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Mary Masters (1694?-1759?) was an English poet and letter-writer of the 18th century, who has gained some historic attention because of her association with Samuel Johnson. Contemporary evaluations stress her contribution to the evolving model of women in society, both by her publishing her work, and by the themes and opinions in that work. ==Biography== Mary Masters, thought to have been born in 1694 in Otley, West Yorkshire was — by her own insistence – a self-taught poet of humble birth: the preface to her first collection reads: The Author of the following Poems never read a Treatise of Rhetorick, or an Art of Poetry, nor was ever taught her English Grammar. Her Education rose no higher than the Spelling-Book, or the Writing-Master: her Genius to Poetry was always brow-beat and discountenanced by her Parents, and till her Merit got the better of her Fortune, she was shut out from all Commerce with the more knowing and polite Part of the World. Despite this, she seems to have been known to many of the literati of the day, whose names are listed as subscribers to her two collections. James Boswell records that Dr. Johnson, whom she occasionally visited, revised her volumes and "illuminated them here and there with a ray of his own genius"; that association on its own, and the entry on Boswell's ''Life'' appear to have given Masters' name (if not her life and work) some historical currency. She is also associated with editor of the ''Gentleman's Magazine'', Edward Cave, and whose house was one of a number in which she resided when visiting London. In her ''Familiar Letters and Poems upon several Occasions'' (London, 1755) there are three "Short Ejaculations", the first of which, the well-known '' She is noted as a letter-writer, and in her epistles expresses proto-feminist views. She is supposed to have died about 1759. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mary Masters」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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