
Transcribed from the 1909 Deighton and Co. edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
Anna Seward emerged from a modest clerical family in mid‑eighteenth‑century England, growing up amid the stone walls of Lichfield’s Bishop’s Palace. From her earliest years she displayed a prodigious talent for verse, earning the nickname “the first poetess of her day” and forming friendships with the era’s leading minds—Garrick, Johnson, and the vibrant literary circle that gathered in the city’s historic streets. The opening chapters trace her childhood, family tragedies, and the formative influence of Lichfield’s cathedral and scholarly atmosphere, setting the stage for a remarkable literary career.
The biography weaves Seward’s own poetic voice with vivid portraits of her contemporaries, revealing how her work both reflected and shaped the cultural pulse of her time. By revisiting letters, elegies, and the bustling salon life she helped create, the book aims to restore her to the public imagination and illuminate the rich tapestry of Lichfield’s intellectual heritage. Listeners will be drawn into a world of wit, passion, and the enduring power of a woman’s verse.
Language
en
Duration
~58 minutes (56K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-08-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1846–1922
Best known for writing on literary and family history, this English barrister also had a small first-class cricket career. His books include studies of Izaak Walton and Anna Seward, showing a clear interest in biography, place, and the texture of English literary life.
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