Mary Howitt

Mary Howitt

Mary Howitt
Born 12 March 1799[1]
Coleford, in Gloucestershire
Died 30 January 1888 (age 89)
Rome
Education at home
Occupation Writer
Spouse(s) William Howitt
Children

Thumbelina ( biological /adopted daughter )

Anna Mary Howitt ( Daughter )
Parent(s) Samuel Botham and Anne (née Wood)
Mary's portrait in a book
Mary Howitt
A book by William and Mary called Abbeys and Castles of Great Britain. It features a number of photographs and sells today (2007) for over 1000 pounds.[2]
"Ansitz Mair am Hof". The summer retreat in Dietenheim, near Brunico, 1871–1879
Marienruhe M.A.H. in Meran
Former US First Lady Laura Bush just after reading from Mary Howitt's book The Spider and the Fly on 27 October 2006 in Florida

Mary Howitt (12 March 1799 – 30 January 1888) was an English poet, and author of the famous poem The Spider and the Fly.

Background and early life

She was born Mary Botham at Coleford, in Gloucestershire, the temporary residence of her parents, while her father, Samuel Botham, a prosperous Quaker of Uttoxeter, Staffordshire, was looking after some mining property. Samuel had married his wife Ann in South Wales in 1796 when he was 38 and she was 32. They had four children Anna, Mary, Emma and Charles. Their Queen Anne house is now known as Howitt Place.[3]

Mary Botham was educated at home, and read widely; she commenced writing verses at a very early age.[1] Together with her husband she wrote over 180 books.[4]

Marriage and writing

On 16 April 1821 she married William Howitt and began a career of joint authorship with him. Her life was completely bound up with that of her husband; she was separated only from him during the period of his Australian journey (1851–54).

They lived initially in Heanor in Derbyshire, where William was a pharmacist.[3] It was not until 1823, when they were living in Nottingham, that William decided to give up his business with his brother Richard, and concentrate with Mary on writing.[3] Their literary productions at first consisted chiefly of poetical and other contributions to annuals and periodicals, of which a selection was published in 1827 under the title of The Desolation of Eyam and other Poems.

William and Mary mixed with many important literary figures of the day including Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. On removing to Esher in 1837 she commenced writing her well-known tales for children, a long series of books which met with signal success.[1] In 1837 the couple went on a tour of the north and stayed with William and Dorothy Wordsworth.[3] Their work was well regarded; in 1839 Queen Victoria gave George Byng a copy of Mary's book Hymns and Fireside Verses.[3]

William and Mary moved to London in 1843, and following a second move in 1844 they counted Tennyson amongst their neighbours.[3]

Scandinavia

While residing at Heidelberg in 1840, Mary Howitt attention was directed to Scandinavian literature. In company with a friend, Madame Schoultz, she set herself to learn Swedish and Danish. She afterwards translated and introduced Fredrika Bremer's novels (1842–1863, 18 vols) to English readers. Howitt also translated many of Hans Christian Andersen's tales, such as[1]

Among her original works were The Heir of West Way Ian (1847). She edited for three years the Drawing-room Scrap Book, writing (among other articles included) "Biographical Sketches of the Queens of England". She edited the Pictorial Calendar of the Seasons, translated Joseph Ennemoser's History of Magic, and took the chief share in The Literature and Romance of Northern Europe (1852). She also produced a Popular History of the United States (2 vols. 1859), and a three-volume novel called The Cost of Caergwyn (1864).[1]

Mary's brother-in-law Godfrey Howitt, his wife and her family had emigrated to Australia, arriving at Port Phillip in April 1840.[5] In June 1852, the three male members of the Howitt family, accompanied by Edward La Trobe Bateman, sailed there in the hope of finding a fortune. Meanwhile, Mary and her two daughters moved into the Hermitage, Mr Bateman's cottage in Highgate, which had previously been occupied by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.[6]

The men returned from Australia a number of years later. William wrote several books describing the its flora and and fauna.[3] Their son, Alfred William Howitt, achieved renown as an Australian explorer, anthropologist and naturalist; he discovered the remains of the explorers Burke and Wills, which he brought to Melbourne for burial.

Mary Howitt had several other children. Herbert Charlton Howitt was drowned while engineering a road in New Zealand. Anna Mary Howitt spent a year in Germany with the artist Wilhelm von Kaulbach, an experience she wrote up as An Art-Student in Munich. She married Alfred Alaric Watts, wrote a biography of her father, and died while on a visit to her mother in Tirol in 1884.[7] Margaret Howitt wrote the Life of Fredrika Bremer and a memoir of her own mother.[8]

Mary Howitt's name was attached as author, translator or editor to upwards of 110 works. She received a silver medal from the Literary Academy of Stockholm, and on 21 April 1879 was awarded a civil list pension of £100. a year. In her declining years she joined the Roman Catholic Church, and was one of an English deputation received by Pope Leo XIII on 10 January 1888. Her Reminiscences of my Later Life were printed in Good Words in 1886. The Times says:

Their friends used jokingly to call them William and Mary, and to maintain that they had been crowned together like their royal prototypes. Nothing that either of them wrote will live, but they were so industrious, so disinterested, so amiable, so devoted to the work of spreading good and innocent literature, that their names ought not to disappear unmourned.

Mary Howitt was away from her residence in Meran in Tyrol spending the winter in Rome when she died of bronchitis on 30 January 1888.[1]

Her works

Among the works written, like those already mentioned, independently of her husband, were:

The Spider and the Fly

Mary Howitt's poem the "Spider and the Fly" was originally published in 1829. When Lewis Carroll was readying Alice's Adventures Under Ground for publication, he replaced a parody he had made of a negro minstrel song[9] with the "Lobster Quadrille", a parody of Mary's poem.[10]

The poem was a Caldecott Honor Book in October 2003.[11]

References

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Mary Howitt

Further reading

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