cockney Lane was later renamed London Street.
1893: Margaret Marshall Saunders published her...
Writing climate item
1893
Margaret Marshall Saunders
published her bestselling fictional autobiography of a dog, entitled Beautiful Joe, under the pseudonym Marshall Saunders
.
Saunders, Margaret Marshall, and Hezekiah Butterworth. Beautiful Joe. Charles H. Banes, 1893.
prelims
Beautiful Joe Heritage Society. http://www.beautifuljoe.org/.
Texts
Sewell, Anna. Black Beauty. Jarrold and Sons, 1877.