Mary Masters

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Standard Name: Masters, Mary
Birth Name: Mary Masters
Pseudonym: Maria
MM was a self-taught poet, probably born at the end of the seventeenth century, who wrote from inclination and published because she needed the money. Her feminist opinions (expressed mainly in letters) are those current in Queen Anne 's reign, though not published till a generation later. She has historically attracted attention almost exclusively because she enjoyed the friendship and patronage of Samuel Johnson .

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Publishing Mary Barber
He concluded, let Mrs Howard know that I recommend you to the Queen ,
Stewart, Wendy. “The Poetical Trade of Favours: Swift, Mary Barber, and the Counterfeit Letters”. Lumen, Vol.
xviii
, pp. 155-74.
170
though he declined to supply a direct introduction to a potential royal patron. Two months later Gay wrote to Swift...
Friends, Associates Elizabeth Carter
EC associated on terms of warmth and equality with men of letters or culture such as Samuel Johnson , Samuel Richardson , Thomas Birch , Moses Browne , Richard Savage , William and John Duncombe
Textual Production Anne Finch
One passage from a long Pindaric ode entitled All is Vanity (present in Finch's early octavo ms and in her printed collection) has broken loose and achieved a life of its own. Whereas the entire...
Friends, Associates Samuel Johnson
Johnson had a talent for friendship which he kept well exercised: the names mentioned here represent only a selection of his friendships. His early London friends, whom he met during a comparatively poorly documented period...
Family and Intimate relationships Mary Savage
A cousin of MS , a niece of her father who became by marriage Goodeth Pegge, was at one point landlady to the poet Mary Masters .
Ashfield, Andrew. Emails to Isobel Grundy about Mary Savage.

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

Masters, Mary. Familiar Letters and Poems on Several Occasions. D. Henry and R. Cave, 1755.
Masters, Mary. Poems on Several Occasions. T. Browne, 1733.