- Anne Halkett
Lady Anne Halkett (née Murray) (1623-1699) was a religious writer and autobiographer.cite book
last = Sage
first = Lorna
authorlink = Lorna Sage
title = The Cambridge Guide to Women's Writing in English
publisher =Cambridge University Press
date =1999-09-30
pages = pp. 299 and 300
id = ISBN 0-521-66813-1 ]Early life
Halkett's father Thomas Murray was tutor to King James I's children. He later became Provost of
Eton College . Her mother wasgoverness to the king's children. When Thomas Murray died, Halkett was educated by her mother. She learned French, dancing, medicine, music, needlework, religion and surgery. Her religious education was extensive, and she read the Bible, had daily prayers and regularly attended church.cite book
last = Cerasano
first = P.
coauthors = Marion Wynne-Davies
title = Renaissance Drama by Women
publisher = Routledge (UK)
date =1996-01-01
id = ISBN 0-415-09806-8 ]Personal life
Halkett's first romantic relationship was with Thomas Howard. Although Howard was from a distinguished family, he was not wealthy. This meant that marriage between them would be economically damaging to both families. Halkett's emotions were caught between the economic difficulties the marriage would result in, and the pain and loss of credibility that Howard would suffer if she did not marry him. To prevent Halkett from making an imprudent decision, her mother guarded her by having another person sleep in Halkett's room and forbidding her from seeing Howard again. Rather than disobey her mother, Halkett said goodbye to him while wearing a blindfold. Her relationship with Howard created a rift between her and her mother that lasted for fourteen months. Although Howard vowed never to marry another woman, he later broke this promise. Halkett reported in her writing that his marriage was known to be unhappy.cite book
last = Otten
first = Charlotte F.
title = English Women's Voices, 1540-1700
publisher =University Press of Florida
date =1992-01-01
id = ISBN 0-8130-1099-3 ]Halkett had a relationship with the Royalist Colonel Joseph Bampfield. She collaborated with him in several daring manoeuvres on behalf of the Royalist cause during the
English Civil War . They rescued James, Duke of York, (who later became James II) from Parliamentary captivity. Halkett disguised him as a woman to effect his escape to the European continent. Halkett seems to have lived with Bampfield under the promise of marriage. However, Bampfield had been pretending to be a widower and Halkett later learned that his wife was alive.Halkett practised medicine in Scotland. She later became a governess in the household of Sir James Halkett, a widower with two daughters. She married him in 1656. During her first pregnancy she wrote "The Mother's Will to her Unborn Child", the manuscript of which is now lost.
Halkett was happily married to Sir James for 20 years. When he died she was left with insufficient funds to support her family, and made her living by teaching children of nobility in her home. Her financial difficulties eased when James II provided her with a pension for her services to him during the English Civil War.
When she died, Halkett left behind 21 folio and quarto manuscript volumes that had been written between 1644 and the late 1690s. These manuscripts are now housed in the
National Library of Scotland .cite book
last = Pacheco
first = Anita
title = A Companion to Early Modern Women's Writing
publisher =Blackwell Publishing
date =2002-07-01
id = ISBN 0-631-21702-9 ]Written work
Halkett’s writings include extensive an autobiography (c.1677), religious meditations, and "Instructions for Youth". For Halkett, writing about what she had read, her dreams, and her hopes for her children were apart of her daily domestic devotions as well as for pleasure. Her religious writings seem to have been composed over a fifty-five year period (1644-99).
Halkett’s autobiography (which can be titled as "Autobiography" or "Memoirs", depending on the editor) is a candid record of personal and political events during the English Civil War. It appears to have been written between 1677 and 1678. In it, Halkett gives a detailed account of her courtships and marriage. It is written with narrative suspense, and dialogue is used to capture both Halkett’s own emotions and those of her lovers.
Bibliography
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