Maria James

Maria James (October 11, 1793 – September 11, 1868[1]) was a Welsh-born American poet and domestic servant. Her poetry includes Ode on the Fourth of July 1833.

Early years and education

Maria James was born in 1793, in Wales. She was about seven years old when she emigrated to the United States with her family,[2] landing at Dutchess County, New York, where her father went to work at the slate quarries.[1]

She was fond of reading the common hymnbook, and the New Testament was her only school book. She heard Joseph Addison's paraphrases of the twenty-third psalm, which she described as the first time that she ever heard a good reader.[2] Her parents moved house, and James found herself in a school where the elder children used the American Preceptor. She found herself entranced by the sounds of their reading of Timothy Dwight IV's "Columbia", the meaning of which she did not understand at the time.[2]

Career

At the age of ten, her parents arranged for her to enter the family of Rev. Freeborn Garrettson,[1] where she lived till she was seventeen. Besides carrying out household tasks, she had further opportunities for reading.[2] The heads of the family constantly impressing on the children that 'the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom' and that to 'depart from iniquity is understanding'. In her leisure hours, she read from the Female Mentor, two odd volumes of the Adventurer; Miss Hannah More's Cheap Repository; and Pilgrim's Progress.[2]

In her seventeenth year, she left the Garrettsons to learn dressmaking, but it proved unsuccessful as a career. After this, she worked for several households, mainly in the nursery. [2] In 1833, Bishop Alonzo Potter, then one of the professors in Union College, was shown by his wife, who had just returned from a visit to Rhinebeck on the Hudson, the "Ode for the Fourth of July", and informed that it was the production of a young woman at service in the family of a friend there, whom he had often noticed on account of her retiring and modest manners, and who had been in that capacity more than twenty years. When he learned more about Maria James, he looked at some of her other poetry, and arranged for them to be published, with a preface by him, in a volume entitled Wales and other Poems, by Maria James, published in 1839.[3]

Potter's long introduction to the collection assures readers that Maria James "solaced a life of labour with intellectual occupations," and that "her achievements should be made known to repress the supercilious pride of the privileged and educated."[4] In this way, Potter vindicated, in an admirable manner, against the sneers of Johnson, the propriety of recognising the abilities of the humblest classes.[3]

With respect to some of her early poems, she recollected trying something in this way for the amusement of a little boy who was very dear to her. Except this, with a very few other pieces, no attempt of the kind was made until "The Mother's Lament", and "Elijah", with a number of epitaphs. Others early verses included "Hummingbird" and "The Adventure". In the summer of 1832, when she heard a reading of Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, by Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne, it brought to her mind certain conversations which she heard in the early part of her life regarding Bonaparte. The poem was produced the following summer. In the year 1819, "The American Flag" appeared in the New York American, signed 'Croaker & Co.': fourteen years later, this was her inspiration for the "Ode on the Fourth of July, 1833". After publication, it was popularly assumed that she had not written the poem without help. Many of the pieces were written from impressions received in youth, particularly the "Whippoorwill", the "Meadow Lark", the "Firefly", and others.[3]

James died in Rhinebeck, New York, in 1868, age 74.[1]

gollark: You did not. How does the paper talk about "magnetism having an effect on gravity"?
gollark: Explain how it is first.
gollark: It's not saying that.
gollark: As best I can tell this is saying something about a "gravitomagnetic" effect and (best attempt to parse the insanity) you're trying to go from some reference to that to "so obviously something something gravity magnetism" to "everything is electromagnetism, electric universe, intergalactic Birkeland currents".
gollark: Not really?

References

  1. Wilson & Fiske 1887, p. 399.
  2. Griswold 1852, p. 66.
  3. Griswold 1852, p. 67.
  4. James 1839, p. 29.

Attribution

  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Griswold, Rufus Wilmot (1852). The Female Poets of America (Public domain ed.). H.C. Baird.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: James, Maria (1839). "Alonzo Potter, "Introduction"". Wales: And Other Poems (Public domain ed.). J. S. Taylor. p. 29.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John (1887). Appleton's Cyclopædia of American Biography (Public domain ed.). D. Appleton. p. 399.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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