Jean Ingelow

Jean Ingelow

Jean Ingelow (17 March, 1820 – 20 July, 1897), was an English poet and novelist.

Early life and education

Born at Boston, Lincolnshire, she was the daughter of William Ingelow, a banker. As a girl she contributed verses and tales to magazines under the pseudonym of Orris, but her first (anonymous) volume, "A Rhyming Chronicle of Incidents and Feelings", did not appear until her thirtieth year. This was called charming by Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson who declared he should like to know the author; they later became friends.

Writings

Jean Ingelow followed this book of verse in 1851 with a story, "Allerton and Dreux", but it was the publication of her "Poems" in 1863 which suddenly made her a popular writer. They ran rapidly through numerous editions, were set to music, and sung in every drawing-room, and in the United States obtained even greater public acclaim. In 1867 she published "The Story of Doom and other Poems", and then gave up verse for a while and became industrious as a novelist. "Off the Skelligs" appeared in 1872, "Fated to be Free" in 1873, "Sarah de Berenger" in 1880, and "John Jerome" in 1886. She also wrote "Studies for Stories" (1864), "Stories told to a Child" (1865), "Mopsa the Fairy" (1869), and other excellent stories for children. Her third series of "Poems" was published in 1885. The last years of her life were spent in Kensington, and she outlived her popularity as a poet.

Collected poems

Her poems, collected in one volume in 1898, have often the genuine ballad note, and her songs were exceedingly successful.

"Sailing beyond Seas" and "When Sparrows build in Supper at the Mill" were among the most popular songs of the day; but they share, with the rest of her work, the faults of affectation and stilted phraseology.

Her best-known poem was the "High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire". The blemishes of her style were cleverly indicated in a well-known parody by Charles Stuart Calverley; a false archaism and a deliberate assumption of unfamiliar and unnecessary synonyms for simple objects were among the worst of her mannerisms. Postmodern novelist Gilbert Sorrentino, in his satirical novel "Blue Pastoral" (1983), lampooned her "Supper at the Mill," a poem cast in the form of a dramatic vignette, as "Supper at the Kind Brown Mill."

She wrote, however, with a sweetness of sentiment, and in prose she displayed feeling for character and the gift of narrative; a delicate underlying tenderness is never wanting in either medium. She was a woman of frank and hospitable manners, with a look of the Lady Bountiful of a country parish. She had nothing of the professional authoress or the literary lady about her, and, as with characteristic simplicity she was accustomed to say, was no great reader. Her temperament was rather that of the "improvisatore" than of the professional author or artist.

Ingelow died in 1897 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.

Works

*gutenberg author|id=Jean_Ingelow|name=Jean Ingelow
* [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/ingelow/mopsa/mopsa.html "Mopsa the Fairy" at A Celebration of Women Writers]

References

*1911

External links

* [http://gerald-massey.org.uk/ingelow/index.htm Jean Ingelow] biograhy & selected writings at gerald-massey.org.uk
*worldcat id|lccn-n50-27127


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Jean Ingelow — Jean Ingelow, photographie de Elliott and Fry Jean Ingelow (17 mars 1820 à Boston (Angleterre) 20 juillet 1897), est une romancière et poète anglaise. Biographie Cette section est vide, insuffisammen …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Jean Ingelow — (* 17. März 1820 in Boston (Lincolnshire); † 20. Juli 1897 in Brompton, heute Stadt London) war eine englische Dichterin. Jean Ingelow debütierte mit einer Sammlung von Erzählungen, Tales of Orris (1860), und ließ zwei Jahre später den Gedichts …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Ingelow, Jean — (1820 1897)    Born at Boston, Lincolnshire, daughter of a banker of Scottish origin, she was educated at home. Her early life was spent in Lincolnshire and in the fen district of Suffolk apparent in her poetry and in 1863 she moved to London,… …   British and Irish poets

  • Ingelow — (spr. inndschelō), Jean, engl. Dichterin, geb. 1820 in Boston (Lincolnshire), gest. 20. Juli 1897 in London, trat 1850 mit »A rhyming chronicle of incidents and feeling« auf, dem Erzählungen: »Tales of Orris« (1860), und ein oft aufgelegter Band… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Ingelow — (spr. índschĕloh), Jean, engl. Schriftstellerin, geb. 1820 zu Boston (Lincolnshire), gest. 20. Juli 1897 in London; schrieb Gedichte (1863 u.ö.), Erzählungen und Romane (»Off the Skelligs«, 1872; »Don John«, 1876; »Sarah de Berenger«, 1880 etc.) …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Ingelow, Jean — ▪ British poet and novelist born March 17, 1820, Boston, Lincolnshire, Eng. died July 20, 1897, London       English poet and novelist popular in her own day and remembered for her narrative poem “The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, 1571” …   Universalium

  • Ingelow — /in jeuh loh /, n. Jean, 1820 97, English poet and novelist. * * * …   Universalium

  • Ingelow — /in jeuh loh /, n. Jean, 1820 97, English poet and novelist …   Useful english dictionary

  • INGELOW, JEAN —    poetess and novelist, born at Boston, Lincolnshire, died at Kensington; her earliest work appeared anonymously, but a volume of verses under her name was successful in 1863; her poetry is chiefly religious and devotional; later she wrote for… …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Ingelow, Jean — (1820 1897)    Poetess and novelist, dau. of a banker at Boston, Lincolnshire, pub. three vols. of poems, of which perhaps the best known individual piece is The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, and several successful novels, including Off …   Short biographical dictionary of English literature

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