142-] English Literature
Felicia Dorothea Hemans – Summary
Felicia
Dorothea Hemans, (born Sept. 25, 1793, Liverpool—died May 16, 1835, Dublin),
English poet who owed the immense popularity of her poems to a talent for
treating Romantic themes—nature, the picturesque, childhood innocence, travels
abroad, liberty, the heroic—with an easy and engaging fluency. Poems (1808),
written when she was between 8 and 13, was the first of a series of 24 volumes
of verse; from 1816 to 1834 one or more appeared almost every year.
At
19 she married Capt. Alfred Hemans, but they separated seven years later; her
prolific output helped to support her five children. She became a literary
celebrity, admired by such famous older writers as William Wordsworth and Sir
Walter Scott. Often diffuse and sentimental, she has been chiefly remembered
for her shorter pieces, notably “The Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers,” “Dirge,”
“Casabianca” (“The boy stood on the burning deck”), and “The Homes of England”
(“The stately homes of England”), but was perhaps at her best in her sequence
of poems on female experience, Records of Women (1828).
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