Poems by Eminent Ladies

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Poems by Eminent Ladies
EditorGeorge Colman, Bonnell Thornton
CountryEngland
LanguageEnglish
Genrepoetry
PublishedLondon
PublisherR. Baldwin
Publication date
1755[1]
Media typeprint
Pagesviii, [2], 3-316p.
OCLC461463666

Poems by Eminent Ladies (1755) is one of the first anthologies of women's writing in English. It was edited by George Colman (1732–1794) and Bonnell Thornton (1725–1768).

The first edition[edit]

The first edition comprises works by eighteen poets born between 1623 and 1722. Roughly half the pieces were written in the late seventeenth century, and the rest in the first half of the eighteenth. The poems are arranged alphabetically by author, an innovative format, for while both collections and collective biographies were popular, "the conflation of verse miscellany and encyclopedia or memoir was almost unheard of".[2] Chantal Lavoie has described this anthology as "the first attempt to determine and justify a canon of women's writings".[3] and notes that Colman and Thornton were friends to John Duncombe,[4] author of The Feminiad (1754), a poetic celebration of women writers.[5]

The second edition[edit]

Colman, as surviving partner, published a considerably expanded edition in 1785,[6] in partial response, it has been conjectured, to the absence of women writers in Samuel Johnson's extensive Lives of the Poets (1779–81).[7] This new edition includes a greater number of poets while offering fewer texts per poet. All the newly added writers produced their work in the mid- to late-eighteenth century, some of them years after the first edition was published.

Significance and context[edit]

The poets represented in Poems by Eminent Ladies are diverse in terms of literary reputation and degree of critical and commercial success, literary school or style, and social, economic, and cultural background. Together, they help the editors make a case for including women writers in the national literary tradition: "The Ladies, whose pieces we have here collected, are not only an honour to their sex, but to their country."[8]

Poems by Eminent Ladies was only the first of "multiple attempts to promote and anthologize women writers as important members of the national literary tradition,"[9] part of what scholar Moira Ferguson calls an "eruption of female panegyrics," mainly by men, that includes George Ballard's Memoirs of British Ladies (biographies of sixty-five notable women; 1752); Theophilus Cibber's Lives of the Poets (1753); Thomas Amory's Memoirs of Several Ladies of Great Britain (1755); and Biographium faemineum: the female worthies, or, Memoirs of the most illustrious ladies, of all ages and nations, who have been eminently distinguished for their magnanimity, learning, genius, virtue, piety, and other excellent endowments. London: Printed for S. Crowder, 1766. 2 vols. (Anon; 1766).[10]

Poets[edit]

Writers included in the 1st (1755) edition[edit]

Writers added to the 1780 edition[edit]

Etexts[edit]

  • Colman, George, the Elder, and Bonnell Thornton, eds. Poems by Eminent Ladies. London: R. Baldwin, 1755. (Extext of Vol. II, HathiTrust)
  • Poems by the most eminent ladies of Great Britain and Ireland. Re-published from the collection of G. Colman and B. Thornton, Esqrs., with considerable alterations, additions, and improvements. London: W. Stafford, 1785. (Etext, Internet Archive)

See also[edit]

Notes and references[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Irish edition: Dublin: Sarah Cotter, 1757. 2nd, revised edition, London: W. Stafford, 1785.
  2. ^ Lavoie, p. 14.
  3. ^ Lavoie, p. 1.
  4. ^ Lavoie, p. 38.
  5. ^ Twelve of the writers named in The Feminiad are represented in the 2nd edition of Poems by Eminent Ladies.
  6. ^ Poems by the most eminent ladies of Great Britain and Ireland. Re-published from the collection of G. Colman and B. Thornton, Esqrs., with considerable alterations, additions, and improvements (London: W. Stafford, 1785).
  7. ^ Lonsdale 2006, note 17, p.11
  8. ^ Preface, revised edition, p, v.
  9. ^ Kucich, Greg. “Gendering the Canons of Romanticism: Past and Present.” The Wordsworth Circle, vol. 27, no. 2, 1996, pp. 95–102. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/24042631. Accessed 24 Jun. 2022.
  10. ^ Ferguson, Moira. "'The cause of my sex': Mary Scott and the female literary tradition." Huntington Library Quarterly 50.4 (Autumn 1987), p. 359.
  11. ^ Remains unidentified, according to Lavoie (p. 312).
  12. ^ Todd, Janet M., A Dictionary of British and American women writers, 1660-1800. Totowa, N.J.: Rowman & Allanheld, 1985, 269. (Etext, Internet Archive)
  13. ^ Lonsdale, Roger ed. Eighteenth Century Women Poets: An Oxford Anthology. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.
  14. ^ Lavoie points out that the second of these two pieces, "Verses on a day of prayer, for success in war" (pp. 176-177), is a hymn by Anne Steele, Scott's friend (Lavoie, p. 320).
  15. ^ The editors list "Mrs. Darwall" and "Miss Whateley" as separate poets.

References[edit]

  • Lavoie, Chantel Michelle. Poems by Eminent Ladies: A study of an eighteenth-century anthology (thesis). Toronto: University of Toronto, 1999. ISBN 9780612498839, 0612498832 (PDF)
  • Lonsdale, Roger. Introduction to the 2006 edition of Johnson's "Lives" (Clarendon Press)

External links[edit]