词条 | Hesba Stretton |
释义 |
| name = Sarah Smith | image = hesba-stretton.jpg | imagesize = 200px | caption = Sarah Smith | pseudonym = Hesba Stretton | birth_date = {{birth date|1832|07|27|df=y}} | birth_place = Wellington, Shropshire, England | death_date = {{death date and age|1911|10|8|1832|07|27|df=y}} | death_place = Ham, London, England | occupation = Writer (novelist) | nationality = English | period = 19th century | genre = Children's literature | subject = | movement = | signature = | website = }}Hesba Stretton was the pen name of Sarah Smith (27 July 1832{{snd}}8 October 1911), an English writer of children's books. She concocted the name from the initials of herself and four surviving siblings and part of the name of a Shropshire village she visited, All Stretton, where her sister Anne owned a house, Caradoc Lodge.[1] Early lifeSarah Smith was the daughter of a bookseller, Benjamin Smith (1793–1878) of Wellington, Shropshire and his wife Anne Bakewell Smith (1798–1842), a noted Methodist. She and her elder sister attended the Old Hall, a school in the town, but were largely self-educated.[2] About 1867, Sarah Smith moved south to live at Snaresbrook and Loughton near Epping Forest, and at Ham, near Richmond, Surrey. WritingSmith was one of the most popular Evangelical writers of the 19th century, who used her "Christian principles as a protest against specific social evils in her children's books."[3] Her moral tales and semi-religious stories, chiefly for the young, were printed in huge numbers and often chosen as school and Sunday-school prizes. She became a regular contributor to Household Words and All the Year Round under Charles Dickens's editorship, after her sister had successfully submitted a story of hers without her knowledge. Altogether she wrote more than 40 novels.[4] The book that won widespread fame for "Hesbah Stretton" was Jessica's First Prayer, first published in the journal Sunday at Home in 1866 and the following year in book form. By the end of the 19th century it had sold at least a million and a half copies.[5] Critic Brian Alderson notes that its sales were "nearly ten times as many as those of Alice in Wonderland."[6] The book gave rise to a genre of stories about homeless children "that successfully combined elements of the sensational novel and the religious tract and helped introduce the image of the poor, urban child into the Victorian social conscious."[5] It has been published in the United States as part of the Lamplighter Family Collection, under the title Jessica's Journey.[7] A sequel, Jessica's Mother, was published in Sunday at Home in 1866 and as a book in 1904. Jessica is a homeless girl in Victorian London, abandoned by an alcoholic actress mother, but who finds comfort and religious support in a friendship with Daniel Standring, owner of a coffee stall. She appears as a child actress, but when she becomes too big for such parts, she is beaten by her mother, receives little to eat, and wanders about London. The act of humanity by Standring, a chapel keeper in a Methodist chapel, helps him too, by re-evaluating his concept of religion and respectability. Other authors who followed the tradition of stories about "street arabs" and the importance of philanthropy to the poor include Georgina Castle Smith.[8] Smith became the chief writer for the Religious Tract Society.[9] Her experience of working with slum children in Manchester in the 1860s gave her books a greater sense of authenticity, for they "drive home the abject state of the poor with almost brutal force."[10] Social workIn 1884, Smith was one of the co-founders (with Benjamin Waugh, Baroness Burdett-Coutts, Lord Shaftesbury and others) of the London Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, which combined with similar societies in other cities such as Manchester to form the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children some five years later. However, she (and Burdett-Coutts) resigned after a decade in protest against what she saw as financial mismanagement. In retirement in Richmond, Surrey, the Smith sisters ran a branch of the Popular Book Club for working-class readers. Sarah died at home at Ivycroft on Ham Common on 8 October 1911, surviving her sister by only eight months. Bibliography
References1. ^{{cite book|last=Dickins|first=Gordon|title=An Illustrated Literary Guide to Shropshire|year=1987|publisher=Shropshire Libraries|pages=71, 87|isbn=0-903802-37-6}} 2. ^Patricia Demers: Smith, Sarah... In: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: OUP, 2004; online e. October 2008). Retrieved 14 November 2010. Subscription required. 3. ^Jan Susina: The Place of Lewis Carroll in Children's Literature (New York: Routledge. 2009), p. 111; Margaret Nancy Cutt: Ministering Angels: a study of nineteenth-century Evangelical writing for children (Wormley, England: Five Owls Press, 1979), p. 133. 4. ^Patricia Demers: "Smith, Sarah"... 5. ^1 Jan Susina..., p. 108. 6. ^Brian Alderson: "Tracts, Reward and Fairies: the Victorian contribution to children's literature". In: Essays in the History of Publishing..., ed. Asa Briggs (London: Longman, 1974), p. 268 7. ^Retrieved 8 July 2017. 8. ^Charlotte Mitchell: Smith, Georgina Castle... Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004/2008) Retrieved 2 April 2018. 9. ^Jan Susina, p. 108. 10. ^Gillian Avery: Nineteenth Century Children: heroes and heroines in English children's stories 1780–1900 (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1965), p. 94. Sources
External links{{Nuttall poster|Stretton, Hesba}}
12 : 1832 births|1911 deaths|English children's writers|People from Shropshire|Victorian novelists|Victorian women writers|19th-century British novelists|19th-century British women writers|19th-century British writers|British women novelists|National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children people|People from Essex (before 1965) |
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