Description

Book Synopsis
Questioning the assumption that few poems by working-class women had survived, Florence Boos set out to discover supposedly lost works in libraries, private collections, and archives. Her years of research resulted in this anthology.



Trade Review

“Florence Boos has produced a fascinating anthology and a learned interpretive study in one volume. Boos is passionate in her claims for the social life of poetry and careful in her presentation of individuality of each of these writing women. The poems include political ballads, personal lyrics, and selections of prose that often give insights into what poetic vocation meant to working women. Boos provides excellent introductions to each poet. This is a beautiful labor of love, and will delight scholars, general readers, and poets.” — Anne Janowitz, Queen Mary University of London

“This anthology is essential reading for anyone concerned with women’s writing. The work of these indomitable women shows human determination at its strongest and most moving. These poets elegize the tragic deaths of their children, celebrate the beauties of the natural world, and deplore war and injustice. Hampered by neglected or interrupted education and often dogged by poverty, they overcome their disadvantages with great dignity. We should read them now and give them the praise they deserve.” — Dorothy McMillan, University of Glasgow



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction

Janet Hamilton

  • Introduction
    A Plea for the Doric
    A Wheen Aul’ Memories
    The Feast of the “Mutches”
    Oor Location
    Rhymes for the Times II
    Rhymes for the Times IV
    Rhymes for the Times V
    Grannie Visited at Blackhill, Shotts, July, 1805
    Auld Mither Scotland
    Grannie’s Crack About the Famine in Auld Scotlan’, 1739-40
    Grannie’s Dream—A True Incident
    Effie—A Ballad
    Preface to Poems, Essays and Sketches
    Preface to Memorial Edition, James Hamilton
    Janet Hamilton at her “Ain Fireside,” Alexander Wallace
    Janet Hamilton on the Education of Women
    Scottish Peasant Life and Character in Days of Auld Langsyne
    Sketch of a Scottish Out-door Communion Sabbath in TimesGone By
    Local Changes
    Sketch of a Scottish Village
    From The Mental and Moral Dignity of Woman, by the Rev. BenjaminParsons

The Rural Poets

Anonymous Celtic Songs Collected by Alexander Carmichael

  • Introduction
    Peace
    The Apple Tree
    New Moon
    My Father and Mother Will Kill Me

Isabella Chisholm

  • Introduction
    The Wicked Who Would Do Me Harm
    Exorcism of the Eye
    Counteracting the Evil Eye

Elizabeth Duncan Campbell

  • Introduction
    The Death of Willie, My Second Son
    A Prison Cell
    The Crimean War
    The Summer Night
    The Mother’s Lament
    The Life of My Childhood
    Mrs. Campbell: A Criticism, by George Gilfillan

Jane Stevenson

  • Introduction
    Home
    The Wandering Dog
    The Fairy Dale
    The Prophetess, Or Seer of Visions
    Preface from Homely Musings

Elizabeth Horne Smith

  • Introduction
    The Armenian Atrocities
    A Midnight Meeting with the Ghost of Burns, July, 1896
    My Friend
    Lines to J —— B——, Dunfermline
    “In the Foremost Files. Elizabeth Horne Smith, Farmworker and Poetess.,” by the Rev. P[aul] Anton

Mary MacDonald MacPherson

  • Introduction
    Incitement of the Gaels
    Farewell to the New Christmas
    A Prose Translation: “Ivory and the Crofters,” Donald Meek

The Factory Poets

“Marie”

  • Introduction
    The Indomitable Will
    Posted Books
    Sibyl, the Far-Seer
    An Autumn Evening, People’s and Howitt’s Journal, 1849

Ellen Johnston

  • Introduction
    Lines to Isabel from the Factory Girl
    The Factory Girl’s Reply to Edith
    The Last Sark
    The Maid of Dundee to Her Slumbering Muse
    The Last Lay of “The Factory Girl”
    Edith, from Preface to Second Edition, Autobiography, Poems and Songs
    Selections from the “Autobiography of Ellen Johnston”

Ruth Wills

  • Introduction
    A Lament
    The Seen and the Unseen
    Koziell
    Zenobia
    “The Factory Poetess,” from The Working Man
    Application to the Royal Literary Fund, 1863
    Last Will and Testament of Ruth Wills

Fanny Forrester

  • Introduction
    Dying in the City
    The Lowly Bard
    The Bitter Task
    To “Sabina”
    Application to the Royal Literary Fund from Mrs. Ellen Forrester
    “Fanny Forrester,” Ben Brierley’s Journal, 1875

Ethel Carnie

  • Introduction
    A Marching Tune
    Faith
    An Old Woman’s Hands
    A Washerwoman
    Shame
    A Lament
    A Riding Song
    “A Lancashire Fairy. An Interview with Miss Ethel Carnie”
    “Paddling your Own Canoe,” Miss Nobody
    “Modern Womanhood,” The Woman Worker, 1909
    Letter from Ethel Carnie to Graham Wallas

Lyricists and Feminists

Eliza Cook

  • Introduction
    Song of the City Artisan
    The Streets
    A Song:To “The People” of England
    They All Belong to Me
    Song of the Red Man
    Lines Suggested by the Song of a Nightingale
    To the Late William Jerdan
    “Advice to the Ladies,” from Eliza Cook’s Journal, 1850
    Letter from Eliza Cook, 1838
    Letter from Eliza Cook, 1864

Mary Smith

  • Introduction
    “Women’s Claims”
    Our Village
    Life Similes
    The Snow Storm
    My Mother-Sister
    Selections from “Progress”
    Selections from The Autobiography of Mary Smith

Jessie Russell

  • Introduction
    Preface to The Blinkin’ O’ the Fire
    The Blinkin’ O’ the Fire
    Women’s Rights vs.Woman’s Wrongs
    The Mother’s Story
    Oor Flittin’

Jeannie Graham Paterson

  • Introduction
    A Brighter Dawn
    Speak the Words
    Class Distinction
    A Song of Liberty
    A Freen’ly Crack
    To One Who Believes that Women are Soulless

Marion Bernstein

  • Introduction
    Mirren’s Autobiography
    Wanted in Glasgow
    Come Back to Me,Ye Happy Dreams
    Manly Sports
    Wanted a Husband
    A Dream
    Application to the Royal Literary Fund, 1904

Bibliography

  1. General Works
  2. Some Little-Educated or Working-Class Victorian Women Poets Who Published Books Not Included in this Anthology
  3. Comprehensive Bibliography
  4. Periodicals

Index of Titles
Index of First Lines

Working-Class Women Poets in Victorian Britain:

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    A Paperback / softback by Florence S. Boos

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      Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/06/2008
      ISBN13: 9781551115962, 978-1551115962
      ISBN10: 1551115964
      Also in:
      Poetry

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Questioning the assumption that few poems by working-class women had survived, Florence Boos set out to discover supposedly lost works in libraries, private collections, and archives. Her years of research resulted in this anthology.



      Trade Review

      “Florence Boos has produced a fascinating anthology and a learned interpretive study in one volume. Boos is passionate in her claims for the social life of poetry and careful in her presentation of individuality of each of these writing women. The poems include political ballads, personal lyrics, and selections of prose that often give insights into what poetic vocation meant to working women. Boos provides excellent introductions to each poet. This is a beautiful labor of love, and will delight scholars, general readers, and poets.” — Anne Janowitz, Queen Mary University of London

      “This anthology is essential reading for anyone concerned with women’s writing. The work of these indomitable women shows human determination at its strongest and most moving. These poets elegize the tragic deaths of their children, celebrate the beauties of the natural world, and deplore war and injustice. Hampered by neglected or interrupted education and often dogged by poverty, they overcome their disadvantages with great dignity. We should read them now and give them the praise they deserve.” — Dorothy McMillan, University of Glasgow



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements
      Introduction

      Janet Hamilton

      • Introduction
        A Plea for the Doric
        A Wheen Aul’ Memories
        The Feast of the “Mutches”
        Oor Location
        Rhymes for the Times II
        Rhymes for the Times IV
        Rhymes for the Times V
        Grannie Visited at Blackhill, Shotts, July, 1805
        Auld Mither Scotland
        Grannie’s Crack About the Famine in Auld Scotlan’, 1739-40
        Grannie’s Dream—A True Incident
        Effie—A Ballad
        Preface to Poems, Essays and Sketches
        Preface to Memorial Edition, James Hamilton
        Janet Hamilton at her “Ain Fireside,” Alexander Wallace
        Janet Hamilton on the Education of Women
        Scottish Peasant Life and Character in Days of Auld Langsyne
        Sketch of a Scottish Out-door Communion Sabbath in TimesGone By
        Local Changes
        Sketch of a Scottish Village
        From The Mental and Moral Dignity of Woman, by the Rev. BenjaminParsons

      The Rural Poets

      Anonymous Celtic Songs Collected by Alexander Carmichael

      • Introduction
        Peace
        The Apple Tree
        New Moon
        My Father and Mother Will Kill Me

      Isabella Chisholm

      • Introduction
        The Wicked Who Would Do Me Harm
        Exorcism of the Eye
        Counteracting the Evil Eye

      Elizabeth Duncan Campbell

      • Introduction
        The Death of Willie, My Second Son
        A Prison Cell
        The Crimean War
        The Summer Night
        The Mother’s Lament
        The Life of My Childhood
        Mrs. Campbell: A Criticism, by George Gilfillan

      Jane Stevenson

      • Introduction
        Home
        The Wandering Dog
        The Fairy Dale
        The Prophetess, Or Seer of Visions
        Preface from Homely Musings

      Elizabeth Horne Smith

      • Introduction
        The Armenian Atrocities
        A Midnight Meeting with the Ghost of Burns, July, 1896
        My Friend
        Lines to J —— B——, Dunfermline
        “In the Foremost Files. Elizabeth Horne Smith, Farmworker and Poetess.,” by the Rev. P[aul] Anton

      Mary MacDonald MacPherson

      • Introduction
        Incitement of the Gaels
        Farewell to the New Christmas
        A Prose Translation: “Ivory and the Crofters,” Donald Meek

      The Factory Poets

      “Marie”

      • Introduction
        The Indomitable Will
        Posted Books
        Sibyl, the Far-Seer
        An Autumn Evening, People’s and Howitt’s Journal, 1849

      Ellen Johnston

      • Introduction
        Lines to Isabel from the Factory Girl
        The Factory Girl’s Reply to Edith
        The Last Sark
        The Maid of Dundee to Her Slumbering Muse
        The Last Lay of “The Factory Girl”
        Edith, from Preface to Second Edition, Autobiography, Poems and Songs
        Selections from the “Autobiography of Ellen Johnston”

      Ruth Wills

      • Introduction
        A Lament
        The Seen and the Unseen
        Koziell
        Zenobia
        “The Factory Poetess,” from The Working Man
        Application to the Royal Literary Fund, 1863
        Last Will and Testament of Ruth Wills

      Fanny Forrester

      • Introduction
        Dying in the City
        The Lowly Bard
        The Bitter Task
        To “Sabina”
        Application to the Royal Literary Fund from Mrs. Ellen Forrester
        “Fanny Forrester,” Ben Brierley’s Journal, 1875

      Ethel Carnie

      • Introduction
        A Marching Tune
        Faith
        An Old Woman’s Hands
        A Washerwoman
        Shame
        A Lament
        A Riding Song
        “A Lancashire Fairy. An Interview with Miss Ethel Carnie”
        “Paddling your Own Canoe,” Miss Nobody
        “Modern Womanhood,” The Woman Worker, 1909
        Letter from Ethel Carnie to Graham Wallas

      Lyricists and Feminists

      Eliza Cook

      • Introduction
        Song of the City Artisan
        The Streets
        A Song:To “The People” of England
        They All Belong to Me
        Song of the Red Man
        Lines Suggested by the Song of a Nightingale
        To the Late William Jerdan
        “Advice to the Ladies,” from Eliza Cook’s Journal, 1850
        Letter from Eliza Cook, 1838
        Letter from Eliza Cook, 1864

      Mary Smith

      • Introduction
        “Women’s Claims”
        Our Village
        Life Similes
        The Snow Storm
        My Mother-Sister
        Selections from “Progress”
        Selections from The Autobiography of Mary Smith

      Jessie Russell

      • Introduction
        Preface to The Blinkin’ O’ the Fire
        The Blinkin’ O’ the Fire
        Women’s Rights vs.Woman’s Wrongs
        The Mother’s Story
        Oor Flittin’

      Jeannie Graham Paterson

      • Introduction
        A Brighter Dawn
        Speak the Words
        Class Distinction
        A Song of Liberty
        A Freen’ly Crack
        To One Who Believes that Women are Soulless

      Marion Bernstein

      • Introduction
        Mirren’s Autobiography
        Wanted in Glasgow
        Come Back to Me,Ye Happy Dreams
        Manly Sports
        Wanted a Husband
        A Dream
        Application to the Royal Literary Fund, 1904

      Bibliography

      1. General Works
      2. Some Little-Educated or Working-Class Victorian Women Poets Who Published Books Not Included in this Anthology
      3. Comprehensive Bibliography
      4. Periodicals

      Index of Titles
      Index of First Lines

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