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FELICIA DOROTHEA See also: English poet, was See also: born in Duke Street, Liverpool, on the 25th of See also: September 1793
.
Her See also: father, See also: George See also: Browne, of Irish extraction, was a
See also: merchant in Liverpool, and her See also: mother, whose See also: maiden name was Wagner, was the daughter of the See also: Austrian and Tuscan See also: consul at Liverpool
.
Felicia, the fifth of seven See also: children, was scarcely seven years old when her father failed in business, and retired with his See also: family to Gwrych, near Abergele, Denbighshire; and there the See also: young poet and her See also: brothers and sisters See also: grew up in a romantic old See also: house by the See also: sea-See also: shore, and in the very midst of the mountains and myths of See also: Wales
.
Felicia's See also: education was desultory
.
Books of See also: chronicle and See also: romance, and every kind of See also: poetry, she read with avidity; and she also studied See also: Italian, See also: Spanish, Portuguese and See also: German
.
She played both harp and piano, and cared especially for the See also: simple See also: national melodies of Wales and See also: Spain
.
In 18o8, when she was only fourteen, a See also: quarto See also: volume of her Juvenile Poems; was published by subscription, and was harshly criticized in the Monthly Review
.
Two of her brothers were fighting in Spain under See also: Sir See also: John
See also: Moore; and Felicia, fired with military See also: enthusiasm, wrote See also: England and Spain, or Valour and Patriotism, a poem afterwards translated into Spanish
.
Her second volume, The Domestic Affections and other Poems, appeared in 1812, on the See also: eve of her See also: marriage to Captain See also: Alfred See also: Hemans
.
She lived for some See also: time at See also: Daventry, where her See also: husband was adjutant of the See also: Northamptonshire militia
.
About this time her father went to See also: Quebec on business and died there; and, after the See also: birth of her first son, she and her husband went to live with her mother at Bronwylfa, a house near St See also: Asaph
.
Here during the next six years four more children—all boys—were born; but in spite of domestic cares and failing See also: health she still read and wrote indefatigably
.
Her poem entitled The Restoration of See also: Works of See also: Art to See also: Italy was published in 1816, her See also: Modern See also: Greece in 1817, and in 18r$ See also: Translations from Camoens and other Poets
.
In 1818 Captain Hemans went to See also: Rome, leaving his wife, shortly before the birth of their fifth See also: child, with her mother at Bronwylfa
.
There seems to have been a tacit agreement, perhaps on account of their limited means, that they should See also: separate
.
Letters were interchanged, and Captain Hemans was often consulted about his children; but the husband and wife never met again
.
Many friends—among them the See also: bishop of St Asaph and Bishop Heber--gathered round Mrs Hemans and her children
.
In 1819 she published Tales and Historic Scenes in Verse, and gained a prize of L50 offered for the best poem on The Meeting of See also: Wallace and See also: Bruce on the See also: Banks of the Carron
.
In 182o appeared The Sceptic and Stanzas to the Memory of the See also: late See also: King, In
See also: June 1821 she won the prize awarded by the Royal Society of Literature for the best poem on the subject of Dart-See also: moor, and began her See also: play, The Vespers of Palermo
.
She now applied herself to a course of German See also: reading
.
Korner was her favourite German poet, and her lines on the See also: grave of Korner were one of the first English tributes to the See also: genius of the young soldier-poet
.
In the summer of 1823 a volume of her poems was published by See also: Murray, containing " The Siege of
See also: Valencia," " The Last See also: Constantine " and " Belshazzar's Feast." The Vespers of Palermo was acted at Covent Garden, See also: December 12, 1823, arytl Mrs Hemans received L200 for the copy= right; but, though the leading parts were taken by Young and See also: Charles Kemble, the play was a failure, and was withdrawn after the first performance
.
It was acted again in
See also: Edinburgh in the following See also: April with greater success, when an See also: epilogue, written for it by Sir Walter See also: Scott at See also: Joanna See also: Baillie's See also: request, was spoken by Harriet See also: Siddons
.
This was the beginning of a cordial friendship between Mrs Hemans and Scott
.
In the same See also: year she wrote De See also: Chatillon, or the Crusaders; but the See also: manuscript was lost, and the poem was published after her See also: death, from a rough copy
.
In 1824 she began " The See also: Forest Sanctuary,"
which appeared a year later with the "See also: Lays of Many Lands" and See also: miscellaneous pieces collected from the New Monthly See also: Magazine and other See also: periodicals
.
In the spring of 1825 Mrs Hemans removed from Bronwylfa, which had been See also: purchased by her See also: brother, to Rhyllon, a house on an opposite height across the See also: river Clwyd
.
The contrast between the two houses suggested her Dramatic Scene between Bronwylfa and Rhyllon
.
The house itself was See also: bare and unpicturesque, but the beauty of its surroundings has been celebrated in " The See also: Hour of Romance," " To the River Clwyd in See also: North Wales," " Our Lady's Well " and " To a Distant Scene." This time seems to have been the most tranquil in Mrs Hemans's See also: life
.
But the death of her mother in See also: January 1827 was a second See also: great breaking-point in her life
.
Her See also: heart was affected, and she was from this time an acknowledged invalid
.
In the summer of 1828 the Records of Woman was published by See also: Blackwood, and in the same year the home in Wales was finally broken up by the marriage of Mrs Hemans's See also: sister and the departure of her two elder boys to their father in Rome
.
Mrs Hemans removed to Wavertree, near Liverpool
.
But, although she had a few intimate See also: friends there—among them her two subsequent biographers, See also: Henry F
.
Chorley and Mrs
See also: Lawrence of Wavertree Hall—she was disappointed in her new home, She thought the See also: people of Liverpool stupid and provincial; and they, on the other See also: hand, found her uncommunicative and eccentric
.
In the following summer she travelled by sea to Scotland with two of her boys, to visit the Hamiltons of Chiefswood
.
Here she enjoyed " See also: constant, almost daily, intercourse " with Sir Walter Scott, with whom she and her boys afterwards stayed some time at See also: Abbotsford
.
" There are some whom we meet, and should like ever after to claim as kith and kin; and you are one of those," was Scott's compliment to her at parting
.
One of the results of her Edinburgh visit was an article, full of praise, judiciously tempered with See also: criticism, by See also: Jeffrey himself for the Edinburgh Review
.
Mrs Hemans returned to Wavertree to write her Songs of the Affections, which were published early in 183o
.
In the following June, however, she again See also: left home, this time to visit See also: Wordsworth and the Lake country; and in See also: August she paid a second visit to Scotland
.
In 1831 she removed to See also: Dublin
.
Her poetry of this date is chiefly religious
.
Early in 1834 her See also: Hymns for Childhood, which had appeared some years before in See also: America, were published in Dublin
.
At the same time appeared her collection of National Lyrics, and shortly afterwards Scenes and Hymns of Life
.
She was planning also a series of German studios, one of which, on Goethe's See also: Tasso, was completed and published in the New Monthly Magazine for January 1834
.
In intervals of acute suffering she wrote the lyric Despondency and Aspiration, and dictated a series of sonnets called Thoughts during Sickness, the last of which, " Recovery," was written when she fancied she was getting well
.
After three months spent at See also: Redesdale, Archbishop See also: Whately's country seat, she was again brought into Dublin, where she lingered till spring
.
Her last poem, the See also: Sabbath Sonnet, was dedicated to her brother on See also: Sunday April 26th, and she died in Dublin on the 16th of May 1835 at the age of See also: forty-one
.
Mrs Hemans's poetry is the production of a See also: fine imaginative and enthusiastic temperament, but not of a commanding intellect or very complex or subtle nature
.
It is the outcome of a beautiful but singularly circumscribed life, a life spent in romantic seclusion, without much worldly experience, and warped and saddened by domestic unhappiness and See also: physical suffering
.
An undue preponderance of the emotional is its prevailing characteristic
.
Scott complained that it was " too poetical," that it contained " too many See also: flowers " and " too little fruit." Many of her See also: short poems, such as " The Treasures of the Deep," " The Better See also: Land," " The Homes of England," " Casabianca," " The Palm See also: Tree," " The See also: Graves of a See also: Household," " The See also: Wreck," " The Dying See also: Improvisatore," and " The Lost See also: Pleiad," have become See also: standard English lyrics
.
It is on the strength of these that her reputation must rest
.
Mrs Hemans's Poetical Works were collected in 1832 ; her Memorials &c., by H
.
F
.
Chorley (1836)
.
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