Mary Louisa Molesworth, née Stewart (29 May 1839 – 20 January 1921) was an English writer of children's stories who wrote for children under the name of Mrs Molesworth. Her first novels, for adult readers, Lover and Husband (1869) to Cicely (1874), appeared under the pseudonym of Ennis Graham. Her name occasionally appears in print as M. L. S. Molesworth.
Life
Molesworth was born in Rotterdam, a daughter of Charles Augustus Stewart (1809–1873), who later became a rich merchant in Manchester, and his wife Agnes Janet Wilson (1810–1883). Mary had three brothers and two sisters. She was educated in Great Britain and Switzerland, and much of her girlhood was spent in Manchester. In 1861 she married Major R. Molesworth, nephew of Viscount Molesworth; they legally separated in 1879. She lived for an early part of her marriage in Tabley Grange, outside Knutsford in Cheshire, rented from George, 2nd Lord de Tabley.
Molesworth is best known as a writer of books for children, such as Tell Me a Story (1875), Carrots (1876), The Cuckoo Clock (1877), The Tapestry Room (1879), and A Christmas Child (1880). She has been called "the Jane Austen of the nursery," while The Carved Lions (1895) "is probably her masterpiece." In the judgement of Roger Lancelyn Green:
Typical of the time, her young characters often use a lisping style, and words may be misspelt to represent children's speech—"jography" for geography, for instance.
She also took an interest in supernatural fiction. In 1888, she published a collection of supernatural tales under the title Four Ghost Stories, and in 1896 a similar collection of six stories under the title Uncanny Tales. In addition to those, her volume Studies and Stories includes a ghost story entitled "Old Gervais" and her Summer Stories for Boys and Girls includes "Not exactly a ghost story."
A new edition of The Cuckoo Clock was published in 1914.
She died in 1921 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.
References in other works
- Siegfried Sassoon mentions, in his 1928 autobiographical novel Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, Molesworth's The Palace in the Garden and Four Winds Farm as being 'almost' his favourite books.
- Agatha Christie mentions The Tapestry Room and Four Winds Farm in her novel Postern of Fate, as childhood favourites of her detectives Tommy and Tuppence.
- In The Whirling Shapes by Joan North, Two Little Waifs by Mrs. Molesworth is mentioned as a book (Great-)Aunt Hilda was given by her father on her eighth birthday.
Works
- Jack, Dick and Bob: The Three Jackdaws from Hurstmonceaux, as by E.G. (1865?) – 1875,
- Lover and Husband: A Novel, as by Ennis Graham (1870)
- Not Without Thorns, as Graham (1873)
- Cicely: A Story of Three Years, as Graham (1874)
- Tell Me a Story, as Graham (1875) – collection
- "Carrots": Just a Little Boy, as Graham (1876)
- The Cuckoo Clock, as Graham, illustrated by Walter Crane (1877)
- "Grandmother Dear": A Book for Boys and Girls, illus. Crane (1878)
- The Tapestry Room: A Child's Romance, illus. Crane (1879)
- Edmeé: a tale of the French revolution (1916)
- Stories by Mrs. Molesworth (compiled by Sidney Baldwin, 1922)
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- Five Minutes' Stories (not dated—1888?)
- Great-Uncle Hoot-Toot (not dated—1889?)
- The Thirteen Little Black Pigs, and Other Stories (not dated—1893?)
- Blanche: A Story for Girls (not dated—1893?)
- The Grim House (1899)
- The House That Grew (1900)
- Jasper (1906)
- The Laurel Walk (1898)
- Lettice (1884)
- The Little Old Portrait: Later: Edmee, A Tale of the French Revolution (1884)
- Mary (1893)
- Nurse Heatherdale's Story (1891)
- The Old Pincushion; or, Aunt Clotilda's Guests (1889)
- Silverthorns (1887)
- Sweet Content (1891)
- That Girl in Black (1889)
- The Third Miss St Quentin (1888)
- White Turrets (1895)
- The Bolted Door: and other stories (1906) illustrated by Lewis Baumer
Anthologies as contributor
- A Christmas Fairy and Other Stories (1878) – John Strange Winter, Mrs. Molesworth, and Frances E. Crompton
- Jack Frost's Little Prisoners: A Collection of Stories for Children from Four to Twelve Years of Age (1887) – other contributors Stella Austin, S. Baring-Gould, Caroline Birley, Edward Hugessen Knatchbull-Hugessen Brabourne, Mrs. Massey, Anne Thackeray Ritchie, E. M. Wilmot-Buxton, and Charlotte M. Yonge)
- A Budget of Christmas Tales, by Charles Dickens and Others (circa 1895) – other contributors Charles Dickens, Margaret Elizabeth Munson Sangster, Mrs. W. H. Corning, Irving Bacheller, Julia Schayer, Hezekiah Butterworth, Cornelia Redmond, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, C. H. Mead, Herbert W. Collingwood, and Juliana Horatia Ewing)
References
Further reading
- Cooper, Jane (2002) Mrs. Molesworth: a biography. Crowborough: Pratts Folly Press
- Marghanita Laski, (1950) Mrs Ewing, Mrs Molesworth and Mrs Hodgson Burnett. Folcroft Library Editions (1976)
External links
- "Griselda's Big Adventures" by Jacqueline Wilson, review of Mrs Molesworth and The Cuckoo Clock (2002)
- "'The Victorian Auntly Narrative Voice and Mrs. Molesworth's Cuckoo Clock" by Sanjay Sircar (1989)
- "The Ghost Stories of Mrs. Molesworth: an unorthodox view" by Mario Guslandi (2003)
- List of works at LibraryThing
