Thursday, March 21, 2019
Mary Barton: A Tale of Manchester Life :: Essays
bloody shame Barton A Tale of Manchester LifeElizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell was born in London on Setpember 29th, 1810 to William and Elizabeth Stevenson. Her father William was a former Unitarian minister who, after self-effacing from the ministry, combined farming, writing, and teaching before being appointed Keeper of the Records to the treasury (Allott 10). Her mother, Elizabeth died just over a year after giving receive and, consequently, while still an infant, Gaskell was sent off to live with her aunt, Hannah Lumb who resided in Heathside, Knutford. throughout her young intent, up until her 1832 marriage, Gaskell lived in various places around England including Stratford-on-Avon, where she received some education, Newcastle, Edinburgh, and Manchester. It was in Manchester that she met her husband, William Gaskell, a ministers assistant, who was eventually to become Senior subgenus Pastor and remain at Cross Street Unitarian Chapel in Manchester for the peace of a long, a ctive life (Allott 11). From 1832 to 1848, after her marriage to William Gaskell, Mrs. Gaskell lived a life of domesticity, giving birth to 6 children, with 4 surviving. Besides raising the 4 surviving children, Gaskell worked with her husband to aid, comfort, and minister to the poor of Manchester. In 1845, Gaskell suffered the haunting deprivation of her only son to scarlet fever at just xix months old. With the encouragement of her husband, Gaskell turned her grief towards writing, and her literary career began.Over the tendency of her literary career, Gaskell wrote six novels, several nouvelles, a life history, about thirty short-change stories, a number of sketches and articles, and a few poems (Allott 8). The novels, in chronological assure were Mary Barton (1848), Cranford (1853), Ruth (1853), North and South (1855), Slyvias Lovers (1863), and Cousin Phillis (1864). The biography was of her good friend and fellow authoress, Charlotte Bront, The Life of Charlotte B ront (1857). Gaskells career include two controversies, one over her portrayal of the fallen woman in society in Ruth the other over accusations of libel from portrayals in The Life of Charlotte Bront. Despite these controversies, Gaskell remained a popular literary figure throughout her life, even enjoying a friendship and working relationship with perhaps the about popular writer of the day, Charles Dickens, to whose Household Words publication she became a customary contributor. When Gaskell passed away in 1865, The Athenaeum rated Gaskell if not the some popular, with small question, the most powerful and finished female novelist of an epoch singularly rich in female novelists(Victorian Web).
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