Mary Ann Browne

Mary Ann Browne (also known as Mrs. James Gray; 24 September 1812 – 28 January 1845) was an English poet and writer of musical scores.

Biography

Mary Ann (sometimes Mary-Anne) Browne was born in Maidenhead, Berkshire, 24 September 1812.[1] She was the eldest of three children.[2] Though some sources mention Felicia Hemans was her sister, that is not the case.[3][4]

A collection of her verses came before the public when she was only fifteen years of age.[5] Browne wrote Mont Blanc, Ada, Bepentance, The Coronal, The Birthday Gift, Ignatia, Sacred Poetry, and many fugitive pieces in periodicals.[6]

In 1840, her family removed to Liverpool. In 1842, she married James Gray, a Scotchman, and a nephew of James Hogg. Her mature character was remarkable for piety and charity, shown in deeds of unostentatious usefulness to all around her.[6] She died 28 January 1845 at Sunday's Well, Cork, Ireland.[1][lower-alpha 1]

Style and themes

Her writing evinced a mind which has derived its thoughts chiefly from secondary sources. Her style was always imitative, yet the pathos which usually belongs to her themes, and her mode Of treating them, was attractive and endearing.[6]

Selected works

  • The captive knight : a ballad, 18-- (Musical score)
  • The messenger bird, a duett, 1826 (Musical score, with George E. Blake)
  • The sunset tree, Tyrolese evening hymn, 1826 (Musical score, with George E Blake)
  • The Pilgrim Fathers, 1827 (Musical score)
  • Mont Blanc, and other poems by Mary Ann Browne, in her fifteenth year., 1827
  • The recall, 1827-33 (Musical score, with Charles Bradlee)
  • Ada, and other poems, 1828
  • Evening song to the Virgin, (at sea) A duett., 183- (Musical score, with Edward S Mesier)
  • The blue sea, song of a Greek islander in exile,, 183- (Musical score, with Edward S Mesier)
  • The coronal; original poems, sacred and miscellaneous., 1833
  • Ignatia, and other poems, 1838
  • Twelve popular songs, 18-- (with Edward F. Rimbault)

Notes

  1. Virtue & Company record 1844 as year of death.[6]
gollark: That atomic rockets page talks about particle beams, actually. Does the Eldraeverse use those much?
gollark: Warranty void if used in same system as inhabited planets.
gollark: *entire spaceship instantly obliterated by slight engineering error*
gollark: Wait, antigravitational effect?
gollark: Ah, but the future might be.

References

  1. Brown, Susan; Patricia Clements; Isobel Grundy (eds.). "Mary Ann Browne". Orlando Project. Cambridge University Press Online. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  2. Ashfield 1998, p. 162.
  3. Feldman 2000, p. 154.
  4. Blain, Virginia (January 1995). ""Thou with Earth's Music Answerest to the Sky": Felicia Hemans, Mary Ann Browne, and the myth of poetic sisterhood". Women's Writing. 2 (3): 251–269. doi:10.1080/0969908950020304.
  5. Virtue and Company 1875, p. 547.
  6. Virtue and Company 1875, p. 548.

Attribution

  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Virtue and Company (1875). The Art Journal (Public domain ed.). Virtue and Company.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.