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         Sigourney Lydia Huntley:     more books (18)
  1. Sketches, By Mrs. Sigourney by Lydia Huntley Sigourney, 1834
  2. The Christian's gift by Rufus W. 1813-1886 Clark, Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney, et all 2010-08-01
  3. Savings of the little ones, and poems of their mothers
  4. The RELIGIOUS SOUVENIR for Christian & New-Years Presents. by Lydia Huntley, editor. SIGOURNEY, 1840
  5. LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY - Early 19th Century American Female Poet. (American Female Poets)
  6. "Lydia Huntley Sigourney": A Biographical Essay from Gale's "Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 239, American Women Prose Writers 1820-1870" (code 30)
  7. Letters to Mothers. By Mrs. L.H. Sigourney by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 2010
  8. Letters to Mothers. By Mrs. L.H. Sigourney by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 1854-01-01
  9. Poems for the sea
  10. [Pocahontas, and other poems.] by Lydia Howard Huntley Afterwards Sigourney, 2010-03-18
  11. Select poems;
  12. Letters to Mothers by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 2005-10-27
  13. Lucy Howard's Journal / By Mrs. L. H. Sigourney by Lydia Huntley Sigourney, 1858
  14. Lydia Huntley Sigourney in the Bacon Collection by Alice DeLana, 1986

1. Lydia Huntley Sigourney
Lydia Huntley Sigourney was born on September 1, 1791, in Norwich, Connecticut, the daughter of a gardner and former Revolutionary soldier, Ezekial Huntley
http://www.sigourney.com/History/LydiaBiography.html
LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY - A SHORT BIBLIOGRAPHY Lydia Huntley Sigourney was born on September 1, 1791, in Norwich, Connecticut, the daughter of a gardner and former Revolutionary soldier, Ezekial Huntley and Zerviah Wentworth Huntley. The Lathrops, her father's employers, would prove to be important in the development of Sigourney's career. Her mother and Mrs. Lathrop encouraged her in her reading and writing and also provided her with many social connections which would be valuable to later in her life. After Mrs. Lathrop died during her teenage years, Sigourney was so depressed that her physician said she should get away from familiar surroundings. So she went to stay with the Wadsworths of Hartford. Daniel Wadsworth, a young man her own age, became her friend, eventually helping her set up her own school and helping her get her first book published: Moral Pieces, in Prose and Verse. Three years later, in 1816, she started writing for periodicals. For the next few years, she taught school in Hartford. When she was twenty-seven, she married Charles Sigourney who owned a hardware business and was president of a bank. After her first three children died, two children, Mary and Andrew, were born. Her husband objected to her publishing her works for money (he thought it degrading), but actually encouraged her, when it was anonymous. During the '20's, she continued to publish anonymously, but began to ask for payment in order to help support her elderly parents.

2. Lydia Huntley Sigourney - LoveToKnow 1911
LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY (17911865), American author, was born in Norwich, Connecticut, on the 1st of September 1791. She was educated in Norwich and
http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Lydia_Huntley_Sigourney
Lydia Huntley Sigourney
From LoveToKnow 1911
LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY (1791-1865), American author, was born in Norwich, Connecticut , on the 1st of September 1791. She was educated in Norwich and Hartford . After conducting a private school for young ladies in Norwich, she conducted a similar school in Hartford from 1814 until 1819, when she was married to Charles Sigourney, a Hartford merchant. She contributed more than two thousand articles to many (nearly 300) periodicals , and wrote more than fifty books. She died in Hartford, on the 10th of June 1865. Her books include Moral Pieces in Prose and Verse Traits of the Aborigines of America (1822), a poem; A Sketch of Connecticut Forty Years Since Poems Letters to Young Ladies (1833), one of her best-known books; Sketches (1834); Poetry for Children (1834); Zinzendorf, and Other Poems Olive Buds Letters to Mothers (1838), republished in London Pocahontas, and Other Poems Pleasant Memories of Pleasant Lands (1842), descriptive of her trip to Europe in 1840; Scenes in My Native Land (1844); Letters to My Pupils Olive Leaves The Faded Hope (1852), in memory of her only son, who died when he was nineteen years old;

3. Words Of Women Lydia Huntley Sigourney
Lydia Huntley Sigourney. (1791 1865). Elizabeth Akers Allen Jane Austen Joanna Baillie Anna Lætitia Barbauld Katharine Lee Bates
http://www.photoaspects.com/lilip/sigourney.shtml

4. [SIGOURNEY Lydia Huntley] . CLEMENT J., Editor; Noble Deeds Of American Women; W
sigourney lydia huntley . CLEMENT J., Editor. Noble Deeds of American Women; with Biographical Sketches of Some of the More Prominent. Buffalo Geo. H.
http://www.ilab.org/db/detail.php?lang=fr&membernr=1457&ordernr=7414

5. CWHF-Lydia Huntley Sigourney
A short biography from the Connecticut Women s Hall of Fame.
http://www.cwhf.org/hall/sigourney/sigourney.htm
POET BORN: DIED: FIELD: WRITERS AND JOURNALIST FROM: HARTFORD For More Information, Please Visit:
The Victorian Web
Lydia Huntley Sigourney Media The "Sweet Singer of Hartford" for whom Sigourney Street was named, one of the first American women to succeed at a literary career. A teacher, born in Norwich, Lydia Huntley moved to Hartford at the invitation of Daniel Wadsworth to open a school for the daughters of his friends. With her marriage to Charles Sigourney in 1819 came financial stability, allowing her to give up teaching and devote herself full time to writing and publishing anonymously.. Lydia used proceeds from her writing to contribute to charitable causes including the temperance movement, peace societies, Greek war relief, and the work of missionaries at home and abroad. In Traits of the Aborigines of America (1822) she turned Indian tales into blank verse urging conversion of Native Americans to Christianity. When her husband's business began to fail, she sold poems and sketches to magazines. After the success of Letters to Young Ladies (1833), her most popular prose work, she abandoned anonymity despite her husband's objections. Within a year she had published eight other volumes including Poems (1834), a collection of her verse that was reprinted three times. Her popularity was so great that rival publishers competed for her work. Death and piety were her favorite subjects; her rhyming of pious truisms had a wide appeal. Lydia went abroad in 1840 where she was received by Wordsworth, had tea with Carlyle and was presented at the court of Louis Philippe. Between 1840 and 1850 Mrs. Sigourney published fourteen collections of her poetry.

6. George Griffin-Lydia H. Sigourney Papers
The sigourney Papers contain 54 letters from lydia huntley sigourney (51 addressed to George Griffin, two to Griffin s wife, lydia, and one to his daughter
http://www.clements.umich.edu/Webguides/S/Sigourney.html
William L. Clements Library
The University of Michigan
George Griffin-Lydia H. Sigourney Papers
Griffin, George and Sigourney, Lydia Howard Papers, 1833 October 26-1854 March 6
77 items; 0.25 lin feet
Background note: Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, the "Sweet Singer of Hartford" was a major figure in the rise of feminized, sentimental fiction in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. Born in Norwich, Conn., as the only child of Ezekiel and Zerviah Huntley, Sigourney was educated in the common schools of Norwich and Hartford, and from 1811-1813, conducted a school in Norwich. By 1814, Sigourney was considered successful enough as an educator to establish a school of her own in Hartford, and the following year she followed up this triumph with the publication of her first book, Moral pieces, in prose and verse In June, 1819, Lydia married Charles Sigourney, a widower with three children. Contrary to Lydia's expectations, Charles' finances were not very solid, and as a result, she turned to writing to supplement the family income. Her first efforts were published anonymously because of the objections of her husband, but as her reputation began to grow, she began to show increasing confidence in her abilities and autonomy. By the early 1830s, Sigourney was a regular and highly sought after contributor to periodicals, eventually editing her own annual, the Religious Souvenir . Although she took a dim view of the average quality of American literary outlets, her popularity eventually grew so great that Louis Godey, among other magazine publishers, was willing to pay her simply to include her name on his magazine's list of editors. A highly prolific writer, Sigourney helped to shape literary tastes in early Victorian America, spawning numerous imitators. Her writing is steeped in a prim religious moralism, with a clear fascination for death, and tends to be overtly didactic, as exemplified by works such as

7. Lydia Huntley Sigourney Quotes And Quotations Compiled By GIGA
Extensive collection of 85000+ ancient and modern quotations,lydia huntley sigourney,lydia huntley sigourney quotes,lydia huntley sigourney quotations
http://www.giga-usa.com/quotes/authors/lydia_huntley_sigourney_a001.htm
THE MOST EXTENSIVE
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ON THE INTERNET Home Biographical Index Reading List Search ... Authors by Date TOPICS: A B C D ... Z
PEOPLE: A B C D ... Z LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY

American poet and writer
Displaying page 1 of 2
An appearance of delicacy is inseparable from sweetness and gentleness of character.
Delicacy

And with a velvet lip print on his brow such language as the tongue hath never spoken.
Kisses
As nothing truly valuable can be attained without industry, so there can be no persevering industry without a deep sense of the value of time. Time "Beware," said Lavater, "of him who hates the laugh of a child." "I love God and little children," was the simple yet sublime sentiment of Richter. Childhood Children Fear is the white lipp'd sire Of subterfuge and treachery. Fear Habits, though in their commencement like the filmy line of the spider, trembling at every breeze, may in the end prove as links of tempered steel, binding a deathless being to eternal felicity or woe. Habit It is one proof of a good education, and of true refinement of feeling, to respect antiquity.

8. Lydia Sigourney - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
lydia huntley sigourney née lydia Howard huntley (September 1, 1791 June 10, 1865) was an extremely popular American poet during the early and mid 19th
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lydia_Sigourney
Lydia Sigourney
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Lydia Huntley Sigourney n©e Lydia Howard Huntley ( September 1 June 10 ) was an extremely popular American poet during the early and mid 19th century . She was commonly known as the "Sweet Singer of Hartford ." Most of her works were published with just her married name "Mrs. Sigourney."
Contents
edit Early life
Mrs. Sigourney was born in Norwich, Connecticut to Ezekiel Huntley and Zerviah Wentworth. Their only child, she was named after her father's first wife, Lydia Howard, who had died soon after their marriage. In her autobiography Letters of Life Sigourney describes her relation to her parents, her decision to care for them, and her intent to avoid marriage because it would interfere with this relationship. I had . . . reason for avoiding serious advances. My mind was made up never to leave my parents. I felt that their absorbing love could never be repaid be the longest life-service, and that the responsibility of an only child, their sole prop and solace, would be strictly regarded by Him who readeth the heart. I had seen aged people surrounded by indifferent persons, who considered their care a burden, and could not endure the thought that my tender parents, who were without near relatives, should be thrown upon the fluctuating kindness of hirelings and strangers. To me, my father already seemed aged, though scarcely sixty; and I said, in my musing hours, Shall he, who never denied me aught, or spoke to me otherwise than in love-tones, stretch forth his hands in their weakness, "and find none to gird him"? (241).

9. Heath Anthology Of American LiteratureLydia Howard Huntley Sigourney - Author P
Information from The Heath Anthology of American Literature.
http://college.hmco.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/early_nine
Site Orientation Heath Orientation Timeline Galleries Access Author Profile Pages by: Fifth Edition Table of Contents Fourth Edition Table of Contents Concise Edition Table of Contents Authors by Name ... Internet Research Guide Textbook Site for: The Heath Anthology of American Literature , Fifth Edition
Paul Lauter, General Editor
Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney
When Lafayette, the French hero of the American Revolutionary War, visited the United States in the 1820s, a procession of schoolchildren with wreaths proclaiming “NOUS AIMONS LA FAYETTE” greeted him in the city of Hartford, Connecticut. The phrase was the refrain of a poem in his honor by Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney. This event characterizes Sigourney’s position as a writer. Her poetry, like her prose, was about public subjects—history, slavery, missionary work, as well as current events—or treated personal matters, especially loss and death, as experiences common to all. In contrast to a Dickinson or an Emerson, she wrote for popular consumption, her work expressed a communal ethic based on compassionate Christianity and on conservative republicanism.
Sigourney was enormously popular. In 1848 the respected publishers Cary and Hart issued her selected poems in their series of works by American poets, the preceding volumes having been devoted to three highly regarded male writers, Bryant, Longfellow, and N. P. Willis. She was also enormously productive: at her death in 1865 she had published over fifty books. Their range attests to the variety of forms in which antebellum writers could undertake to guide the public. She wrote communitarian narratives, educational volumes, advice manuals, travel literature, temperance pieces, meditative prose, and exemplary memoirs as well as a vast and varied quantity of poetry.

10. Érudit | RON N29-30 2003 : Dasler Johnson : Reviving Lydia Huntley Sigourney
Doing so, we may revive in our imaginations lydia huntley sigourney’s own .. Curiously, Welter herself admitted that lydia huntley sigourney both did,
http://www.erudit.org/revue/ron/2003/v/n29/007722ar.html
Le navigateur que vous utilisez est d'une ancienne version (ou bien la prise en charge des feuilles de styles CSS est d©sactiv©e). La mise en page de l'article ne peut ©tre enti©rement reproduite avec cette version. Romanticism on the Net The Transatlantic Poetess Issues 29-30, February-May 2003 Issue guest-edited by : Laura Mandell Editor : Michael Eberle-Sinatra Publisher : Universit© de Montr©al ISSN : 1467-1255 (electronic version)
Reviving Lydia Huntley Sigourney
Author Wendy Dasler Johnson Washington State University Abstract Lucy Howard’s Journal , Sigourney prophesies and in some sense prepares her own reception history as a female writing subject whose textual voice can outlive the stultifying critique of feminine sentimentalism. This business of the subject is tricky. Joan Didion on Robert Mapplethorpe’s Some Women Cultural meaning attached to writing is not a single meaning that women or men participate in by the act of becoming writers; and in the early nineteenth century especially, women with ambitions to become writers faced a complex mixture of permission and prohibition, deriving from their sex, from which men were spared. Norma Clarke, Ambitious Heights

11. 54144. Sigourney, Lydia Huntley. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 1996
54144. sigourney, lydia huntley. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996.
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Within its rocky heart

12. PAL: Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865)
Reuben, Paul P. Chapter 3 lydia Howard huntley sigourney PAL Perspectives in American Literature A Research and Reference Guide.
http://web.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap3/sigourney.html
PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide - An Ongoing Project Paul P. Reuben (To send an email, please click on my name above.) Chapter 3: Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865) Heath Anthology Introduction Primary Works Selected Bibliography 1980-Present MLA Style Citation of this Web Page ... Home Page
Source: Legacy Photo Known as "the Sweet Singer of Hartford," Lydia Sigourney was a prolific writer who published over fifty books before her death. Primary Works Traits of the Aborigines of America, Sketch of Connecticut, Forty Years Since, Poems, Zinzendorff and Other Poems, Illustrated Poems, Past Meridian, Lucy Howard's Journal, Letters of Life, Selected Bibliography 1980-Present Baker, Dorothy Z. ed. Poetics in the Poem: Critical Essays on American Self-Reflexive Poetry. NY: Peter Lang, 1997. Estes, Glenn E. ed. American Writers for Children Before 1900. Detroit: Gale, 1985. Harris, Sharon M. ed. Redefining the Political Novel: American Women Writers, 1797-1901. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 1995. Hudock, Amy E. and Katharine Rodier. eds.

13. Lydia Huntley Sigourney
sigourney, lydia huntley, author, born in Norwich, Connecticut, 1 September, 1791; died in Hartford, Start your search on lydia huntley sigourney.
http://www.famousamericans.net/lydiahuntleysigourney/
You are in: Museum of History Hall of North and South Americans Lydia Huntley Sigourney
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14. UVa Library Early American Fiction Collection
lydia Howard (huntley) sigourney was born in Norwich, Connecticut, Guides to lydia Howard huntley sigourney manuscript holdings from UVA Special
http://etext.virginia.edu/eaf/authors/lhhs.htm
EAF Author: Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney (1791-1865)
Works in the Collection Manuscript Materials Biographies Other Resources Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney was born in Norwich, Connecticut, and in 1814 sent to school in Hartford, where she became a lifelong resident. She was author and editor of fifty-three volumes of prose and poetry, including Moral Pieces in Prose and Verse ; the historical poem Traits of the Aborigines A Sketch of Connecticut Forty Years Since Zinzendorff and Other Poems ; and Pocohantas and Other Poems
Works in the EAF Collection
Lucy Howard's Journal (Restricted) Myrtis: With Other Etchings and Sketchings (Restricted) Sketch of Connecticut, Forty Years Since (Restricted) Sketches (Restricted) Water-Drops (Restricted)
EAF Manuscript Materials
Letter: Sigourney to Samuel G. Goodrich (February 4,1831) Letter: Sigourney to "Revd and dear sir" (September 23, 1854) Engraving: Lydia Huntley Sigourney Engraving: Lydia Huntley Sigourney (2) Engraving: L. H. Sigourney (signed) Photo: Lydia Huntley Sigourney
Contemporary Biographies
From Oscar Fay Adams

15. Lydia (Howard Huntley) Sigourney Criticism
lydia (Howard huntley) sigourney Criticism and Essays.
http://www.enotes.com/nineteenth-century-criticism/lydia-howard-huntley-sigourne
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Lydia (Howard Huntley) Sigourney Criticism and Essays
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  • Lydia (Howard Huntley) Sigourney 1791-1865
    American poet, sketch writer, essayist, novelist, and travel writer. For additional information on Sigourney's life and works, see NCLC, Volume 21.
    INTRODUCTION
    Known as “the sweet singer of Hartford,” Sigourney was one of America's most popular poets during the first half of the nineteenth century. Her celebration of religious and patriotic values, talent for writing commemorative poetry, and reputation for moral integrity strongly appealed to her contemporary public. A prolific author, Sigourney contributed widely to magazines and published numerous volumes of her work, becoming one of the first women in the United States to establish a successful and remunerative career as a writer.
    Biographical Information
    Sigourney was born in Norwich, Connecticut, the only daughter of Sophia Wentworth Huntley and Ezekiel Huntley, a gardener in the employ of a wealthy matron, Mrs. Daniel Lathrop. Encouraged by both her mother and Mrs. Lathrop to read and write at an early age, Sigourney received her primary education from local schools. She later paid tribute to the influential guidance of her father's employer in her fictional

    16. Alexa - Sites In: Sigourney, Lydia Huntley
    Alexa Browse Sites Browse and search through sites by category or by most popular in category based on Alexa traffic rank.
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    17. LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNE... - Online Information Article About LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOU
    sigourney, lydia huntley (17911865). sigourney, a Hartford See also. MERCHANT (O. End of Article lydia huntley sigourney (1791-1865)
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    LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY (1791-1865)
    Online Encyclopedia Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 82 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica. Make a correction to this article. Add information or comments to this article.
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    Spread the word: del.icio.us it! See also: LYDIA HUNTLEY See also: SIGOURNEY See also: American author, was See also: born in See also: Norwich See also: Connecticut , on the 1st of See also: September 1791 . She was educated in Norwich and See also: Hartford . After conducting a private school for See also: young ladies in Norwich, she conducted a similar school in Hartford from 1814 until 1819, when she was married to See also:

    18. Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865)
    lydia Howard huntley sigourney (17911865). Contributing Editor Sandra A. Zagarell. Classroom Issues and Strategies. Among the biggest hurdles contemporary
    http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/sigourney.html
    Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865)
    Contributing Editor: Sandra A. Zagarell
    Classroom Issues and Strategies
    Major Themes, Historical Perspectives, and Personal Issues
    Significant Form, Style, or Artistic Conventions
    Sigourney was a prolific and varied writer. I would draw attention to the adroitness with which her work exhibits the stylistic versatility of public verse. Among the forms her poems take are the ode, the nonsubjective lyric, elegy, and narrative and descriptive verse. She wrote in a variety of meters and verse patterns. Her poetry is situated in a sentimental tradition that contrasts with the Romantic one more familiar to, and more highly valued by, readers in the academy. The striking absence of the subjective consciousness of an organizing persona is a feature I would stress. As Annie Finch has observed, Sigourney's poetry gives religious, moral, and emotional truths what seems an independent or nonpersonal voice, or appears to represent nature or natural states without a mediating subjectivity. I also call attention to the wit Sigourney's poems can display: "To a Shred of Linen" elicits an earlier agrarian New England while reflecting wryly on continuing societal ambivalence about women's creativity in a sphere other than the domestic.

    19. JSTOR William Wordsworth And Lydia Huntley Sigourney
    MEMORANDA AND DOCUMENTS WILLIAM WORDSWORTH AND lydia huntley sigourney DAVID BONNELL GREEN L YDIA sigourney, the sweet singer of Hartford, enjoyed a
    http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0028-4866(196412)37:4<527:WWALHS>2.0.CO;2-A

    20. Excite France - Sigourney, Lydia Huntley > S > Authors > Literature > Arts (Web-
    8 sites dans la catégorie sigourney, lydia huntley. lydia H. sigourney and George Griffin Poems of lydia huntley sigourney (17911865) Enregistrer
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    Excite Mail MIX all channels Aujourd'hui Ecartes Horoscope Info Jeux Meteo MIX Recherche Sitemap Traducteur Voyage Web Web Images Images Shopping Shopping Web-Catalogue Tout le web powered by Ask.com et("sr1","1"); Web-Catalogue Arts Literature Authors ... S Sigourney, Lydia Huntley
    Lydia H. Sigourney and George Griffin: Papers
    Enregistrer Provides a background description of author''s life and a bibliographic index of the author''s papers. http://www.clements.umich.edu/Webguid... Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney Enregistrer Information from The Heath Anthology of American Literature. http://college.hmco.com/english/laute... Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865) Enregistrer Photograph and selected bibliography. http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben... Lydia Howard Sigourney Enregistrer Biographical information, list of works and related links from The Victorian Web. http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/s... Lydia Howard Sigourney Enregistrer Biographical information from the Connecticut Humanities Council. http://www.ctheritage.org/encyclopedi... Lydia Huntley Sigourney Enregistrer A short biography from the Connecticut Women''s Hall of Fame. http://www.cwhf.org/hall/sigourney/si...

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