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Mary Darby Robinson [1758-1800] ENG
Ranked #288 in the top 380 poets
Votes 49%: 38 up, 40 down

Actress, poet, dramatist, novelist, and celebrity figure. During her lifetime she was known as "the English Sappho".

Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Darby of Bristol, England, Mary Darby Robinson benefited greatly from her father’s membership with the mercantile firm of Miller and Elton. Not only did she enjoy the perks of high society but she was also provided what was considered to be one of the finest educations of the time. She spent her early educational years learning from a minister of a monastery at St. Augustine. Robinson grew to love the arts, dabbling not only in writing and music, but also acting in her later years. Even in her early years she demonstrated a skill in the use of language and flourished in her English classes. Her talent in music earned her a harpsichord and she stuDuring her childhood, her father John abruptly mortgaged all of his property and then sailed away with his mistress, Elenor, leaving Robinson and the rest of her family behind. His escapade to America failed, and he was forced to return home seven years later. Immediately, he formally separated from his wife and then placed Robinson and her brother John in a school at Chelsea. When Robinson failed from Mrs. Lorrington`s school at Chelsea failed, Robinson`s mother intervened and enrolled her in her own boarding school, which she opened up with the help of her children. By this time Robinson was fourteen and teaching English prose, poetry, and grammar in Little Chelsea in her mother’s school.

Robinson finished her schooling at Oxford House, the place she developed her love for theatre where she became involved in theater. On a trip to Greenwich she met her future husband, when she stepped out of the carriage at The Star and Garter Inn at Greenwich. Thomas Robinson Esquire greeted her as she exited the carriage, and soon realized he was a neighbor of hers. Shortly after that, Robinson’s brother, George, caught smallpox and Thomas attended to him daily, which gained the approval of Robinson’s mother. By the time George recovered Robinson had fallen ill as well, and received the same care from Thomas that her brother had. Thomas pressed courtship and attended her everyday until Robinson finally agreed. She and Thomas wed in secret when she was fifteen. After Robinson started showing her pregnancy her mother demanded their marriage be announced, and Thomas confessed to his father, who accepted them.

Soon after, they became friends with Lord Lyttleton, an older man who became quite intrested in Robinson. He began to pursue her, and even informed her of her husband’s infidelity with a woman by the name of Harriet Wilmot. Upon questioning, Robinson found this to be true, and became quite distraught. Despite her pain Lyttleton continued to try to seduce Robinson, but she refused. She was later rumored to have had a fifteen-year love affair with Lord Banastre Tarleton. The death of his mother in 1797 catalyzed him to end his 15-year relationship with Mary. Within a year, he met and married a young heiress, Susan Priscilla Bertie. Mary Robinson revenged herself as best she could by writing a savage characterization of Tarleton in The False Friend. The Natural Daughter was an attempt to remind readers of an old scandal concerning Tarleton`s young wife: Susan Bertie was an illegitimate child of the Duke of Ancaster. Shortly after the affair she was nearly raped by George Robert Fitzgerald, a murderer who was later hanged by the Kings Officers. Thomas fell into debt and the couple was forced to move in with Thomas’ father, who was now much less welcoming. Robinson soon tired of constant taunting and insults and fled to the Treveca House on November 18, 1774. Here she bore her daughter, whom she christened Maria Elizabeth. Later Thomas was discovered and the couple relocated to Robinson’s grandmother’s home in Mommouth. Thomas was caught here and forced into custody. After his release the family retired at Hafton Garden, where Robinson lived the rest of her life. 

In her final writings Robinson sought to describe and justify her life. She expressed her disillusionment with marriage in a work of social criticism, entitled A Letter to the Women of England, on the Injustice of Mental Subordination which she wrote in 1799. She first published the work under the name of Anne Frances Randall, and it reflected the thinking of her friends Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin. Mary argued for the choice of a wife to leave her husband. Robinson also began to write her autobiography. However, her health became increasingly poor, and she died on December 26, 1800, leaving it unfinished. Her daughter Maria Elizabeth edited and published her memoirs (Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Robinson, Written by Herself, With Some Posthumous Pieces) in 1801 and a collected edition of her Poetical Works in 1806.

Bio information from A Celebration of Women Writers

Della Cruscans, Romanticism, Didactism, Slavery

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
-615--550
GRC
Sappho
← resembled by Mary Darby Robinson


WorkLangRating
Deborah`s Parrot, a Village Tale
eng
7
Female Fashions for 1799
eng
2
London`s Summer Morning
eng
2
The Lascar
eng
2
The Snowdrop
eng
2
Male Fashions for 1799
eng
1
Sonnet XVIII: Why Art Thou Chang`d?
eng
1
A Fragment, Supposed To Be Written Near The Temple, On The Night Before The Murder Of Louis The Sixt
eng
0
Absence
eng
0
Ainsi Va le Monde
eng
0
All Alone
eng
0
Canzonet
eng
0
Cupid Sleeping
eng
0
Echo to Him Who Complains
eng
0
Edmund`s Wedding
eng
0
Elegy on the Death of Lady Middleton
eng
0
Elegy to the Memory of David Garrick, Esq.
eng
0
Elegy to the Memory of Richard Boyle, Esq.
eng
0
Elegy to the Memory of Werter
eng
0
Golfre, Gothic Swiss Tale
eng
0
January, 1795.
eng
0
Lewin and Gynneth
eng
0
Life
eng
0
Lines inscribed to P. de Loutherbourg, Esq. R. A.
eng
0
Lines on Hearing it Declared that No Women Were So Handsome as the English
eng
0
Lines to Him Who Will Understand Them
eng
0
Lines to the memory of Richard Boyle, Esq.
eng
0
Lines Written by the Side of a River
eng
0
Lines Written on the Sea-Coast
eng
0
Mistress Gurton`s Cat
eng
0
Monody to the Memory of Chatterton
eng
0
Morning
eng
0
Oberon to the Queen of the Fairies
eng
0
Ode on Adversity
eng
0
Ode to Beauty
eng
0
Ode to Della Crusca
eng
0
Ode to Despair
eng
0
Ode to Eloquence
eng
0
Ode to Envy
eng
0
Ode to Health
eng
0
Ode to Meditation
eng
0
Ode to Melancholy
eng
0
Ode to Reflection
eng
0
Ode to the Moon
eng
0
Ode to the Muse
eng
0
Ode to the Nightingale
eng
0
Ode to Valour
eng
0
Ode to Vanity
eng
0
Old Barnard -- A Monkish Tale
eng
0
Pastoral Stanzas
eng
0
Petrarch to Laura
eng
0
Poor Marguerite
eng
0
Rinaldo to Laura Maria
eng
0
Second Ode to the Nightingale
eng
0
Sir Raymond of the Castle
eng
0
Sonnet
eng
0
Sonnet -- The Mariner
eng
0
Sonnet -- The Peasant
eng
0
Sonnet -- The Snow-Drop
eng
0
Sonnet -- The Tear
eng
0
Sonnet I: Favour`d by Heav`n
eng
0
Sonnet II: High on a Rock
eng
0
Sonnet III: Turn to Yon Vale Beneath
eng
0
Sonnet IV: Why, When I Gaze
eng
0
Sonnet IX: Ye, Who in Alleys Green
eng
0
Sonnet to Amicus
eng
0
Sonnet to Evening
eng
0
Sonnet to Ingratitude
eng
0
Sonnet to My Beloved Daughter
eng
0
Sonnet to the Memory of Miss Maria Linley
eng
0
Sonnet V: O! How Can Love
eng
0
Sonnet VI: Is It to Love
eng
0
Sonnet VII: Come, Reason
eng
0
Sonnet VIII: Why, Through Each Aching Vein
eng
0
Sonnet X: Dang`rous to Hear
eng
0
Sonnet XI: O! Reason!
eng
0
Sonnet XII: Now, O`er the Tesselated Pavement
eng
0
Sonnet XIII: Bring, Brick to Deck My Brow
eng
0
Sonnet XIV: Come, Soft Aeolian Harp
eng
0
Sonnet XIX: Farewell, Ye Coral Caves
eng
0
Sonnet XL: On the Low Margin
eng
0
Sonnet XLI: Yes, I Will Go
eng
0
Sonnet XLII: Oh! Canst Thou Bear
eng
0
Sonnet XLIII: While From the Dizzy Precipice
eng
0
Sonnet XLIV: Here Droops the Muse
eng
0
Sonnet XV: Now, Round My Favour`d Grot
eng
0
Sonnet XVI: Delusive Hope
eng
0
Sonnet XVII: Love Steals Unheeded
eng
0
Sonnet XX: Oh! I Could Toil For Thee
eng
0
Sonnet XXI: Why Do I Live
eng
0
Sonnet XXII: Wild Is the Foaming Sea
eng
0
Sonnet XXIII: To Aetna`s Scorching Sands
eng
0
Sonnet XXIV: O Thou! Meek Orb
eng
0
Sonnet XXIX: Farewell, Ye Tow`ring Cedars
eng
0
Sonnet XXV: Can`st Thou Forget
eng
0
Sonnet XXVI: Where Antique Woods
eng
0
Sonnet XXVII: Oh! Ye Bright Stars
eng
0
Sonnet XXVIII: Weak Is the Sophistry
eng
0
Sonnet XXX: O`er the Tall Cliff
eng
0
Sonnet XXXI: Far O`er the Waves
eng
0
Sonnet XXXII: Blest As the Gods
eng
0
Sonnet XXXIII: I Wake
eng
0
Sonnet XXXIV: Venus! To Thee
eng
0
Sonnet XXXIX: Prepare Your Wreaths
eng
0
Sonnet XXXV: What Means the Mist
eng
0
Sonnet XXXVI: Lead Me, Sicilian Maids
eng
0
Sonnet XXXVII: When, in the Gloomy Mansion
eng
0
Sonnet XXXVIII: Oh Sigh
eng
0
Sonnet. Inscribed to Her Grace the Duchess of Devonshire
eng
0
Stanzas
eng
0
Stanzas Inscribed to Lady William Russell
eng
0
Stanzas to a Friend
eng
0
Stanzas to Flora
eng
0
Stanzas to Love
eng
0
Stanzas to the Rose
eng
0
Stanzas to Time
eng
0
Stanzas Written under an Oak in Windsor Forest
eng
0
The Adieu to Love
eng
0
The Alien Boy
eng
0
The Bee and the Butterfly
eng
0
The Camp
eng
0
The Confessor, a Sanctified Tale
eng
0
The Deserted Cottage
eng
0
The Faded Bouquet
eng
0
The Fortune-Teller, a Gypsy Tale
eng
0
The Fugitive
eng
0
The Granny Grey, a Love Tale
eng
0
The Haunted Beach
eng
0
The Hermit of Mont-Blanc
eng
0
The Mistletoe (A Christmas Tale)
eng
0
The Negro Girl
eng
0
The Origin of Cupid -- A Fable
eng
0
The Poor Singing Dame
eng
0
The Reply to Time
eng
0
The Shepherd`s Dog
eng
0
The Trumpeter, an Old English Tale
eng
0
The Widow`s Home
eng
0
To Cesario
eng
0
To Leonardo
eng
0
To Rinaldo
eng
0
To Simplicity
eng
0
To the Muse of Poetry
eng
0
To the Myrtle
eng
0

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