الاستماع والقراءة

خطوة إلى عالم لا حدود له من القصص

  • اقرأ واستمع إلى ما تريده
  • أكثر من مليون عنوان
  • العناوين الحصرية + أصول القصة
  • 7 يوم تجربة مجانية، ثم 34.99 ريال يورو في الشهر
  • من السهل الإلغاء في أي وقت
جرب مجانا
image

The Sociable Companions: 'For Pleasure, Delight, Peace and Felicity live in method and temperance'

اللغة
اللغة الإنجليزية
Format
الفئة

الأدب الكلاسيكي

Margaret Lucas Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne was born in 1623 in Colchester, Essex into a family of comfortable means.

As the youngest of eight children she spent much time with her siblings. Margaret had no formal education but she did have access to scholarly libraries and tutors, although she later said the children paid little attention to the tutors, who were there ‘rather for formality than benefit’.

From an early age Margaret was already assembling her thoughts for future works despite the then conditions of society that women did not partake in public authorship. For England it was also a time of Civil War. The Royalists were being pushed back and Parliamentary forces were in the ascendancy.

Despite these obvious dangers, when Queen Henrietta Maria was in Oxford, Margaret asked her mother for permission to become one of her Ladies-in-waiting. She was accepted and, in 1644, accompanied the Queen into exile in France. This took her away from her family for the first time.

Despite living at the Court of the young King Louis XIV, life for the young Margaret was not what she expected. She was far from her home and her confidence had been replaced by shyness and difficulties fitting in to the grandeur of her surroundings and the eminence of her company.

Margaret told her mother she wanted to leave the Court. Her mother was adamant that she should stay and not disgrace herself by leaving. She provided additional funds for her to make life easier. Margaret remained. It was now also that she met and married William Cavendish who, at the time, was the Marquis of Newcastle (and later Duke). He was also 30 years her senior and previously married with two children.

As Royalists, a return to life in England was not yet possible. They would remain in exile in Paris, Rotterdam and Antwerp until the restoration of the crown in 1660 although Margaret was able to return for attention to some estate matters. The couple were devoted to each other. Margaret wrote that he was the only man she was ever in love with, loving him not for title, wealth or power, but for merit, justice, gratitude, duty, and fidelity. She also relied upon him for support in her career. The marriage provided no children despite efforts made by her physician to overcome her inability to conceive.

Margaret’s first book, ‘Poems and Fancies’, was published in 1653; it was a collection of poems, epistles and prose pieces which explores her philosophical, scientific and aesthetic ideas.

For a woman at this time writing and publishing were avenues they had great difficulty in pursuing. Added to this was Margaret’s range of subjects. She wrote across a number of issues including gender, power, manners, scientific method, and philosophy.

She always claimed she had too much time on her hands and was therefore able to indulge her love of writing. As a playwright she produced many works although most are as closet dramas. (This is a play not intended to be performed onstage, but instead read by a solitary reader or perhaps out loud in a small group. For Margaret the rigours of exile, her gender and Cromwell’s closing of the theatres mean this was her early vehicle of choice and, despite these handicaps, she became one of the most well-known playwrights in England)

Her utopian romance, ‘The Blazing World’, (1666) is one of the earliest examples of science fiction. Margaret also published extensively in natural philosophy and early modern science; at least a dozen books.

Margaret was always defended against any criticism by her husband and he also contributed to some of her works. She also gives him credit as her writing tutor.

Perhaps a little strangely she said her ambition despite her shyness, was to have everlasting fame. This she has very much accomplished.

Margaret Cavendish died on 15th December 1673 and was buried at Westminster Abbey.

© 2019 Stage Door (كتاب ): 9781787804302

تاريخ الإصدار

كتاب : ٢١ فبراير ٢٠١٩

الوسوم

    واستمتع آخرون أيضًا...

    1. The Lady Contemplation: Part II: 'Sweet-heart, you are a most Heavenly Creature'' Margaret Cavendish
    2. Shipping News Annie Proulx
    3. The Convent of Pleasure: 'For we are commanded to give to those that want'' Margaret Cavendish
    4. The Presence: 'Marriage is the grave or tomb of wit'' Margaret Cavendish
    5. The Fifth Gospel: A Novel Ian Caldwell
    6. Mile 81: Includes bonus story 'The Dune' Stephen King
    7. The Suppliant Maidens Aeschylus
    8. Rasputin: The Biography Douglas Smith
    9. Just After Sunset: Stories Stephen King
    10. Everything's Eventual: 14 Dark Tales Stephen King
    11. The Eumenides Aeschylus
    12. The Women of the Cousins' War: The Duchess, the Queen and the King's Mother Philippa Gregory
    13. Dissolution C.J. Sansom
    14. New York, New York, New York: Four Decades of Success, Excess, and Transformation Thomas Dyja
    15. The Horse You Came in On Martha Grimes
    16. The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism Doris Kearns Goodwin
    17. The First: How to Think About Hate Speech, Campus Speech, Religious Speech, Fake News, Post-Truth, and Donald Trump Stanley Fish
    18. The Open Society and Its Enemies: New One-Volume Edition Karl Popper
    19. The Secret Ingredients in Your Foods: What Big Food Companies Don't Want You to Know John Harpoon
    20. Alexander the Great Jacob Abbott
    21. The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914 Christopher Clark
    22. What Kind of Creatures Are We? Noam Chomsky
    23. How to Be Free: An Ancient Guide to the Stoic Life Epictetus
    24. Summary of Kitty Kelley's The Royals IRB Media
    25. The Moral Landscape: How Science Can Determine Human Values Sam Harris
    26. The Fourth Age: Smart Robots, Conscious Computers, and the Future of Humanity Byron Reese
    27. The Warren Buffett Stock Portfolio: Warren Buffett's Stock Picks: When and Why He Is Investing in Them Mary Buffett
    28. Prudes, Perverts, and Tyrants: Plato's Gorgias and the Politics of Shame Christina H. Tarnopolsky
    29. The Origins of Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt
    30. The Old Contemptibles Martha Grimes
    31. The Description of a New World, Called The Blazing-World: 'Columbus, then for Navigation fam'd, Found a new World, America 'tis nam'd'' Margaret Cavendish
    32. The Case Has Altered: A Richard Jury Mystery Martha Grimes
    33. The Wind Through the Keyhole: A Dark Tower Novel Stephen King
    34. The Tommyknockers Stephen King
    35. The Comedy Named the Several Wits: 'But a wild wit in every ditch doth flow, And with the mudde doth soul, and filthy grow'' Margaret Cavendish
    36. 7 Areas Without Laws: Exploring the World's Last Anarchic Zones John Harpoon

    دائمًا برفقة Storytel

    • أكثر من 200000 عنوان

    • وضع الأطفال (بيئة آمنة للأطفال)

    • تنزيل الكتب للوصول إليها دون الاتصال بالإنترنت

    • الإلغاء في أي وقت

    الكتب الأكثر استماعًا

    شهري

    قصص لكل المناسبات.

    34.99 ريال / شهر
    7 أيام مجانًا
    • حساب واحد

    • حساب بلا حدود

    • 1 حساب

    • استماع بلا حدود

    • إلغاء في أي وقت

    جرب الآن

    سنويا

    قصص لكل المناسبات.

    299 ريال /سنة
    7 أيام مجانًا
    وفر 29%
    • حساب واحد

    • حساب بلا حدود

    • 1 حساب

    • استماع بلا حدود

    • إلغاء في أي وقت

    جرب الآن

    6 أشهر

    قصص لكل المناسبات.

    192 ريال /6 أشهر
    7 أيام مجانًا
    وفر 9%
    • حساب واحد

    • حساب بلا حدود

    • 1 حساب

    • استماع بلا حدود

    • إلغاء في أي وقت

    جرب الآن