148-] English Literature
Letitia Elizabeth Landon - Summary
Letitia
Elizabeth Landon , (born Aug. 14, 1802, London, Eng.—died Oct. 15, 1838, Gold
Coast Colony [now Ghana]), English poet and novelist who , at a time when women
were conventionally restricted in their themes, wrote of passionate love. She
is remembered for her high-spirited social life and mysterious death and for
verse that reveals her lively intelligence and emotional intensity.
Landon’s
first volume of verse came out in 1821; it and the eight collections that
followed were extremely popular, and she was in great demand as a contributor
to magazines and giftbooks, annuals produced in the 1820s and ’30s as gifts for
ladies. Her four novels, published in 1831–42, were also successful.
Landon
captivated London society by her wayward charm. Her engagement to John Forster,
a journalist and man of letters, ended unhappily. In 1838 she married George
Maclean, then chief administrator of the Cape Coast settlement (now in Ghana).
She died of poisoning, presumably by accident, soon after her arrival in
Africa.
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