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Susanna Blamire (12 January 1747 – 1794) was an English Romantic poet, sometimes known as 'The Muse of Cumberland' because many of her poems represent rural life in the county and, therefore, provide a valuable contradistinction to those amongst the poems of William Wordsworth that regard the same subject, in addition to those of the other Lake Poets, especially those of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and in addition to those of Lord Byron, on whose The Prisoner of Chillon her works may have had an influence. Blamire composed much of her poetry outside, sat beside a stream in her garden at Thackwood. She also played the guitar and the flageolet, both of which she used in the process of the composition of her poetry.

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  • Susanna Blamire (12 January 1747 – 1794) was an English Romantic poet, sometimes known as 'The Muse of Cumberland' because many of her poems represent rural life in the county and, therefore, provide a valuable contradistinction to those amongst the poems of William Wordsworth that regard the same subject, in addition to those of the other Lake Poets, especially those of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and in addition to those of Lord Byron, on whose The Prisoner of Chillon her works may have had an influence. Blamire composed much of her poetry outside, sat beside a stream in her garden at Thackwood. She also played the guitar and the flageolet, both of which she used in the process of the composition of her poetry. Blamire has been described as 'unquestionably the greatest female poet of [the Romantic] age' and, by Jonathan Wordsworth, a great-nephew of William Wordsworth, 'as important as the other Romantic poets writing during the eighteenth century'. Blamire's song 'And Ye shall walk in silk attire', referenced by Charles Dickens in The Old Curiosity Shop is well known. Her magnum opus is Stoklewath, or The Cumbrian Village. (en)
  • Susanna Blamire ( (Thursby), 12 januari 1747 – Carlisle, 5 april 1794) was een Britse dichteres uit het Lake District. Zij schreef gedichten en liederen in het Engels, Schots en het dialect van Cumbria, die tijdens haar leven veelal anoniem in literaire tijdschriften werden gepubliceerd en een aanzienlijke populariteit genoten. Bijna vijftig jaar na haar dood werd haar werk voor het eerst in een boek gebundeld. Blamire werd bijwijlen de Muze van Cumberland genoemd; door de beperkte schaal waarop het circuleerde, werd haar oeuvre nooit zo befaamd als dat van William Wordsworth, maar negentiende-eeuwse literatuurcritici waren van oordeel dat haar gedichten zeker een bredere bekendheid verdienden. (nl)
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  • 1747-01-12 (xsd:date)
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  • 1747-01-12 (xsd:date)
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  • Susanna Blamire (en)
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  • 'Stoklewath, or The Cumbrian Village'; 'And ye shall walk in silk attire' (en)
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  • Poet (en)
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  • Susanna Blamire ( (Thursby), 12 januari 1747 – Carlisle, 5 april 1794) was een Britse dichteres uit het Lake District. Zij schreef gedichten en liederen in het Engels, Schots en het dialect van Cumbria, die tijdens haar leven veelal anoniem in literaire tijdschriften werden gepubliceerd en een aanzienlijke populariteit genoten. Bijna vijftig jaar na haar dood werd haar werk voor het eerst in een boek gebundeld. Blamire werd bijwijlen de Muze van Cumberland genoemd; door de beperkte schaal waarop het circuleerde, werd haar oeuvre nooit zo befaamd als dat van William Wordsworth, maar negentiende-eeuwse literatuurcritici waren van oordeel dat haar gedichten zeker een bredere bekendheid verdienden. (nl)
  • Susanna Blamire (12 January 1747 – 1794) was an English Romantic poet, sometimes known as 'The Muse of Cumberland' because many of her poems represent rural life in the county and, therefore, provide a valuable contradistinction to those amongst the poems of William Wordsworth that regard the same subject, in addition to those of the other Lake Poets, especially those of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and in addition to those of Lord Byron, on whose The Prisoner of Chillon her works may have had an influence. Blamire composed much of her poetry outside, sat beside a stream in her garden at Thackwood. She also played the guitar and the flageolet, both of which she used in the process of the composition of her poetry. (en)
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  • Susanna Blamire (nl)
  • Susanna Blamire (en)
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  • Susanna Blamire (en)
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