Margaret Moyes Black

Margaret Moyes Black (pseudonym, M.B. Fife; 1853–1935) was a Scottish novelist and biographer. She was born on 27 April 1853 in the parish of Scoonie, Fife. Her father was William Black, a shipmaster,and her mother was Margaret Moyes Deas. She wrote her first novel, In Glenoran, under the pseudonym of M.B. Fife. Of the volume on Robert Louis Stevenson, in the Famous Scots Series, Black stated in her preface that it is, "only a reminiscence and an appreciation by one who, in the old days between 1869 and 1880, knew him and his home circle well."[1] She was unmarried and died on 16 October 1935 at Montrose, Angus.[lower-alpha 1]

Margaret Moyes Black
Born(1853-04-27)27 April 1853
Scoonie, Fife, Scotland, UK
Died16 October 1935(1935-10-16) (aged 82)
Montrose, Angus, UK
Pen nameM.B. Fife
OccupationWriter, novelist, biographer, botanist
NationalityScottish
GenreNon-fiction, novels, biography, botany

Selected works

Notes

  1. Adapted from the births and deaths information available at the General Register Office for Scotland, Scotlands People Centre in Edinburgh, and also at http://scotlandspeople.gov.uk
gollark: Also "you aren't using actual evidence" and "you're constantly shifting the goalposts" and "you're not even bothering to explain your claims and just expect people to infer them from random papers" and "you say stupidly vague things and cite papers for evidence because they sound vaguely related".
gollark: Your quote, not the video which I have ignored.
gollark: Well, it's hardly a good-faith attempt to explain a point or something, and you're unlikely to make anyone actually do much about it by saying it again.
gollark: > Ah, yes, this video says saint Einstein is wrong therefore he is a moron indeed.> Ah, yesis generally used to precede "gotcha" sort of things i.e. snappy "arguments" which don't really mean much> saint Einsteinis basically you just pushing the whole "science = religion" thing you like
gollark: It's not exactly a very sensible thing to "address", since it seems to just be you being inflammatory.

References

  1. Chapman 1898, p. 705.

Attribution

  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chapman, J. (1898). The Westminster Review. 150 (Public domain ed.). J. Chapman.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)


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