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  1. Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt (1774–1843) was an English journalist and walker, and wife of the essayist William Hazlitt . Early life and relationships. She was born in 1774, the only daughter of John Stoddart, lieutenant in the Royal Navy. Her only sibling was John Stoddart, who later became Editor of The Times. [1]

  2. The Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt Project is a living website dedicated to sharing resources for the study and celebration of the life, writing, and travels of Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt.

  3. 18. Jan. 2013 · Read this article. This paper is concerned with Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt and her text, Journal of My Trip to Scotland, written in 1822 and first published by Le Gallienne in 1893. The journal was written during a three-month trip to Scotland and Ireland as Sarah awaited the progress of divorce proceedings from her husband, the essayist ...

    • Gillian Beattie-Smith
    • 2013
  4. 21. Feb. 2023 · The Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt Project is a living website dedicated to sharing resources for the study and celebration of the life, writing, and travels of Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt.

  5. Hazlitt, a Life: From Winterslow to Frith Street. By STANLEY JONES. Pp. xx+398. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989. £35 net. The most distinctive feature of Dr Jones's biography of Hazlitt is his decision to begin, not at the beginning in 1778, but with Hazlitt's marriage at the age of thirty to Sarah Stoddart in 1808. With almost any other writer ...

  6. In order to do this I discuss the writing of three Romantic-era women walkers—guidebook writer Sarah Murray, journalist Dorothy Wordsworth, and diarist Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt. I will conclude the essay by assessing what the inclusion of these women’s accounts does to our construction of Romanticism as the foundational literature of walking ...

  7. 21. Juni 2022 · Abstract. An essay in which Warner speculates on the character and circumstances of William Hazlitts wife Sarah (née Stoddart) during the stay in Scotland from April to June 1822 which was necessary for their divorce to be concluded. Warner draws on Sarahs Journal of her travels in Scotland.