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Mary Robinson (poet)

Mary Robinson (née Darby; 27 November 1757 – 26 December 1800) was an English actress, poet, dramatist, novelist, and celebrity figure. She lived in England, in the cities of Bristol and London; she also lived in France and Germany for a time. She enjoyed poetry from the age of seven and started working, first as a teacher and then as actress, from the age of fourteen. She wrote many plays, poems and novels. She was a celebrity, gossiped about in newspapers, famous for her acting and writing. During her lifetime she was known as "the English Sappho".[1][2] She earned her nickname "Perdita" for her role as Perdita (heroine of Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale) in 1779. She was the first public mistress of King George IV while he was still Prince of Wales.

Mary Robinson
Portrait of Mary Robinson by Thomas Gainsborough, 1781
Born
Mary Darby

(1757-11-27)27 November 1757
Bristol, England
Died26 December 1800(1800-12-26) (aged 43)
SpouseThomas Robinson
ChildrenMary Elizabeth Robinson

Biography Edit

Early life Edit

Robinson was born in Bristol, England to Nicholas Darby, a naval captain, and his wife Hester (née Vanacott) who had married at Donyatt, Somerset, in 1749, and was baptised 'Polle(y)' ("Spelt 'Polle' in the official register and 'Polly' in the Bishop's Transcript") at St Augustine's Church, Bristol, 19 July 1758,[3] the entry noting that she was born 27 November 1756.[4] In her memoirs,[5] Robinson gives her birth in 1758, but the year 1757 seems more likely according to recently published research (see appendix to Byrne, 2005). Her father deserted her mother and took a mistress when Robinson was still a child. The family hoped for a reconciliation, but Captain Darby made it clear that this was not going to happen. Without the support of her husband, Hester Darby supported herself and the five children born of the marriage by starting a school for young girls in Little Chelsea, London, (where Robinson taught by her 14th birthday).[6] However, during one of his brief returns to the family, Captain Darby had the school closed[7] (which he was entitled to do by English law). Darby died in the Russian naval service in 1785. Robinson, who at one point attended a school run by the social reformer Hannah More, came to the attention of actor David Garrick.

Marriage Edit

Hester Darby encouraged her daughter to accept the proposal of an articled clerk, Thomas Robinson, who claimed to have an inheritance. Mary was against this idea; however, after falling ill and watching him take care of her and her younger brother, she felt that she owed him, and she did not want to disappoint her mother who was pushing for the engagement. After the early marriage, Robinson discovered her husband did not have an inheritance. He continued to live an elaborate lifestyle, however, and made no effort to hide multiple affairs. Subsequently, Mary supported their family. After her husband squandered their money, the couple fled to Talgarth, Breconshire (where Robinson's only daughter, Mary Elizabeth, was born in November). Here they lived in a fairly large estate, called Tregunter Park. Eventually her husband was imprisoned for debt in the Fleet Prison where she lived with him for many months. While it was common for the wives of prisoners to live with their husbands while indebted, children were usually sent to live with relatives to keep them away from the dangers of prison. However, Robinson was deeply devoted to her daughter Maria, and when her husband was imprisoned, Robinson brought the 6-month-old baby with her.[8]

It was in the Fleet Prison that Robinson's literary career really began, as she found that she could publish poetry to earn money, and to give her an escape from the harsh reality that had become her life. Her first book, Poems By Mrs. Robinson, was published in 1775 by C. Parker.[9] Additionally, Robinson's husband was offered work in the form of copying legal documents so he could try to pay back some of his debts, but he refused to do anything. Robinson, in an effort to keep the family together and to get back to normal life outside of prison, took the job instead, collecting the pay that her husband neglected to earn.[8] During this time, Mary Robinson found a patron in Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire, who sponsored the publication of Robinson's second volume of poems, Captivity.

Theatre Edit

 
Caricature of the Prince of Wales as Florizel and Mary Robinson as Perdita, 1783

After her husband obtained his release from prison, Robinson decided to return to the theatre. She launched her acting career and took to the stage playing Juliet at Drury Lane Theatre in December 1776. Robinson was best known for her facility with the 'breeches parts', and her performances as Viola in William Shakespeare'sTwelfth Night and Rosalind in As You Like It won her extensive praise. But she gained popularity with playing in Florizel and Perdita, an adaptation of Shakespeare, with the role of Perdita (heroine of The Winter's Tale) in 1779. It was during this performance that she attracted the notice of the young Prince of Wales, later King George IV of the United Kingdom.[10] He offered her twenty thousand pounds to become his mistress.[11] During this time, the very young Emma, Lady Hamilton sometimes worked as her maid and dresser at the theatre.

With her new social prominence, Robinson became a trend-setter in London, introducing a loose, flowing muslin style of gown based upon Grecian statuary that became known as the Perdita. It took Robinson a considerable amount of time to decide to leave her husband for the Prince, as she did not want to be seen by the public as that type of woman. Throughout much of her life she struggled to live in the public eye and also to stay true to the values in which she believed. She eventually gave in to her desires to be with a man who she thought would treat her better than Mr Robinson. However the Prince ended the affair in 1781, refusing to pay the promised sum.[12] "Perdita" Robinson was left to support herself through an annuity promised by the Crown (but rarely paid), in return for some letters written by the Prince, and through her writings.[13] After her affair with the young Prince of Wales she became famous for her rides in her extravagant carriages and her celebrity–like perception by the public.[14]

Later life and death Edit

 
Lieutenant-Colonel Banastre Tarleton by Joshua Reynolds

Mary Robinson, who now lived separately from her husband, went on to have several love affairs, most notably with Banastre Tarleton, a soldier who had recently distinguished himself fighting in the American War of Independence. Prior to their relationship, Robinson had been having an affair with a man named Lord Malden. According to one account, Malden and Tarleton were betting men, and Malden was so confident in Robinson's loyalty to him, and believed that no man could ever take her from him. As such, he made a bet of a thousand guineas that none of the men in his circle could seduce her. Unfortunately for Malden, Tarleton accepted the bet and swooped in to not only seduce Robinson, but establish a relationship that would last the next 15 years.[15] This relationship, though rumoured to have started on a bet, saw Tarleton's rise in military rank and his concomitant political successes, Mary's own various illnesses, financial vicissitudes and the efforts of Tarleton's own family to end the relationship. They had no children, although Robinson had a miscarriage. However, in the end, Tarleton married Susan Bertie, an heiress and an illegitimate daughter of the young 4th Duke of Ancaster, and niece of his sisters Lady Willoughby de Eresby and Lady Cholmondeley. In 1783, Robinson suffered a mysterious illness that left her partially paralysed. Biographer Paula Byrne speculates that a streptococcal infection resulting from a miscarriage led to a severe rheumatic fever that left her disabled for the rest of her life.

From the late 1780s, Robinson became distinguished for her poetry and was called "the English Sappho". In addition to poems, she wrote eight novels, three plays, feminist treatises, and an autobiographical manuscript that was incomplete at the time of her death. Like her contemporary Mary Wollstonecraft, she championed the rights of women and was an ardent supporter of the French Revolution. She died in poverty at Englefield Cottage, Englefield Green, Surrey, 26 December 1800, aged 44, having survived several years of ill health, and was survived by her daughter, Maria Elizabeth (1774-1818), who was also a published novelist. Administration of her estate was granted to her husband Thomas Robinson from whom she had long been separated and who in 1803 inherited a substantial estate from his half-brother William.[16] One of Robinson's dying wishes was to see the rest of her works published. She tasked her daughter, Maria Robinson, with publishing most of these works. She also placed her Memoirs in the care of her daughter, insisting that she publish the work. Maria Robinson published Memoirs just a few months later.[17]

Portraits Edit

During her lifetime, Robinson also enjoyed the distinction of having her image captured by the most notable artists of the period. The earliest known, drawn by James Roberts II, depicts "Mrs. Robinson in the Character of Amanda" from Cibber's Love's Last Shift in 1777. In 1781, Thomas Gainsborough produced an oil sketch, Mrs. Mary Robinson 'Perdita', and an untitled study. That year, George Romney also painted Mrs. Mary Robinson and John Keyse Sherwin printed an untitled portrait. Joshua Reynolds sketched a study for what became Portrait of a Lady in 1782, and in 1784, he finished Mrs Robinson as Contemplation for which he also sketched a study. George Dance the Younger sketched a later portrait in 1793.

Literature Edit

 
Mrs Robinson by Thomas Gainsborough, 1781

In 1792 Robinson published her most popular novel which was a Gothic novel titled, Vancenza; or The Dangers of Credulity. The books were "sold out by lunch time on the first day and five more editions quickly followed, making it one of the top-selling novels in the latter part of the eighteenth century."[18] It did not receive either critical or popular acclaim.[19] In 1794 she wrote The Widow; or, A Picture of Modern Times which portrayed themes of manners in the fashionable world.[20] Since Robinson was a fashion icon and very much involved in the fashion world the novel did not get a lot of favourable reception in 1794 as it might have now. In 1796 she wrote Angelina: A Novel. It cost more money than it brought in. Through this novel, she offers her thoughts on the afterlife of her literary career.

There has been an increase in scholarly attention to Robinson’s literary output in recent years. While most of the early literature written about Robinson focused on her sexuality, emphasising her affairs and fashions, she also spoke out about woman's place in the literary world, for which she began to receive the attention of feminists and literary scholars in the 1990s. Robinson recognised that, ”women writers were deeply ambivalent about the myths of authorship their male counterparts had created”[21] and as a result she sought to elevate woman's place in the literary world by recognising women writers in her own work. In A Letter to the Women of England, Robinson includes an entire page dedicated to English women writers to support her notion that they were just as capable as men of being successful in the literary world. These ideas have continued to keep Mary Robinson relevant in literary discussions today. In addition to maintaining literary and cultural notability, she has re-attained a degree of celebrity in recent years when several biographies of her appeared, including one by Paula Byrne entitled Perdita: The Literary, Theatrical, and Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson that became a top-ten best-seller after being selected for the Richard & Judy Book Club.

An eight-volume scholarly edition of Robinson's complete works was published in 2009–2010. In 2011, Daniel Robinson (no relation), editor of the poetry for the edition, published the first scholarly monograph to focus exclusively on her literary achievement--The Poetry of Mary Robinson: Form and Fame. A second monograph on Robinson's literary career, Mary Robinson and the Genesis of Romanticism: Literary Dialogues and Debts, 1784-1821, by Ashley Cross, appeared in 2016. Although, Robinson's novels were not as successful as she hoped, she had a talent for her poetry. Her ability to produce poetry can be seen furthermore in her poems titled "Sappho and Phaeon". Since the press had given her the name "The English Sappho", a clear relationship can be drawn between these poems and her literary name. The poems are love poems and many scholars have come to the conclusion that they represent her affairs with the Prince of Wales. Mary Darby Robinson was not only praised in literary circles for her poetry but also for her works written in prose. The two best known examples are "A Letter to the Women of England" (1798) and "The Natural Daughter" (1799). Both her works are dealing with the role of women during the Romantic Era. Mary Robinson as much as Mary Wollenstonecraft tried to put the focus on how inferior women were treated in comparison to men. The discrepancy can be seen in both of her works. "The Natural Daughter" can be seen as an autobiography of Mary Robinson. The characters are in many ways patterns of her own life and the stages of her life. All the characters are symbols of her own coming of age or people she met in her life.[22]

Poetry Edit

 
Perdita, portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1782.

From the late 1780s, Robinson, striving to separate herself from her past scandals, and life as a theatre actress, turned to writing as a full-time career.[23] Robinson, disregarding her previous associations with the nickname “Perdita”, meaning “lost one”, soon became distinguished for her poetry and was reclassified as "the English Sappho" by the English public. During her 25-year writing career, from 1775 until her premature death in 1800, Robinson produced an immense body of work. In addition to eight collections of poems, Robinson wrote eight novels, three plays, feminist treatises, and an autobiographical manuscript that was incomplete at the time of her death.[23]

Poems by Mrs. Robinson, was published by C. Parker, in London, in 1775.[23] "Poems" consisted of “twenty-six ballads, odes, and elegies” that “echo traditional values, praising values such as charity, sincerity, and innocence, particularly in a woman”.[24] Robinson's husband, Thomas Robinson was imprisoned at the King's Bench Prison for fifteen months for the gambling debts he acquired. Robinson originally intended for the profits made from this collection to help pay off his debts. But the publication of Poems could not prevent his imprisonment. Robinson lived for nine months and three weeks with Thomas and their baby within the squalor of prison.[23]

Motivated by the months she spent in prison, Robinson wrote Captivity; a Poem and Celadon and Lydia, a Tale, published by T. Becket, in London, in 1777.[23] This collection “described the horrors of captivity and painted a sympathetic picture of the ‘wretch’ and the ‘guiltless partners of his poignant woes’...The poem ends admonishing people to open their hearts and to pity the unfortunate...”[23]

Following the publication of Captivity, Robinson established a new poetic identity for herself. Robinson let go of her Della Cruscan style when she wrote Poems by Mary Robinson, published in 1791 by J. Bell in London, and Poems by Mrs. Robinson, published in 1793 by T. Spilsbury in London.[23] A review was written by the Gentleman's Magazine and the reviewer stated that if Robinson had been less blessed with "beauty and captivating manners","her poetical taste might have been confined in its influence". At the end of the review, "the Gentleman's Magazine describes her poetry as elegant and harmonious.[25]

In 1795, Robinson wrote a satirical poem titled London's Summer Morning, but it was published after her death in 1800.[23] This poem showcased Robinson's critical perspective of the infrastructure and society of London. Robinson described the busy and loud sounds of the industrialised city in the morning. She employed characters such as the chimney-boy, and ruddy housemaid to make a heavy critique on the way English society treated children as both innocent and fragile creatures.[26]

In 1796, Robinson argued for women's rationality, their right to education and illustrated ideas of free will, suicide, rationalisation, empiricism and relationship to sensibility in Sappho and Phaon: In a Series of Legitimate Sonnets.[27]

 
Portrait by George Romney, c. 1782

During the 1790s, Robinson was highly inspired by feminism and desired to spread her liberal sentiments through her writing.[28] She was an ardent admirer of Mary Wollstonecraft, an established and influential feminist writer of the period. But to Robinson’s surprise, her intense feelings were not reciprocated by Wollstonecraft.[28] While Robinson expected a strong friendship between the two of them to flourish, Wollstonecraft “found Robinson herself considerably less appealing than the title character of Angelina”.[28] In 1796, Wollstonecraft wrote an extremely harsh review of Robinson's work in the Analytical Review. It was this critique that was not critical, or well thought out. Instead, Wollstonecraft's review of Robinson proved to be relatively shallow and pointed at her jealousy of Robinson's comparable freedom. Wollstonecraft had the potential to spend more of her own time writing, instead of having to entertain her husband, William Goodwin.[28] Robinson's "Letter to the Women of England against Mental Subordination" is still powerful reading. Robinson reiterates the rights women have to live by sexual passion.

Lastly, in 1800, after years of failing health and decline into financial ruin, Robinson wrote her last piece of literature during her lifetime: a series of poems titled the Lyrical Tales, published by Longman & Rees, in London. This poetry collection explored themes of domestic violence, misogyny, violence against destitute characters, and political oppression. “Robinson’s last work pleads for a recognition of the moral and rational worth of women: ‘Let me ask this plain and rational question-- is not woman a human being, gifted with all the feelings that inhabit the bosom of man?".[23] Robinson's main objective was to respond to Lyrical Ballads written by authors Wordsworth and Coleridge; who were not as well known at the time. Although it was not as highly praised as Mary Wollstonecraft's "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman", published in 1792, Lyrical Tales provides a “powerful critique of the division of duties and privileges between the sexes. It places Robinson firmly on the side of the ‘feminist’ thinkers or ‘modern’ philosophers of the 1790s, as one of the strong defenders of her sex".[23]

Criticism and reception Edit

Robinson was known as a sexualised celebrity, but she was a very talented writer. Robinson did not receive recognition for her work until much later because of "strict attitudes led to a rejection of the literary work of such a notorious woman."[29] She became a lesson to young girls about the dangers of promiscuity, and pleasure seeking. She was named by her friend Samuel Taylor Coleridge "as a woman of undoubted genius."[25] The collection of Poems published in 1791 had a "subscription list of 600 people was headed by His Royal Highness, George, Prince of Wales, and included many other members of the nobility. Some people subscribed because of her writing, some because of her notoriety, and some perhaps out of pity for the former actress, now crippled and ill. Reviews were generally kind, and noted traces in her poems of a sensibility that would later be termed Romanticism."[29] Twenty years after her death the Poetical Works of The Late Mrs. Robinson was published in 1824, which speaks to her ongoing popularity.[30] Robinson's second novel The Widow, and in her controversial comedy Nobody: A Comedy in Two Acts both of which, according to newspaper reports, offended fashionable women.[31] Needless to say, Robinson's playwright career was short-lived after all the bad reviews of her play. The upper class interpreted her satire as mockery on female gambling and it was an attack on moral legitimacy of the Whig elite.[32] The upper class interpretation of Nobody reveals a great deal about the social and political anxieties during the revolutionary era.[33]

Robinson's poems were popular, especially after she produced a variety of poems whilst working at the newspaper The Morning Post. The poetry columns had a double agenda of pleasing a substantial and diverse audience and shaping them into a select group of elite readers eager to buy and consume books.[32] The public adored the novel Vancenza; or The Dangers of Credulity, but the critical reception was mixed. Furthermore, a biographer Paula Byrne recently dismissed it as a “product of the vogue for Gothic fiction [that] now seems overblown to the point of absurdity.” Although Robinson's poetry was more popular than her other works, the most lucrative "was her prose. The money helped to support herself, her mother and daughter, and often Banastre Tarleton.[citation needed] Novels such as Vancenza (1792), The Widow (1794), Angelina (1796), and Walsingham (1797) went through multiple editions and were often translated into French and German. They owed part of their popularity to their suspected autobiographical elements. Even when her characters were placed in scenes of gothic horror, their views could be related to the experiences of their author."[29]

Mary Robinson was one of the first female celebrities of the modern era. She was dubbed as scandalous, but on the other hand educated and able to be partially independent from her husband. She was one of the first women to enter the sphere of writing, and to be successful there. Scholars often argue that she used her celebrity status only in her own advantage, but it is to be noted how much she contributed to the awareness of early feminism. She tried to elaborate the ideas of equality for women in England during the late 18th century.[34] Nevertheless, many contemporary women were not amused with how she exposed herself to the public and ostracised her. They did not want to be associated with her, since they feared to receive a bad reputation sympathising with Mary Robinson.[35]

Works Edit

 
As Perdita, attributed to John Hoppner.

Poetry Edit

  • Poems by Mrs. Robinson (London: C. Parker, 1775) Digital Edition
  • Captivity, a Poem and Celadon and Lydia, a Tale. Dedicated, by Permission, to Her Grace the Duchess of Devonshire. (London: T. Becket, 1777)
  • Ainsi va le Monde, a Poem. Inscribed to Robert Merry, Esq. A.M. [Laura Maria] (London: John Bell, 1790) Digital Edition
  • Poems by Mrs. M. Robinson (London: J. Bell, 1791) Digital Edition
  • The Beauties of Mrs. Robinson (London: H. D. Symonds, 1791)
  • Monody to the Memory of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Late President of the Royal Academy, &c. &c. &c. (London: J. Bell, 1792)
  • Ode to the Harp of the Late Accomplished and Amiable Louisa Hanway (London: John Bell, 1793)
  • Modern Manners, a Poem. In Two Cantos. By Horace Juvenal (London: Printed for the Author, 1793)
  • Sight, the Cavern of Woe, and Solitude. Poems (London: T. Spilsbury and Son, 1793)
  • Monody to the Memory of the Late Queen of France (London: T. Spilsbury and Son, 1793)
  • Poems by Mrs. M. Robinson. Volume the Second (London: T. Spilsbury and Son, 1793)
  • Poems, by Mrs. Mary Robinson. A New Edition (London: T. Spilsbury, 1795)
  • Sappho and Phaon. In a Series of Legitimate Sonnets, with Thoughts on Poetical Subjects, and Anecdotes of the Grecian Poetess (London: For the Author, 1796)
  • Lyrical Tales, by Mrs. Mary Robinson (London: T. N. Longman and O. Rees, 1800) Digital Edition
  • The Mistletoe. --- A Christmas Tale [Laura Maria] (London: Laurie & Whittle, 1800)

Novels Edit

  • Vancenza; or, the Dangers of Credulity. In Two Volumes (London: Printed for the Authoress, 1792)
  • The Widow, or a Picture of Modern Times. A Novel, in a Series of Letters, in Two Volumes (London: Hookham and Carpenter, 1794)
  • Angelina; a Novel, in Three Volumes (London: Printed for the Author, 1796)
  • Hubert de Sevrac, a Romance, of the Eighteenth Century (London: Printed for the Author, 1796)
  • Walsingham; or, the Pupil of Nature. A Domestic Story (London: T. N. Longman, 1797)
  • The False Friend: a Domestic Story (London: T. N. Longman and O. Rees, 1799)
  • Natural Daughter. With Portraits of the Leadenhead Family]. A Novel (London: T. N. Longman and O. Rees, 1799)

Dramas Edit

  • The Lucky Escape, A Comic Opera (performed on 23 April 1778 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane)
  • The Songs, Chorusses, &c. in The Lucky Escape, a Comic Opera, as Performed at the Theatre-Royal, in Drury-Lane (London: Printed for the Author, 1778)
  • Kate of Aberdeen (a comic opera withdrawn in 1793 and never staged)
  • Nobody. A Comedy in Two Acts (performed on 27 Nov. 1794 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane) Digital Edition
  • The Sicilian Lover. A Tragedy. In Five Acts (London: Printed for the Author, 1796)

Political Treatises Edit

  • Impartial Reflections on the Present Situation of the Queen of France; by A Friend to Humanity (London: John Bell, 1791)
  • A Letter to the Women of England, on the Injustice of Mental Subordination. With Anecdotes. By Anne Frances Randall] (London: T. N. Longman and O. Rees, 1799) Digital Edition
  • Thoughts on the Condition of Women, and on the Injustice of Mental Subordination (London: T. N. Longman and O. Rees, 1799)

Essays Edit

  • “The Sylphid. No. I,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 29 Oct. 1799: 2 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 3–8)
  • “The Sylphid. No. II,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 7 Nov. 1799: 2 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 8–16)
  • “The Sylphid. No. III,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 16 Nov. 1799: 3 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 17–21)
  • “The Sylphid. No. IV,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 23 Nov. 1799: 2 (edited version printed in Memoirs 3: 21–26)
  • “The Sylphid. No. V,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 27 Nov. 1799: 2 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 27–31)
  • “The Sylphid. No. VI,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 7 Dec. 1799: 2 (edited version printed in Memoirs 3: 31–35)
  • “The Sylphid. No. VII,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 19 Dec. 1799: 2 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 35–40)
  • “The Sylphid. No. VIII,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 24 Dec. 1799: 2 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 41–45)
  • “The Sylphid. No. IX,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 2 Jan. 1800: 3 (also printed as No. XIV in Memoirs 3: 74–80)
  • “To the Sylphid,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 4 Jan. 1800: 3 (also printed as No. IX in Memoirs 3: 46–50)
  • “The Sylphid. No. X,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 7 Jan. 1800: 3 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 51–57)
  • “The Sylphid. No. XI,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 11 Jan. 1800: 2 (also printed in Memoirs 3: 58–63)
  • “The Sylphid. No. XII,” Morning Post and Gazetteer 31 Jan. 1800: 2 (edited version printed in Memoirs 3: 63–68)
  • “The Sylphid. No. XIII,” Memoirs 3: 68-73 (no extant copy of Morning Post exists)
  • “Present State of the Manners, Society, &c. &c. of the Metropolis of England,” Monthly Magazine 10 (Aug. 1800): 35–38.
  • “Present State of the Manners, Society, &c. &c. of the Metropolis of England,” Monthly Magazine 10 (Sept. 1800): 138-40
  • “Present State of the Manners, Society, &c. &c. of the Metropolis of England,” Monthly Magazine 10 (Oct. 1800): 218-22
  • “Present State of the Manners, Society, &c. &c. of the Metropolis of England,” Monthly Magazine 10 (Oct. 1800): 305-06

Translation Edit

  • Picture of Palermo by Dr. Hager translated from the German by Mrs. Mary Robinson (London: R. Phillips, 1800)

Biographical Sketches Edit

  • “Anecdotes of Eminent Persons: Memoirs of the Late Duc de Biron,” Monthly Magazine 9 (Feb.1800): 43-46
  • “Anecdotes of Eminent Persons: Account of Rev. John Parkhurst,” Monthly Magazine 9 (July 1800): 560-61
  • “Anecdotes of Eminent Persons: Account of Bishop Parkhurst,” Monthly Magazine 9 (July 1800): 561
  • “Anecdotes of Eminent Persons: Additional Anecdotes of Philip Egalité Late Duke of Orleans,” Monthly Magazine 10 (Aug. 1800): 39-40
  • “Anecdotes of Eminent Persons: Anecdotes of the Late Queen of France,” Monthly Magazine 10 (Aug. 1800): 40-41

Posthumous Publications Edit

  • “Mr. Robert Ker Porter.” Public Characters of 1800-1801 (London: R. Phillips, 1801)
  • Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson, Written by Herself with Some Posthumous Pieces. In Four Volumes (London: R. Phillips, 1801)
  • “Jasper. A Fragment,” Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson, Vol. 3 (London: R. Phillips, 1801)
  • “The Savage of Aveyron,” Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson, Vol. 3 (London: R. Phillips, 1801)
  • “The Progress of Liberty,” Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson, Vol. 4 (London: R. Phillips, 1801)
  • The Poetical Works of the Late Mrs. Mary Robinson: Including Many Pieces Never Before Published. In Three Volumes (London: Richard Phillips, 1806)

Publications about Robinson and Her Work Edit

Biographies (Ordered by Date of Publication) Edit

  • “A Tribute of Respect to the Memory of the Late Mrs. Robinson, in the Form of a Monumental Inscription.” Weekly Entertainer 37 (June 1801): 517.
  • “Mrs. Robinson.” Public Characters of 1800-1801. London: R. Phillips, 1801. 327–37.
  • Jones, Stephen. “Robinson (Mary).” A New Biographical Dictionary: Containing a Brief Account of the Life and Writings of the Most Eminent Persons and Remarkable Characters in Every Age and Nation. 5th ed. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orne; J. Wallis; W. Peacock and Sons; J. Harris; Scatcherd and Letterman; Vernor and Hood; and J. Walker, 1805. N. pag.
  • “Biographical Sketch of Mrs. Mary Robinson.” The Hibernia Magazine, and Dublin Monthly Panorama 3 (1811): 25–28.
  • Knight, John Joseph (1897). "Robinson, Mary" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 49. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Craven, Mary. Famous Beauties of Two Reigns; Being an Account of Some Fair Women of Stuart & Georgian Times. London: E. Nash, 1906.
  • Fyvie, John. Comedy Queens of the Georgian Era. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1907.
  • Makower, Stanley. Perdita: A Romance in Biography. London: Hutchinson, 1908.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Robinson, Mary" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Barrington, E. [Lily Adams Beck]. The Exquisite Perdita. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1926.
  • Benjamin, Lewis S. More Stage Favorites of the Eighteenth Century. Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press, Inc, 1929.
  • Mendenhall, John C. “Mary Robinson (1758-1800).” University of Pennsylvania Library Chronicle 4 (1936): 2–10.
  • Steen, Marguerite. The Lost One, a Biography of Mary (Perdita) Robinson. London: Methuen & Co., 1937.
  • Bass, Robert D. The Green Dragoon: The Lives of Banastre Tarleton and Mary Robinson. New York: Henry Hold and Company, 1957.
  • Ty, Eleanor. "Mary Robinson." In British Reform Writers, 1789-1832, edited by Gary Kelly, 297–305. Detroit: Thomson Gale, 1995.
  • Levy, Martin J. "Mrs. Robinson." The Mistresses of King George IV. London: P. Owen, 1996. 13–43.
  • Meyers, Kate Beaird. “Mary Darby Robinson (‘Perdita’).” An Encyclopedia of British Women Writers. Eds. Paul and June Schleuter. Rev. and Expanded. New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1998. 391-92.
  • Schlueter, Paul, and June Schlueter. “Mary Robinson.” An Encyclopedia of British Women Writers. New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1998.
  • Pascoe, Judith, ed. "Introduction." Mary Robinson: Selected Poems. Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, 2000.
  • Binhammer, Katherine. "Mary Darby Robinson (1758–1800)." Female Spectator 4.3 (2000): 2–4.
  • Byrne, Paula. Perdita: The Literary, Theatrical, and Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson. New York: Random House, 2004.
  • Davenport, Hester. The Prince’s Mistress: Perdita, a Life of Mary Robinson. Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 2004.
  • Denlinger, Elizabeth Campbell. Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British Romantic Era. New York: New York Public Library: Columbia University Press, 2005.
  • Gristwood, Sarah. Perdita: Royal Mistress, Writer, Romantic. London: Bantam, 2005.
  • Gristwood, Sarah. Bird of Paradise: The Colourful Career of the First Mrs Robinson. London: Bantam, 2007.
  • Brewer, William D., ed. The Works of Mary Robinson. 8 vols. Pickering & Chatto, 2009–2010.
  • Davenport, Hester, Ed. “‘Sketch of Mrs Robinson’s Life by Herself.’” In The Works of Mary Robinson, edited by William D. Brewer, 7: 333-35. London: Pickering and Chatto, 2010.
  • Perry, Gill, Joseph Roach, and Shearer West. “Mary Robinson: Born in 1756/8 – Died in 1800.” In The First Actresses: Nell Gwyn to Sarah Siddons. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2011. 55.
  • Levy, Martin J. "Robinson, Mary [Perdita] (1756/1758?–1800)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23857. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Selected Resources on Robinson and Her Work Edit

  • Barron, Phillip. “'Who Has Not Wak'd': Mary Robinson and Cartesian Poetry.” Philosophy and Literature 41.2 (2017): 392–399.
  • Brewer, William D., ed. The Works of Mary Robinson. 8 vols. Pickering & Chatto, 2009–2010.
  • Cross, Ashley. Mary Robinson and the Genesis of Romanticism: Literary Dialogues and Debts, 1784-1821. London: Routledge, 2016.
  • Gamer, Michael, and Terry F. Robinson. “Mary Robinson and the Dramatic Art of the Comeback.” Studies in Romanticism 48.2 (Summer 2009): 219–256.
  • Ledoux, Ellen Malenas. “Florizel and Perdita Affair, 1779–80.” BRANCH: Britain, Representation and Nineteenth-Century History. Ed. Dino Franco Felluga. Extension of Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net. Web. 2 June 2013.
  • Pascoe, Judith. Mary Robinson: Selected Poems. Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, 1999.
  • Robinson, Daniel. The Poetry of Mary Robinson: Form and Fame. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.
  • Robinson, Terry F. "Introduction." Nobody. By Mary Robinson. Romantic Circles. Web. March 2013.
  • Robinson, Terry F. "Becoming Somebody: Refashioning the Body Politic in Mary Robinson's Nobody." Studies in Romanticism 55 (Summer 2016): 143–184.

Fictional Works about Robinson Edit

  • Plaidy, Jean. Perdita's Prince. 1969.
  • Elyot, Amanda. All For Love: The Scandalous Life and Times of Royal Mistress Mary Robinson. A Novel. 2008.
  • Lightfoot, Freda. Lady of Passion: The Story of Mary Robinson. 2013.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Mary Robinson, Sappho and Phaon, About the Book
  2. ^ Judith Pascoe, Romantic Theatricality, Cornell University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-8014-3304-5, p.13
  3. ^ Paula., Byrne (2005). Perdita : the life of Mary Robinson. London: Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0007164592. OCLC 224036999.
  4. ^ Anthony Camp, Royal Mistresses and Bastards: Fact and Fiction: 1714-1936 (2007) 133-34.
  5. ^ Her daughter Mary Elizabeth, honoring her mother's request, published a draft of Robinson's memoirs in 1801 as Memoirs, with some Posthumous Pieces,
  6. ^ Levy 2004.
  7. ^ Feldman, p. 590
  8. ^ a b Byrne, Paula (2004). Perdita: The Literary, Theatrical, Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson. New York: Random House. p. 56.
  9. ^ Runge, Laura L. (21 September 2001). "Mary Darby Robinson (1758?-1800) - Bibliography". Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  10. ^ Feldman, Paula R (2000). British Women Poets of the Romantic Era: An Anthology. Mary Robinson (1758–1800). p. 590. ISBN 978-0-8018-6640-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  11. ^ Carroll, Leslie (2008). Royal Affairs: A Lusty Romp Through the Extramarital Adventures That Rocked the British Monarchy. George IV and Mary Robinson 1757–1800. ISBN 978-0-451-22398-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ See Katharine Binhammer, 'Thinking Gender with Sexuality in 1790s Feminist Thought'. Feminist Studies28.3 (2002): 667–690.
  13. ^ Carroll (2008). Royal Affairs: A Lusty Romp Through the Extramarital Adventures That Rocked the British Monarchy. George IV and Mary Robinson 1757–1800.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ Brock, Claire (2006). The feminization of fame, 1750–1830. Basingstoke [England]: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1403989918. OCLC 64511330.
  15. ^ Byrne, Paula (2004). Perdita: The Literary, Theatrical, Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson. New York: Random House. p. 180.
  16. ^ Anthony Camp, Royal Mistresses and Bastards: Fact and Fiction: 1714-1936 (2007) 134.
  17. ^ "Mary Darby Robinson (1758-1800)". digital.library.upenn.edu. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  18. ^ said, Bethany (25 January 2010). "Vancenza; or The Dangers of Credulity". Perditasroom's Blog. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  19. ^ Sodeman, Melissa. Sentimental Memorials: Women and the Novel in Literary History.
  20. ^ "Women Writers in Review". www.wwp.northeastern.edu. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  21. ^ Peterson, Linda H (1994). "Becoming an Author: Mary Robinson's Memoirs and the Origins of the Woman Artist's Autobiography". Re-visioning Romanticism: British Women Writers, 1776-1837: 37–50.
  22. ^ Brock, Claire (2006). The feminization of fame, 1750–1830. Basingstoke [England]: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1403989918. OCLC 64511330.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ty, Eleanor. “Mary Robinson.” British Reform Writers, 1789-1832. Ed. Gary Kelly and Edd Applegate. Detroit: Gale Research, 1996. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 158. Literature Resources from Gale. Web. 8 Oct. 2010
  24. ^ Ty, Eleanor. “Mary Robinson.” British Reform Writers, 1789-1832. Ed. Gary Kelly and Edd Applegate. Detroit: Gale Research, 1996. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 158. Literature Resources from Gale.
  25. ^ a b Pascoe, Judith. Mary Robinson Selected Poems. Broadview Press.
  26. ^ "Julia Wells Key Passage Analysis of Mary Robinson's "London's Summer Morning" – BRITISH ROMANTIC WOMEN WRITERS: POETRY, 1770-1840". 14 September 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  27. ^ Rumens, Carol (12 April 2010). "Poem of the week: Sappho and Phaon by Mary Robinson". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  28. ^ a b c d Robinson, Mary. A Letter to the Women of England and The Natural Daughter. Edited by Sharon M. Setzer, broadview literary texts, 2003
  29. ^ a b c "Mary Darby Robinson (1758–1800)". digital.library.upenn.edu. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
  30. ^ Miskolcze, Robin L (Winter 1995). "Snapshots of Contradiction in Mary Robinson's 'Poetical Works'". Papers on Language and Literature. 31 (2): 206. ProQuest 1300109586.
  31. ^ Robinson, Daniel (2011). ""The Duchess", Mary Robinson, and Georgiana's Social Network". The Wordsworth Circle. 42 (3): 193–197. doi:10.1086/TWC24043147. JSTOR 24043147. S2CID 161018169.
  32. ^ a b Pascoe, Judith. Romantic Theatricality. Broadview Press.
  33. ^ Brewer, William D. (1 July 2006). "Mary Robinson as Dramatist: The Nobody Catastrophe". European Romantic Review. 17 (3): 265–273. doi:10.1080/10509580600816678. S2CID 144877887.
  34. ^ "Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net". Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  35. ^ Knowles, Claire (18 March 2014). "Hazarding the Press: Charlotte Smith, the Morning Post and the Perils of Literary Celebrity". Romanticism. 20 (1): 30–42. doi:10.3366/rom.2014.0155. ISSN 1354-991X.

References Edit

  • Binhammer, Katherine. 'Thinking Gender with Sexuality in 1790s Feminist Thought.' Feminist Studies 28.3 (2002): 667–90.
  • Byrne, Paula (2005). Perdita: The Life of Mary Robinson. London: HarperCollins and New York: Random House.
  • Gristwood, Sarah (2005). Perdita: royal mistress, writer, romantic. London: Bantam.
  • Levy, Martin J. (2004). "Biography of Mary Robinson". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
  • Robinson, Mary, and Mary Elizabeth Robinson (1801). Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson. London: Printed by Wilkes and Taylor for R. Phillips.
  • Mary Darby Robinson biography
  • Mary Robinson memoirs

External links Edit

mary, robinson, poet, mary, robinson, née, darby, november, 1757, december, 1800, english, actress, poet, dramatist, novelist, celebrity, figure, lived, england, cities, bristol, london, also, lived, france, germany, time, enjoyed, poetry, from, seven, started. Mary Robinson nee Darby 27 November 1757 26 December 1800 was an English actress poet dramatist novelist and celebrity figure She lived in England in the cities of Bristol and London she also lived in France and Germany for a time She enjoyed poetry from the age of seven and started working first as a teacher and then as actress from the age of fourteen She wrote many plays poems and novels She was a celebrity gossiped about in newspapers famous for her acting and writing During her lifetime she was known as the English Sappho 1 2 She earned her nickname Perdita for her role as Perdita heroine of Shakespeare s The Winter s Tale in 1779 She was the first public mistress of King George IV while he was still Prince of Wales Mary RobinsonPortrait of Mary Robinson by Thomas Gainsborough 1781BornMary Darby 1757 11 27 27 November 1757Bristol EnglandDied26 December 1800 1800 12 26 aged 43 Englefield Green EnglandSpouseThomas RobinsonChildrenMary Elizabeth Robinson Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Marriage 1 3 Theatre 1 4 Later life and death 1 5 Portraits 2 Literature 2 1 Poetry 3 Criticism and reception 4 Works 4 1 Poetry 4 2 Novels 4 3 Dramas 4 4 Political Treatises 4 5 Essays 4 6 Translation 4 7 Biographical Sketches 4 8 Posthumous Publications 5 Publications about Robinson and Her Work 5 1 Biographies Ordered by Date of Publication 5 2 Selected Resources on Robinson and Her Work 5 3 Fictional Works about Robinson 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Robinson was born in Bristol England to Nicholas Darby a naval captain and his wife Hester nee Vanacott who had married at Donyatt Somerset in 1749 and was baptised Polle y Spelt Polle in the official register and Polly in the Bishop s Transcript at St Augustine s Church Bristol 19 July 1758 3 the entry noting that she was born 27 November 1756 4 In her memoirs 5 Robinson gives her birth in 1758 but the year 1757 seems more likely according to recently published research see appendix to Byrne 2005 Her father deserted her mother and took a mistress when Robinson was still a child The family hoped for a reconciliation but Captain Darby made it clear that this was not going to happen Without the support of her husband Hester Darby supported herself and the five children born of the marriage by starting a school for young girls in Little Chelsea London where Robinson taught by her 14th birthday 6 However during one of his brief returns to the family Captain Darby had the school closed 7 which he was entitled to do by English law Darby died in the Russian naval service in 1785 Robinson who at one point attended a school run by the social reformer Hannah More came to the attention of actor David Garrick Marriage Edit Hester Darby encouraged her daughter to accept the proposal of an articled clerk Thomas Robinson who claimed to have an inheritance Mary was against this idea however after falling ill and watching him take care of her and her younger brother she felt that she owed him and she did not want to disappoint her mother who was pushing for the engagement After the early marriage Robinson discovered her husband did not have an inheritance He continued to live an elaborate lifestyle however and made no effort to hide multiple affairs Subsequently Mary supported their family After her husband squandered their money the couple fled to Talgarth Breconshire where Robinson s only daughter Mary Elizabeth was born in November Here they lived in a fairly large estate called Tregunter Park Eventually her husband was imprisoned for debt in the Fleet Prison where she lived with him for many months While it was common for the wives of prisoners to live with their husbands while indebted children were usually sent to live with relatives to keep them away from the dangers of prison However Robinson was deeply devoted to her daughter Maria and when her husband was imprisoned Robinson brought the 6 month old baby with her 8 It was in the Fleet Prison that Robinson s literary career really began as she found that she could publish poetry to earn money and to give her an escape from the harsh reality that had become her life Her first book Poems By Mrs Robinson was published in 1775 by C Parker 9 Additionally Robinson s husband was offered work in the form of copying legal documents so he could try to pay back some of his debts but he refused to do anything Robinson in an effort to keep the family together and to get back to normal life outside of prison took the job instead collecting the pay that her husband neglected to earn 8 During this time Mary Robinson found a patron in Georgiana Cavendish Duchess of Devonshire who sponsored the publication of Robinson s second volume of poems Captivity Theatre Edit nbsp Caricature of the Prince of Wales as Florizel and Mary Robinson as Perdita 1783After her husband obtained his release from prison Robinson decided to return to the theatre She launched her acting career and took to the stage playing Juliet at Drury Lane Theatre in December 1776 Robinson was best known for her facility with the breeches parts and her performances as Viola in William Shakespeare sTwelfth Night and Rosalind in As You Like It won her extensive praise But she gained popularity with playing in Florizel and Perdita an adaptation of Shakespeare with the role of Perdita heroine of The Winter s Tale in 1779 It was during this performance that she attracted the notice of the young Prince of Wales later King George IV of the United Kingdom 10 He offered her twenty thousand pounds to become his mistress 11 During this time the very young Emma Lady Hamilton sometimes worked as her maid and dresser at the theatre With her new social prominence Robinson became a trend setter in London introducing a loose flowing muslin style of gown based upon Grecian statuary that became known as the Perdita It took Robinson a considerable amount of time to decide to leave her husband for the Prince as she did not want to be seen by the public as that type of woman Throughout much of her life she struggled to live in the public eye and also to stay true to the values in which she believed She eventually gave in to her desires to be with a man who she thought would treat her better than Mr Robinson However the Prince ended the affair in 1781 refusing to pay the promised sum 12 Perdita Robinson was left to support herself through an annuity promised by the Crown but rarely paid in return for some letters written by the Prince and through her writings 13 After her affair with the young Prince of Wales she became famous for her rides in her extravagant carriages and her celebrity like perception by the public 14 Later life and death Edit nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton by Joshua ReynoldsMary Robinson who now lived separately from her husband went on to have several love affairs most notably with Banastre Tarleton a soldier who had recently distinguished himself fighting in the American War of Independence Prior to their relationship Robinson had been having an affair with a man named Lord Malden According to one account Malden and Tarleton were betting men and Malden was so confident in Robinson s loyalty to him and believed that no man could ever take her from him As such he made a bet of a thousand guineas that none of the men in his circle could seduce her Unfortunately for Malden Tarleton accepted the bet and swooped in to not only seduce Robinson but establish a relationship that would last the next 15 years 15 This relationship though rumoured to have started on a bet saw Tarleton s rise in military rank and his concomitant political successes Mary s own various illnesses financial vicissitudes and the efforts of Tarleton s own family to end the relationship They had no children although Robinson had a miscarriage However in the end Tarleton married Susan Bertie an heiress and an illegitimate daughter of the young 4th Duke of Ancaster and niece of his sisters Lady Willoughby de Eresby and Lady Cholmondeley In 1783 Robinson suffered a mysterious illness that left her partially paralysed Biographer Paula Byrne speculates that a streptococcal infection resulting from a miscarriage led to a severe rheumatic fever that left her disabled for the rest of her life From the late 1780s Robinson became distinguished for her poetry and was called the English Sappho In addition to poems she wrote eight novels three plays feminist treatises and an autobiographical manuscript that was incomplete at the time of her death Like her contemporary Mary Wollstonecraft she championed the rights of women and was an ardent supporter of the French Revolution She died in poverty at Englefield Cottage Englefield Green Surrey 26 December 1800 aged 44 having survived several years of ill health and was survived by her daughter Maria Elizabeth 1774 1818 who was also a published novelist Administration of her estate was granted to her husband Thomas Robinson from whom she had long been separated and who in 1803 inherited a substantial estate from his half brother William 16 One of Robinson s dying wishes was to see the rest of her works published She tasked her daughter Maria Robinson with publishing most of these works She also placed her Memoirs in the care of her daughter insisting that she publish the work Maria Robinson published Memoirs just a few months later 17 Portraits Edit During her lifetime Robinson also enjoyed the distinction of having her image captured by the most notable artists of the period The earliest known drawn by James Roberts II depicts Mrs Robinson in the Character of Amanda from Cibber s Love s Last Shift in 1777 In 1781 Thomas Gainsborough produced an oil sketch Mrs Mary Robinson Perdita and an untitled study That year George Romney also painted Mrs Mary Robinson and John Keyse Sherwin printed an untitled portrait Joshua Reynolds sketched a study for what became Portrait of a Lady in 1782 and in 1784 he finished Mrs Robinson as Contemplation for which he also sketched a study George Dance the Younger sketched a later portrait in 1793 Literature Edit nbsp Mrs Robinson by Thomas Gainsborough 1781In 1792 Robinson published her most popular novel which was a Gothic novel titled Vancenza or The Dangers of Credulity The books were sold out by lunch time on the first day and five more editions quickly followed making it one of the top selling novels in the latter part of the eighteenth century 18 It did not receive either critical or popular acclaim 19 In 1794 she wrote The Widow or A Picture of Modern Times which portrayed themes of manners in the fashionable world 20 Since Robinson was a fashion icon and very much involved in the fashion world the novel did not get a lot of favourable reception in 1794 as it might have now In 1796 she wrote Angelina A Novel It cost more money than it brought in Through this novel she offers her thoughts on the afterlife of her literary career There has been an increase in scholarly attention to Robinson s literary output in recent years While most of the early literature written about Robinson focused on her sexuality emphasising her affairs and fashions she also spoke out about woman s place in the literary world for which she began to receive the attention of feminists and literary scholars in the 1990s Robinson recognised that women writers were deeply ambivalent about the myths of authorship their male counterparts had created 21 and as a result she sought to elevate woman s place in the literary world by recognising women writers in her own work In A Letter to the Women of England Robinson includes an entire page dedicated to English women writers to support her notion that they were just as capable as men of being successful in the literary world These ideas have continued to keep Mary Robinson relevant in literary discussions today In addition to maintaining literary and cultural notability she has re attained a degree of celebrity in recent years when several biographies of her appeared including one by Paula Byrne entitled Perdita The Literary Theatrical and Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson that became a top ten best seller after being selected for the Richard amp Judy Book Club An eight volume scholarly edition of Robinson s complete works was published in 2009 2010 In 2011 Daniel Robinson no relation editor of the poetry for the edition published the first scholarly monograph to focus exclusively on her literary achievement The Poetry of Mary Robinson Form and Fame A second monograph on Robinson s literary career Mary Robinson and the Genesis of Romanticism Literary Dialogues and Debts 1784 1821 by Ashley Cross appeared in 2016 Although Robinson s novels were not as successful as she hoped she had a talent for her poetry Her ability to produce poetry can be seen furthermore in her poems titled Sappho and Phaeon Since the press had given her the name The English Sappho a clear relationship can be drawn between these poems and her literary name The poems are love poems and many scholars have come to the conclusion that they represent her affairs with the Prince of Wales Mary Darby Robinson was not only praised in literary circles for her poetry but also for her works written in prose The two best known examples are A Letter to the Women of England 1798 and The Natural Daughter 1799 Both her works are dealing with the role of women during the Romantic Era Mary Robinson as much as Mary Wollenstonecraft tried to put the focus on how inferior women were treated in comparison to men The discrepancy can be seen in both of her works The Natural Daughter can be seen as an autobiography of Mary Robinson The characters are in many ways patterns of her own life and the stages of her life All the characters are symbols of her own coming of age or people she met in her life 22 Poetry Edit nbsp Perdita portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds 1782 From the late 1780s Robinson striving to separate herself from her past scandals and life as a theatre actress turned to writing as a full time career 23 Robinson disregarding her previous associations with the nickname Perdita meaning lost one soon became distinguished for her poetry and was reclassified as the English Sappho by the English public During her 25 year writing career from 1775 until her premature death in 1800 Robinson produced an immense body of work In addition to eight collections of poems Robinson wrote eight novels three plays feminist treatises and an autobiographical manuscript that was incomplete at the time of her death 23 Poems by Mrs Robinson was published by C Parker in London in 1775 23 Poems consisted of twenty six ballads odes and elegies that echo traditional values praising values such as charity sincerity and innocence particularly in a woman 24 Robinson s husband Thomas Robinson was imprisoned at the King s Bench Prison for fifteen months for the gambling debts he acquired Robinson originally intended for the profits made from this collection to help pay off his debts But the publication of Poems could not prevent his imprisonment Robinson lived for nine months and three weeks with Thomas and their baby within the squalor of prison 23 Motivated by the months she spent in prison Robinson wrote Captivity a Poem and Celadon and Lydia a Tale published by T Becket in London in 1777 23 This collection described the horrors of captivity and painted a sympathetic picture of the wretch and the guiltless partners of his poignant woes The poem ends admonishing people to open their hearts and to pity the unfortunate 23 Following the publication of Captivity Robinson established a new poetic identity for herself Robinson let go of her Della Cruscan style when she wrote Poems by Mary Robinson published in 1791 by J Bell in London and Poems by Mrs Robinson published in 1793 by T Spilsbury in London 23 A review was written by the Gentleman s Magazine and the reviewer stated that if Robinson had been less blessed with beauty and captivating manners her poetical taste might have been confined in its influence At the end of the review the Gentleman s Magazine describes her poetry as elegant and harmonious 25 In 1795 Robinson wrote a satirical poem titled London s Summer Morning but it was published after her death in 1800 23 This poem showcased Robinson s critical perspective of the infrastructure and society of London Robinson described the busy and loud sounds of the industrialised city in the morning She employed characters such as the chimney boy and ruddy housemaid to make a heavy critique on the way English society treated children as both innocent and fragile creatures 26 In 1796 Robinson argued for women s rationality their right to education and illustrated ideas of free will suicide rationalisation empiricism and relationship to sensibility in Sappho and Phaon In a Series of Legitimate Sonnets 27 nbsp Portrait by George Romney c 1782During the 1790s Robinson was highly inspired by feminism and desired to spread her liberal sentiments through her writing 28 She was an ardent admirer of Mary Wollstonecraft an established and influential feminist writer of the period But to Robinson s surprise her intense feelings were not reciprocated by Wollstonecraft 28 While Robinson expected a strong friendship between the two of them to flourish Wollstonecraft found Robinson herself considerably less appealing than the title character of Angelina 28 In 1796 Wollstonecraft wrote an extremely harsh review of Robinson s work in the Analytical Review It was this critique that was not critical or well thought out Instead Wollstonecraft s review of Robinson proved to be relatively shallow and pointed at her jealousy of Robinson s comparable freedom Wollstonecraft had the potential to spend more of her own time writing instead of having to entertain her husband William Goodwin 28 Robinson s Letter to the Women of England against Mental Subordination is still powerful reading Robinson reiterates the rights women have to live by sexual passion Lastly in 1800 after years of failing health and decline into financial ruin Robinson wrote her last piece of literature during her lifetime a series of poems titled the Lyrical Tales published by Longman amp Rees in London This poetry collection explored themes of domestic violence misogyny violence against destitute characters and political oppression Robinson s last work pleads for a recognition of the moral and rational worth of women Let me ask this plain and rational question is not woman a human being gifted with all the feelings that inhabit the bosom of man 23 Robinson s main objective was to respond to Lyrical Ballads written by authors Wordsworth and Coleridge who were not as well known at the time Although it was not as highly praised as Mary Wollstonecraft s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman published in 1792 Lyrical Tales provides a powerful critique of the division of duties and privileges between the sexes It places Robinson firmly on the side of the feminist thinkers or modern philosophers of the 1790s as one of the strong defenders of her sex 23 Criticism and reception EditRobinson was known as a sexualised celebrity but she was a very talented writer Robinson did not receive recognition for her work until much later because of strict attitudes led to a rejection of the literary work of such a notorious woman 29 She became a lesson to young girls about the dangers of promiscuity and pleasure seeking She was named by her friend Samuel Taylor Coleridge as a woman of undoubted genius 25 The collection of Poems published in 1791 had a subscription list of 600 people was headed by His Royal Highness George Prince of Wales and included many other members of the nobility Some people subscribed because of her writing some because of her notoriety and some perhaps out of pity for the former actress now crippled and ill Reviews were generally kind and noted traces in her poems of a sensibility that would later be termed Romanticism 29 Twenty years after her death the Poetical Works of The Late Mrs Robinson was published in 1824 which speaks to her ongoing popularity 30 Robinson s second novel The Widow and in her controversial comedy Nobody A Comedy in Two Acts both of which according to newspaper reports offended fashionable women 31 Needless to say Robinson s playwright career was short lived after all the bad reviews of her play The upper class interpreted her satire as mockery on female gambling and it was an attack on moral legitimacy of the Whig elite 32 The upper class interpretation of Nobody reveals a great deal about the social and political anxieties during the revolutionary era 33 Robinson s poems were popular especially after she produced a variety of poems whilst working at the newspaper The Morning Post The poetry columns had a double agenda of pleasing a substantial and diverse audience and shaping them into a select group of elite readers eager to buy and consume books 32 The public adored the novel Vancenza or The Dangers of Credulity but the critical reception was mixed Furthermore a biographer Paula Byrne recently dismissed it as a product of the vogue for Gothic fiction that now seems overblown to the point of absurdity Although Robinson s poetry was more popular than her other works the most lucrative was her prose The money helped to support herself her mother and daughter and often Banastre Tarleton citation needed Novels such as Vancenza 1792 The Widow 1794 Angelina 1796 and Walsingham 1797 went through multiple editions and were often translated into French and German They owed part of their popularity to their suspected autobiographical elements Even when her characters were placed in scenes of gothic horror their views could be related to the experiences of their author 29 Mary Robinson was one of the first female celebrities of the modern era She was dubbed as scandalous but on the other hand educated and able to be partially independent from her husband She was one of the first women to enter the sphere of writing and to be successful there Scholars often argue that she used her celebrity status only in her own advantage but it is to be noted how much she contributed to the awareness of early feminism She tried to elaborate the ideas of equality for women in England during the late 18th century 34 Nevertheless many contemporary women were not amused with how she exposed herself to the public and ostracised her They did not want to be associated with her since they feared to receive a bad reputation sympathising with Mary Robinson 35 Works Edit nbsp As Perdita attributed to John Hoppner Poetry Edit Poems by Mrs Robinson London C Parker 1775 Digital Edition Captivity a Poem and Celadon and Lydia a Tale Dedicated by Permission to Her Grace the Duchess of Devonshire London T Becket 1777 Ainsi va le Monde a Poem Inscribed to Robert Merry Esq A M Laura Maria London John Bell 1790 Digital Edition Poems by Mrs M Robinson London J Bell 1791 Digital Edition The Beauties of Mrs Robinson London H D Symonds 1791 Monody to the Memory of Sir Joshua Reynolds Late President of the Royal Academy amp c amp c amp c London J Bell 1792 Ode to the Harp of the Late Accomplished and Amiable Louisa Hanway London John Bell 1793 Modern Manners a Poem In Two Cantos By Horace Juvenal London Printed for the Author 1793 Sight the Cavern of Woe and Solitude Poems London T Spilsbury and Son 1793 Monody to the Memory of the Late Queen of France London T Spilsbury and Son 1793 Poems by Mrs M Robinson Volume the Second London T Spilsbury and Son 1793 Poems by Mrs Mary Robinson A New Edition London T Spilsbury 1795 Sappho and Phaon In a Series of Legitimate Sonnets with Thoughts on Poetical Subjects and Anecdotes of the Grecian Poetess London For the Author 1796 Digital Edition Lyrical Tales by Mrs Mary Robinson London T N Longman and O Rees 1800 Digital Edition The Mistletoe A Christmas Tale Laura Maria London Laurie amp Whittle 1800 Novels Edit Vancenza or the Dangers of Credulity In Two Volumes London Printed for the Authoress 1792 The Widow or a Picture of Modern Times A Novel in a Series of Letters in Two Volumes London Hookham and Carpenter 1794 Angelina a Novel in Three Volumes London Printed for the Author 1796 Hubert de Sevrac a Romance of the Eighteenth Century London Printed for the Author 1796 Walsingham or the Pupil of Nature A Domestic Story London T N Longman 1797 The False Friend a Domestic Story London T N Longman and O Rees 1799 Natural Daughter With Portraits of the Leadenhead Family A Novel London T N Longman and O Rees 1799 Dramas Edit The Lucky Escape A Comic Opera performed on 23 April 1778 at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane The Songs Chorusses amp c in The Lucky Escape a Comic Opera as Performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane London Printed for the Author 1778 Kate of Aberdeen a comic opera withdrawn in 1793 and never staged Nobody A Comedy in Two Acts performed on 27 Nov 1794 at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane Digital Edition The Sicilian Lover A Tragedy In Five Acts London Printed for the Author 1796 Political Treatises Edit Impartial Reflections on the Present Situation of the Queen of France by A Friend to Humanity London John Bell 1791 A Letter to the Women of England on the Injustice of Mental Subordination With Anecdotes By Anne Frances Randall London T N Longman and O Rees 1799 Digital Edition Thoughts on the Condition of Women and on the Injustice of Mental Subordination London T N Longman and O Rees 1799 Essays Edit The Sylphid No I Morning Post and Gazetteer 29 Oct 1799 2 also printed in Memoirs 3 3 8 The Sylphid No II Morning Post and Gazetteer 7 Nov 1799 2 also printed in Memoirs 3 8 16 The Sylphid No III Morning Post and Gazetteer 16 Nov 1799 3 also printed in Memoirs 3 17 21 The Sylphid No IV Morning Post and Gazetteer 23 Nov 1799 2 edited version printed in Memoirs 3 21 26 The Sylphid No V Morning Post and Gazetteer 27 Nov 1799 2 also printed in Memoirs 3 27 31 The Sylphid No VI Morning Post and Gazetteer 7 Dec 1799 2 edited version printed in Memoirs 3 31 35 The Sylphid No VII Morning Post and Gazetteer 19 Dec 1799 2 also printed in Memoirs 3 35 40 The Sylphid No VIII Morning Post and Gazetteer 24 Dec 1799 2 also printed in Memoirs 3 41 45 The Sylphid No IX Morning Post and Gazetteer 2 Jan 1800 3 also printed as No XIV in Memoirs 3 74 80 To the Sylphid Morning Post and Gazetteer 4 Jan 1800 3 also printed as No IX in Memoirs 3 46 50 The Sylphid No X Morning Post and Gazetteer 7 Jan 1800 3 also printed in Memoirs 3 51 57 The Sylphid No XI Morning Post and Gazetteer 11 Jan 1800 2 also printed in Memoirs 3 58 63 The Sylphid No XII Morning Post and Gazetteer 31 Jan 1800 2 edited version printed in Memoirs 3 63 68 The Sylphid No XIII Memoirs 3 68 73 no extant copy of Morning Post exists Present State of the Manners Society amp c amp c of the Metropolis of England Monthly Magazine 10 Aug 1800 35 38 Present State of the Manners Society amp c amp c of the Metropolis of England Monthly Magazine 10 Sept 1800 138 40 Present State of the Manners Society amp c amp c of the Metropolis of England Monthly Magazine 10 Oct 1800 218 22 Present State of the Manners Society amp c amp c of the Metropolis of England Monthly Magazine 10 Oct 1800 305 06Translation Edit Picture of Palermo by Dr Hager translated from the German by Mrs Mary Robinson London R Phillips 1800 Biographical Sketches Edit Anecdotes of Eminent Persons Memoirs of the Late Duc de Biron Monthly Magazine 9 Feb 1800 43 46 Anecdotes of Eminent Persons Account of Rev John Parkhurst Monthly Magazine 9 July 1800 560 61 Anecdotes of Eminent Persons Account of Bishop Parkhurst Monthly Magazine 9 July 1800 561 Anecdotes of Eminent Persons Additional Anecdotes of Philip Egalite Late Duke of Orleans Monthly Magazine 10 Aug 1800 39 40 Anecdotes of Eminent Persons Anecdotes of the Late Queen of France Monthly Magazine 10 Aug 1800 40 41Posthumous Publications Edit Mr Robert Ker Porter Public Characters of 1800 1801 London R Phillips 1801 Memoirs of the Late Mrs Robinson Written by Herself with Some Posthumous Pieces In Four Volumes London R Phillips 1801 Jasper A Fragment Memoirs of the Late Mrs Robinson Vol 3 London R Phillips 1801 The Savage of Aveyron Memoirs of the Late Mrs Robinson Vol 3 London R Phillips 1801 The Progress of Liberty Memoirs of the Late Mrs Robinson Vol 4 London R Phillips 1801 The Poetical Works of the Late Mrs Mary Robinson Including Many Pieces Never Before Published In Three Volumes London Richard Phillips 1806 Publications about Robinson and Her Work EditBiographies Ordered by Date of Publication Edit A Tribute of Respect to the Memory of the Late Mrs Robinson in the Form of a Monumental Inscription Weekly Entertainer 37 June 1801 517 Mrs Robinson Public Characters of 1800 1801 London R Phillips 1801 327 37 Jones Stephen Robinson Mary A New Biographical Dictionary Containing a Brief Account of the Life and Writings of the Most Eminent Persons and Remarkable Characters in Every Age and Nation 5th ed London Longman Hurst Rees and Orne J Wallis W Peacock and Sons J Harris Scatcherd and Letterman Vernor and Hood and J Walker 1805 N pag Biographical Sketch of Mrs Mary Robinson The Hibernia Magazine and Dublin Monthly Panorama 3 1811 25 28 Knight John Joseph 1897 Robinson Mary In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 49 London Smith Elder amp Co Craven Mary Famous Beauties of Two Reigns Being an Account of Some Fair Women of Stuart amp Georgian Times London E Nash 1906 Fyvie John Comedy Queens of the Georgian Era New York E P Dutton 1907 Makower Stanley Perdita A Romance in Biography London Hutchinson 1908 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Robinson Mary Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press Barrington E Lily Adams Beck The Exquisite Perdita New York Dodd Mead and Company 1926 Benjamin Lewis S More Stage Favorites of the Eighteenth Century Freeport NY Books for Libraries Press Inc 1929 Mendenhall John C Mary Robinson 1758 1800 University of Pennsylvania Library Chronicle 4 1936 2 10 Steen Marguerite The Lost One a Biography of Mary Perdita Robinson London Methuen amp Co 1937 Bass Robert D The Green Dragoon The Lives of Banastre Tarleton and Mary Robinson New York Henry Hold and Company 1957 Ty Eleanor Mary Robinson In British Reform Writers 1789 1832 edited by Gary Kelly 297 305 Detroit Thomson Gale 1995 Levy Martin J Mrs Robinson The Mistresses of King George IV London P Owen 1996 13 43 Meyers Kate Beaird Mary Darby Robinson Perdita An Encyclopedia of British Women Writers Eds Paul and June Schleuter Rev and Expanded New Brunswick Rutgers UP 1998 391 92 Schlueter Paul and June Schlueter Mary Robinson An Encyclopedia of British Women Writers New Brunswick Rutgers UP 1998 Pascoe Judith ed Introduction Mary Robinson Selected Poems Peterborough ON Broadview Press 2000 Binhammer Katherine Mary Darby Robinson 1758 1800 Female Spectator 4 3 2000 2 4 Byrne Paula Perdita The Literary Theatrical and Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson New York Random House 2004 Davenport Hester The Prince s Mistress Perdita a Life of Mary Robinson Stroud Sutton Publishing 2004 Denlinger Elizabeth Campbell Before Victoria Extraordinary Women of the British Romantic Era New York New York Public Library Columbia University Press 2005 Gristwood Sarah Perdita Royal Mistress Writer Romantic London Bantam 2005 Gristwood Sarah Bird of Paradise The Colourful Career of the First Mrs Robinson London Bantam 2007 Brewer William D ed The Works of Mary Robinson 8 vols Pickering amp Chatto 2009 2010 Davenport Hester Ed Sketch of Mrs Robinson s Life by Herself In The Works of Mary Robinson edited by William D Brewer 7 333 35 London Pickering and Chatto 2010 Perry Gill Joseph Roach and Shearer West Mary Robinson Born in 1756 8 Died in 1800 In The First Actresses Nell Gwyn to Sarah Siddons Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 2011 55 Levy Martin J Robinson Mary Perdita 1756 1758 1800 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23857 Subscription or UK public library membership required Selected Resources on Robinson and Her Work Edit Barron Phillip Who Has Not Wak d Mary Robinson and Cartesian Poetry Philosophy and Literature 41 2 2017 392 399 Brewer William D ed The Works of Mary Robinson 8 vols Pickering amp Chatto 2009 2010 Cross Ashley Mary Robinson and the Genesis of Romanticism Literary Dialogues and Debts 1784 1821 London Routledge 2016 Gamer Michael and Terry F Robinson Mary Robinson and the Dramatic Art of the Comeback Studies in Romanticism 48 2 Summer 2009 219 256 Ledoux Ellen Malenas Florizel and Perdita Affair 1779 80 BRANCH Britain Representation and Nineteenth Century History Ed Dino Franco Felluga Extension of Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net Web 2 June 2013 Pascoe Judith Mary Robinson Selected Poems Peterborough ON Broadview Press 1999 Robinson Daniel The Poetry of Mary Robinson Form and Fame New York Palgrave Macmillan 2011 Robinson Terry F Introduction Nobody By Mary Robinson Romantic Circles Web March 2013 Robinson Terry F Becoming Somebody Refashioning the Body Politic in Mary Robinson s Nobody Studies in Romanticism 55 Summer 2016 143 184 Fictional Works about Robinson Edit Plaidy Jean Perdita s Prince 1969 Elyot Amanda All For Love The Scandalous Life and Times of Royal Mistress Mary Robinson A Novel 2008 Lightfoot Freda Lady of Passion The Story of Mary Robinson 2013 Notes Edit Mary Robinson Sappho and Phaon About the Book Judith Pascoe Romantic Theatricality Cornell University Press 1997 ISBN 0 8014 3304 5 p 13 Paula Byrne 2005 Perdita the life of Mary Robinson London Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0007164592 OCLC 224036999 Anthony Camp Royal Mistresses and Bastards Fact and Fiction 1714 1936 2007 133 34 Her daughter Mary Elizabeth honoring her mother s request published a draft of Robinson s memoirs in 1801 as Memoirs with some Posthumous Pieces Levy 2004 Feldman p 590 a b Byrne Paula 2004 Perdita The Literary Theatrical Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson New York Random House p 56 Runge Laura L 21 September 2001 Mary Darby Robinson 1758 1800 Bibliography Retrieved 23 November 2019 Feldman Paula R 2000 British Women Poets of the Romantic Era An Anthology Mary Robinson 1758 1800 p 590 ISBN 978 0 8018 6640 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link Carroll Leslie 2008 Royal Affairs A Lusty Romp Through the Extramarital Adventures That Rocked the British Monarchy George IV and Mary Robinson 1757 1800 ISBN 978 0 451 22398 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link See Katharine Binhammer Thinking Gender with Sexuality in 1790s Feminist Thought Feminist Studies28 3 2002 667 690 Carroll 2008 Royal Affairs A Lusty Romp Through the Extramarital Adventures That Rocked the British Monarchy George IV and Mary Robinson 1757 1800 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link Brock Claire 2006 The feminization of fame 1750 1830 Basingstoke England Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1403989918 OCLC 64511330 Byrne Paula 2004 Perdita The Literary Theatrical Scandalous Life of Mary Robinson New York Random House p 180 Anthony Camp Royal Mistresses and Bastards Fact and Fiction 1714 1936 2007 134 Mary Darby Robinson 1758 1800 digital library upenn edu Retrieved 8 May 2019 said Bethany 25 January 2010 Vancenza or The Dangers of Credulity Perditasroom s Blog Retrieved 4 August 2017 Sodeman Melissa Sentimental Memorials Women and the Novel in Literary History Women Writers in Review www wwp northeastern edu Retrieved 4 August 2017 Peterson Linda H 1994 Becoming an Author Mary Robinson s Memoirs and the Origins of the Woman Artist s Autobiography Re visioning Romanticism British Women Writers 1776 1837 37 50 Brock Claire 2006 The feminization of fame 1750 1830 Basingstoke England Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1403989918 OCLC 64511330 a b c d e f g h i j Ty Eleanor Mary Robinson British Reform Writers 1789 1832 Ed Gary Kelly and Edd Applegate Detroit Gale Research 1996 Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol 158 Literature Resources from Gale Web 8 Oct 2010 Ty Eleanor Mary Robinson British Reform Writers 1789 1832 Ed Gary Kelly and Edd Applegate Detroit Gale Research 1996 Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol 158 Literature Resources from Gale a b Pascoe Judith Mary Robinson Selected Poems Broadview Press Julia Wells Key Passage Analysis of Mary Robinson s London s Summer Morning BRITISH ROMANTIC WOMEN WRITERS POETRY 1770 1840 14 September 2015 Retrieved 3 August 2017 Rumens Carol 12 April 2010 Poem of the week Sappho and Phaon by Mary Robinson The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 3 August 2017 a b c d Robinson Mary A Letter to the Women of England and The Natural Daughter Edited by Sharon M Setzer broadview literary texts 2003 a b c Mary Darby Robinson 1758 1800 digital library upenn edu Retrieved 8 August 2017 Miskolcze Robin L Winter 1995 Snapshots of Contradiction in Mary Robinson s Poetical Works Papers on Language and Literature 31 2 206 ProQuest 1300109586 Robinson Daniel 2011 The Duchess Mary Robinson and Georgiana s Social Network The Wordsworth Circle 42 3 193 197 doi 10 1086 TWC24043147 JSTOR 24043147 S2CID 161018169 a b Pascoe Judith Romantic Theatricality Broadview Press Brewer William D 1 July 2006 Mary Robinson as Dramatist The Nobody Catastrophe European Romantic Review 17 3 265 273 doi 10 1080 10509580600816678 S2CID 144877887 Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net Retrieved 13 December 2017 Knowles Claire 18 March 2014 Hazarding the Press Charlotte Smith the Morning Post and the Perils of Literary Celebrity Romanticism 20 1 30 42 doi 10 3366 rom 2014 0155 ISSN 1354 991X References EditBinhammer Katherine Thinking Gender with Sexuality in 1790s Feminist Thought Feminist Studies 28 3 2002 667 90 Byrne Paula 2005 Perdita The Life of Mary Robinson London HarperCollins and New York Random House Gristwood Sarah 2005 Perdita royal mistress writer romantic London Bantam Levy Martin J 2004 Biography of Mary Robinson Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press Robinson Mary and Mary Elizabeth Robinson 1801 Memoirs of the Late Mrs Robinson London Printed by Wilkes and Taylor for R Phillips Mary Darby Robinson biography Mary Robinson memoirsExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mary Robinson poet Mary Robinson at the Eighteenth Century Poetry Archive ECPA Online books and library resources in your library and in other libraries about Mary Robinson poet Online books and library resources in your library and in other libraries by Mary Robinson poet Works by Mary Robinson at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Mary Robinson at Internet Archive Works by Mary Robinson at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Portrait of Mary Robinson by Gainsborough The Guardian 26 August 2000 Mary Robinson profile Contemporary obituaries and death notices Tarleton site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Robinson poet amp oldid 1176684240, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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