Online Encyclopedia

HESTER CHAPONE (1727–1801)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 854 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HESTER

CHAPONE (1727–1801)  ,
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English essayist, daughter of Thomas Mulso, a country gentleman, was born at Twywell, Northamptonshire, on the 27th of
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October 1727 . She was a precocious child, and at the age of nine wrote a
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romance entitled The Loves of Amoret and Melissa . Hecky Mulso, as she was familiarly called,
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developed a beautiful voice, which earned her the name of " the
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linnet." While on a visit to Canterbury she made the acquaintance of the learned Mrs Elizabeth Carter, and soon became one of the admirers of the novelist
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Samuel Richardson . She was one of the little court of
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women who gathered at North End,
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Fulham; and in
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Miss Susannah Highmore's sketch of the novelist
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reading
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Sir Charles Grandison to his friends Miss Mulso is the central figure . She corresponded with Richardson on " filial obedience " in letters as long as his own,
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signing herself his " ever obliged and affectionate child." She admired, however, with discrimination, and in the words of her biographer (
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Posthumous
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Works, 1807, p . 9) " her letters show with what dignity, tempered with proper humility, she could maintain her own well-grounded opinion." In 176o Miss Mulso, with her
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father's reluctant consent, married 1 This
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play appears to have been issued in 1653 with the title The Parracide, or Revenge for Honour as the
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work of Henry Glathorne.the attorney, John Chapone, who had been befriended by Richardson . Her
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husband died within a
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year of her
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marriage . Mrs Chapone remained in
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London visiting various friends . She had already made small contributions to various
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periodicals when she published, in 1772, her best known work, Letters on the Improvement of the Mind . This
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book brought her numerous requests from distinguished persons to undertake the
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education of their children . She died on the 25th of December 18or . See The Posthumous Works of Mrs Chapone, containing her correspondence with Mr Richardson; a series of letters to Mrs Elizabeth Carter .

. together with an

account of her
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life and character
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drawn up by her own
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family (1807) .

End of Article: HESTER CHAPONE (1727–1801)
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CLAUDE CHAPPE (1763–18o5)

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