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Literary scholar Mary Cowden Clarke (1809-98), daughter of the music publisher Vincent Novello, had a lifelong love of Shakespeare. Her magnum opus, which took twelve years to prepare, was first published in book form in 1845 and remained a standard work on Shakespearean vocabulary for half a century.
Mary Cowden Clarke (1809-1898) was the daughter of the music publisher Vincent Novello. Charles and Mary Lamb were family friends, and under the inspiration of their Tales from Shakespeare, Mary became a noted Shakespeare scholar, her major work being the Concordance to Shakespeare, which took twelve years to compile, and was to remain a standard work for half a century. From 1856 Clarke and her husband Charles lived in Italy, continuing to publish essays and books, including their joint Cassell's Illustrated Shakespeare. This autobiography, published in 1896, contains many anecdotes and memories of the literary and musical circles in which Mary moved throughout her life: the Lambs, John Keats, the Shelleys, Dickens, Leigh Hunt and Mendelssohn all appear. The book is written in a vivid and engaging style, and records a fascinating nineteenth century life. For more information on this author, see http://orlando.cambridge.org/public/svPeople?person_id=clarmc
Mary Cowden Clarke (1809-98) was a noted Shakespearian scholar, who published in 1850 a series of imaginative accounts of the girlhood of some of his heroines. Her motive was to provide a 'prequel' which showed the development of the heroine's character through the events of her formative years.
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