Molly Elliot Seawell Popular Books

Molly Elliot Seawell Biography & Facts

Molly Elliot Seawell (October 23, 1860 – November 15, 1916), an early American historian and writer, was a descendant of the Seawells of Virginia and a niece of President John Tyler. Raised on a large plantation, her education included being "turned loose in a library of good books", her father's home containing the best literature of the 18th century. She read English classics, and was especially fond of poetry. She did not read a novel until after she was 17, and the first was Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield. Her three amusements were reading, riding and piano-playing. Her father, a prominent lawyer, died just as Seawell reached adulthood. Seawell sent some stories to Lippincott's Monthly Magazine when William S. Walsh was the editor. Recognizing Seawell's ability to be unusual, he encouraged her from the beginning. Her first stories were signed with a pen name till her friends persuaded her to sign her own name, which occurred after Maid Marian was published. This is considered her best story. She ventured into the genre of juvenile literature when she sent Little Jarvis to The Youth's Companion to contend for the US$500 prize. It is possible that Seawell's essay "On the Absence of Creative Faculty in Women" attracted more attention than any of her books. Women answered it, and the discussion was joined by Andrew Lang, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, and others. The Critic stated that essay attracted more attention than any single article ever published in its columns. In style, Seawell was said to resemble Jane Austen. Seawell's works, besides numerous short stories, included: Young Heros of our Navy, Maid Marian and Other Stories, Midshipman Paulding, Hale Weston, Paul Jones, and The Midshipmen's Mess. Early life and education Molly Elliot Seawell was born in Gloucester, Virginia, a member of one of the older European families to settle in Virginia. Her father, John Tyler Seawell, a lawyer and orator, was a nephew of President John Tyler. Her mother (Tyler's second wife), Frances Elizabeth Jackson Seawell, was a native of Baltimore whose father, Major William Jackson, a distinguished officer in the War of 1812, who was with the Cavalry division at the Battle of North Point, 12 September 1814. Descendants of the original Seawells spell the family name in one of two forms: "Sewell" (as in Sewell's Point, Norfolk, Virginia) and "Seawell." Otis Notman interviewing Molly Elliot Seawell for The New York Times Saturday Review of Books noted that the regional pronunciation of the name was "Sowell," although Molly Elliot Seawell pronounced her name as it was spelled ("Talks", 392). Seawell spent her early life at the family's plantation home, "The Shelter," which had been a hospital in the American Revolutionary War. She described her early formation as a "... secluded life ... in the library of an old Virginia country house, and in a community where conditions more nearly resembled the eighteenth than the nineteenth century" ("The Ladies' Battle", 116). Her father was a student of the Classics, who influenced her learning. She was not allowed to read a novel until she was 17, instead reading history, encyclopedias, and the works of William Shakespeare and the Romantic poets. Her education was primarily informal at home, where she learned riding, dancing, and household management. In addition to these influences and her Tidewater surroundings, Seawell's seafaring uncle, Joseph Seawell, contributed to her future literary subjects. Life After her father's death and between her move to Norfolk and settling for life in Washington, D.C., Seawell made the first of many trips to Europe. Her visits took her to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, France, Germany, and even as far as Imperial Russia. Apparently the appeal of Russia and Germany was the therapeutic waters of the baths, to which Seawell attributed the improvement of a chronic eye condition (Notman "Some Authors," "Talks"). Her summers in Europe, returning to Washington in October, became a regular event. These travels extended the material of her literary subjects which included the sea, England, France, and Central Europe. The household Seawell sustained with her mother and her younger sister Henrietta on P Street near Washington's fashionable Du Pont Circle was the location of an artists' salon of sorts. She entertained artists and writers there in addition to such notables of the time as the Earl of Carlisle and his daughter, Lady Dorothy Howard (Notman "Some Authors," "Talks"). After the death of her mother and later of Henrietta, Seawell temporarily withdrew from social life, despite an enormous capacity for friendship and interest in people. Seawell's health had been precarious for a number of years. She died of cancer in her home on November 15, 1916, only a few weeks after her 56th birthday. Her Roman Catholic Requiem Mass was held at the Church of St. Matthew (now the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle). Her body was interred in Baltimore's Greenmount Cemetery. Writings The death of her father when she was 20 (Notman "Talks" 392) prompted Molly Elliot Seawell, her mother and her younger sister, Henrietta, to move from "The Shelter" in Gloucester to Norfolk and later to Washington, D.C. It was either in Norfolk or in Washington that Seawell began her literary career in earnest. She first wrote using pseudonyms (including the patrician-sounding "Foxcroft Davis" – the novels Mrs. Darrell and The Whirl – and the Russian "Vera Sapoukhyn") until the publication of her short story Maid Marian in 1886, a tale she later dramatized for actress Rosina Vokes. Her first novel, Hale-Weston, published in 1889, was widely read and translated into German. These successes established her literary career; in her own words: That I succeeded was due to tireless effort, unbroken health, a number of fortunate circumstances, and above all, what I am neither afraid nor ashamed to say, the kindness of the good God. In the course of time, I became, through literature alone, a householder, a property-owner, a taxpayer, and the regular employer of five persons. (The Ladies' Battle 116) In 1890, Seawell received a prize for a short story. Five years later, she received a $3000 prize from the New York Herald for a story. Her literary production included forty books of fiction, collected short fiction, non-fiction, and numerous political columns from Washington for New York dailies and essays. Among her political essays was a 1910 article for The Atlantic Monthly opposing women's suffrage, in which she also spoke ill of the extension of the franchise to African Americans after the Civil War. For her short stories and historical works, she was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature by American professor Charles W. Kent in 1910 and 1911 Style Seawell's fiction might be distinguished into three genres: regional fiction, romances, and books for boys (primarily nautical stories). Their strong suit is Seawel.... Discover the Molly Elliot Seawell popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Molly Elliot Seawell books.

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  • Francezka synopsis, comments

    Francezka

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    Popular novel, first published in 1902. According to Wikipedia: "Molly Elliot Seawell (October 23, 1860, Gloucester, Virginia – November 15, 1916, Washington, D. C.) was an Americ...

  • The Rock of the Lion synopsis, comments

    The Rock of the Lion

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    The Rock of the Lion is not a history of the siege of Gibraltar, although the story of that immortal siege of 177983 has been closely studied and followed in preparing this book fo...

  • Children of Destiny. 1893 synopsis, comments

    Children of Destiny. 1893

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    hildren of Destiny is a historical novel by Molly Elliot Seawell, first published in 1893. It tells the story of three children who are orphaned during the French Revolution and wh...

  • Children of Destiny. 1893 synopsis, comments

    Children of Destiny. 1893

    M. Elliot Seawell

    CHAPTER I. The hot June sunshine poured down upon the great fields of yellow wheat at Deerchase, and the velvet wind swept softly over them, making long billows and shadowy di...

  • The Collected Works of Molly Elliot Seawell synopsis, comments

    The Collected Works of Molly Elliot Seawell

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    The Collected Works of Molly Elliot Seawell is a collection of classic novels by one of the greatest novelists in history. The included works of Molly Elliot Seawell are Francezka,...

  • The Last Duchess of Belgarde synopsis, comments

    The Last Duchess of Belgarde

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    CHAPTER I TRIMOUSETTE IN the great, green old garden of Madame, the Countess of Floramour, sat her granddaughter, little Mademoiselle Trimousette, wondering when she was to be marr...

  • The Lively Adventures of Gavin Hamilton. 1900 synopsis, comments

    The Lively Adventures of Gavin Hamilton. 1900

    M. Elliot Seawell

    THE LIVELY ADVENTURES OF GAVIN HAMILTONCHAPTER I In Silesia, the autumn of 1757 was one of frightful cold, of icy winds, of sunless days, and freezing nights. The land, made d...

  • Francezka. 2022 EDITION synopsis, comments

    Francezka. 2022 EDITION

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    CHAPTER IIN THE HEART OF PARIS I maintain that my master, Maurice, Count of Saxe, Marshalgeneral of France, Duke of Courland and Semigallia, Knight of the Most Noble Order of Merit...

  • The Rock of the Lion. 2022 EDITION synopsis, comments

    The Rock of the Lion. 2022 EDITION

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    CHAPTER I The sun, a great orb of glory, hung low in the west, lighting up the sea and sky with a blaze of splendor. Long lances of rosy flame shot across the blue Mediterranean, e...

  • Papa Bouchard. 1901 synopsis, comments

    Papa Bouchard. 1901

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    Papa Bouchard is a novel by Molly Elliot Seawell, first published in 1901. It tells the story of a FrenchCanadian fisherman named Papa Bouchard and his family. The novel is set in ...

  • Throckmorton, a Novel synopsis, comments

    Throckmorton, a Novel

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    Popular novel, first published in 1890. According to Wikipedia: "Molly Elliot Seawell (October 23, 1860, Gloucester, Virginia – November 15, 1916, Washington, D. C.) was an Americ...

  • Paul Jones. 2022 EDITION synopsis, comments

    Paul Jones. 2022 EDITION

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    INTRODUCTION. “The fame of the brave outlives him; his portion is immortality.” From the funeral discourse pronounced over Paul Jones. The writer feels the most sincere diffidence ...

  • The Fortunes of Fifi. 1903 synopsis, comments

    The Fortunes of Fifi. 1903

    M. Elliot Seawell

    CHAPTER I THE IMPERIAL THEATER Although it was not yet six o’clock, the November night had descended upon Parisespecially in those meaner quarters on the left bank of the Seine, wh...

  • A Strange, Sad Comedy. 1896 synopsis, comments

    A Strange, Sad Comedy. 1896

    M. Elliot Seawell

    A STRANGE, SAD COMEDYI NE sunny November day, in 1864, Colonel Archibald Corbin sat placidly reading “The Spectator” in the shabby old library at Corbin Hall, in Virginia. The Colo...

  • The House of Egremont. 1900 synopsis, comments

    The House of Egremont. 1900

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    he House of Egremont is a historical novel by Molly Elliot Seawell, first published in 1900. It tells the story of the Egremont family, a wealthy and powerful clan who live in a gr...

  • The Loves of the Lady Arabella. 1898 synopsis, comments

    The Loves of the Lady Arabella. 1898

    M. Elliot Seawell

    The Loves of the Lady ArabellaI ’Tis not in my nature to be cowed by any woman whatever. Therefore, when I found myself in the presence of my Lady Hawkshaw, in her Chinese drawingr...

  • The Secret of Toni. 2022 EDITION synopsis, comments

    The Secret of Toni. 2022 EDITION

    Molly Elliot Seawell

    THE SECRET OF TONICHAPTER I Toni’s name was Antoine Marcel, but he was never called by it but once in his life, and that was at his baptism, when he was eight days old. He had a sh...