Anne Bannerman (31 October 1765 – 29 September 1829) was a Scottish poet. She was part of the Edinburgh literary circle which included John Leyden, Jessie Stewart, Thomas Campbell, and Robert Anderson. Her work was popular in her lifetime[1] and "remains significant for her Gothic ballads, as well as for her innovative sonnet series and her bold original odes."[2]

Anne Bannerman
Title page, Anon. [Anne Bannerman], Tales of Superstition and Chivalry (Vernor and Hood, 1802)
Title page, Anon. [Anne Bannerman], Tales of Superstition and Chivalry (Vernor and Hood, 1802)
Born31 October 1765
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died29 September 1829
Portobello, Edinburgh
Pen nameAugusta
OccupationPoet
PeriodRomantic
RelativesIsobel (née Dick) Bannerman (mother); William Bannerman (father)

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Early life

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Bannerman was born in Edinburgh to Isobel (née Dick) and William Bannerman, a "running stationer" licensed to sell ballads in the streets.

Career

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Bannerman's early work was published, often pseudonymously, in periodicals, notably the Monthly Magazine, the Poetical Register, and the Edinburgh Magazine, the latter of which was edited by her friend and supporter, Dr Robert Anderson. She was read and admired by Thomas Park, James Currie, Bishop Thomas Percy, Anne Grant, and antiquary Joseph Cooper Walker. Her first volume, Poems (1800), was well regarded but did not sell well. It contains a series of odes, original sonnets, a sonnet series translated from Petrarch, and another based on The Sorrows of Werther. In these two latter Bannerman developed Joanna Baillie's theory of dramatic composition — her stated intent to focus on the progress of one master passion — and applied it to poetry. Her second collection, Tales of Superstition and Chivalry (1802) was published anonymously. It consisted of ten Gothic ballads and four engravings and did not fare so well with reviewers, in part because of her penchant for the strain of obscurity and ambiguity within the Gothic tradition.[3] Her ballads were, however, praised by Walter Scott.[4]

After the deaths of her mother and brother, she struggled financially and was a governess for a period despite precarious health. Although various of her friends supported her and sought to procure her a pension, such attempts were largely unsuccessful and she died in debt on 29 September 1829.

Contemporary scholars are rediscovering her work and she is the subject of several recent studies.

Works

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  • Poems by Anne Bannerman (Edinburgh: Mundel / London:Longman, 1800), including "The Mermaid," "The Genii," "The Nun," and "Ode: the Spirit of the Air"
  • "Epistle from the Marquis de Lafayette to General Washington" (attrib.; 1800)
  • Tales of Superstition and Chivalry (pub. anon.; London: Ann Vernor and Thomas Hood, 1802) (Etext, British Women Romantic Poets Project).
  • Poems, by Anne Bannerman. A New Edition (pub. by subscription; 1807), including "To Miss Baillie"
  • "On the loss of a child in infancy." The Casket, a Miscellany, Consisting of Unpublished Poems. (London: John Murray, 1829, pp. 349–350).
  • "The Exile." The Laurel. Fugitive Poetry of the XIXth Century. (London: John Sharpe, 1830, pp. 290–291).

Notes

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  1. ^ "Anne Bannerman." Orlando: Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present. Accessed 8 Aug. 2022. (Orlando)
  2. ^ Adriana Craciun, "Bannerman, Anne (1765–1829)," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: OUP, 2004).
  3. ^ Adriana Craciun, Fatal Women of Romanticism (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2003), 156.
  4. ^ Walter Scott, "Essay on imitations of the ancient ballad," Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1830). Rev. and ed. T.F. Henderson. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd, 1932. Vol. 4.16–17.

Bibliography

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Etexts

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See also

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