Mabel Peacock

Mabel Geraldine Woodruffe Peacock (9 May 1856– 17 July 1920)[1] was an English folklorist.

Peacock was the daughter of Lucy and Edward Peacock F.S.A. of Bottesford Manor, Brigg, Lincolnshire, and later of Kirton-in-Lindsey. She made collections of folklore in this region and published them in journals and her books.[2]

She retired to Norfolk in 1918 and died of tuberculosis in 1920. Mabel Peacock is buried in Grayingham, Lincolnshire churchyard.[3]

Peacock is among the favorite authors of Sir George Bailey in A. S. Byatt's novel, Possession.[4]

Bibliography

Her works include:

  • An Index of Royalists whose estates were confiscated during the Commonwealth. 1879.
  • Tales and Rhymes in the Lindsey Folk-speech, 1886, with Max Peacock (anonymously)
  • Tales fra Linkishire, 1889. She also edited a reprint of John Bunyan's Holy War and Heavenly Footman, 1892, with full introduction and notes;
  • Lincolnshire Tales, 1897.
  • Lincolnshire Rhymes, 1907.
  • Lincolnshire County Folklore, 1908, with Eliza Gutch.
  • Many contributions to Folk-Lore and a collection of notes and manuscript.
gollark: It would be fun to the *edited* me.
gollark: "Fun" is probably just some weird heuristic for novelty-seeking, but it manifests more as a terminal goal than some bad mental tool for navigating goals.
gollark: (or properly for situations it wasn't really optimized for)
gollark: It's an effective one, since you don't have to rely on a glitchy evolved heuristic which might not work properly.
gollark: Also decision making.

References

  1. Death Notice, Norfolk Chronicle, 15 December 1920
  2. Crooke, William, ed. (December 1920). "Obituary of Miss Mabel Peacock" . Folk-Lore. 31. p. 338 via Wikisource. [scan ]
  3. Death Notice, Norfolk Chronicle, 15 December 1920
  4. Byatt, AS. Possession 1991
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