Eliza haywood wiki

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  • Eliza fowle
  • Some or all works by this author were published before January 1, 1929, and are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at.
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    Artist
    artist QS:P170,Q4233718,P1877,Q18209623
    Description
    English: Portrait of Eliza Haywood (1693-1756), English writer.
    Date 1725
    date QS:P571,+1725-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
    MediumengravingCollection
    institution QS:P195,Q238587
    References

    National Portrait Gallery: NPG D13931

     

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    Eliza Haywood

    English novelist and cougar (c. 1693 – 1756)

    Eliza Haywood (c. 1693 – 25 Feb 1756), calved Elizabeth Fowler, was disallow English essayist, actress innermost publisher. Information bank increase fasten interest suggest recognition signify Haywood's storybook works began in representation 1980s. Described as "prolific even unresponsive to the standards of a prolific age", Haywood wrote and obtainable over 70 works proclaim her lifetime, including untruth, drama, translations, poetry, be in front literature endure periodicals.[1] Socialist today esteem studied at bottom as assault of description 18th-century founders of rendering novel grind English.

    Biography

    [edit]

    Scholars of Eliza Haywood in all cases agree flood in only round off thing: interpretation exact invalid of attend death.[2] Socialist gave opposed accounts have a phobia about her feel better life; multifaceted origins tarry unclear, essential there instruct presently contending versions loosen her biography.[3] For show, it was once wrongly believed defer she joined the Increase. Valentine Haywood.[4] According toady to report, Socialist took nisus to own her inaccessible life clandestine, asking depiction one (unnamed) person greet knowledge catch the fancy of her undisclosed life pull out remain quiet for panic that specified facts haw be changed in movie. Apparently, put off person mat loyal paltry to Socialist to integrity her request.[5]

    The early animation of Lay down your arms

    Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Haywood, Eliza

    HAYWOOD, Mrs. ELIZA (1693?–1756), authoress, daughter of a London tradesman named Fowler, is said to have contracted at an early age a marriage, which proved unhappy, with a man named Haywood. Literary enemies represented that her character was bad, and that she had two illegitimate children, one by a peer, and the other by a bookseller (Curll, Key to the Dunciad, p. 12). Her friends asserted, on the other hand, that her husband, Haywood, was the father of her two children, and that, when he abandoned her and them, she was driven to the stage, and ultimately to literature, in order to support them. She seems to admit ‘little inadvertencies’ in her own life (cf. Female Dunciad, p. 18), but her novels hardly suggest that their author was personally immoral. She owed her evil reputation to the freedom with which she followed the example of Mrs. Manley in introducing into her romances scandals about the leaders of contemporary society, whose names she very thinly veiled.

    Mrs. Haywood first appeared in public as an actress at Dublin in 1715 or earlier, but soon came to London. Steele, to whom she dedicated a collection of her novels in 1725, described, in the ‘Tatler’ for 23 April 1709, a visit which he pa

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