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Ellen Sturgis Hooper

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Occupation
  
Poet

Parents
  
William F. Sturgis

Role
  
Poet


Name
  
Ellen Hooper

Children
  
Marian Hooper Adams

Born
  
Ellen Sturgis February 17, 1812 Boston, Massachusetts, USA (
1812-02-17
)

Died
  
November 3, 1848, Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Similar People
  
Marian Hooper Adams, Henry Adams, Charles Francis Adams - Sr

Literary movement
  
Transcendentalism

Duty (Ellen Sturgis Hooper Poem)


Ellen Sturgis Hooper (February 17, 1812 – November 3, 1848) was an American poet. A member of the Transcendental Club, she was widely regarded as one of the most gifted poets among the New England Transcendentalists. Her work is occasionally reprinted in anthologies.

Contents

She was, besides, an acquaintance of William Ellery Channing, Margaret Fuller, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry James, Sr.

Biography

Ellen Sturgis was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the daughter of William F. Sturgis and Elizabeth M. Davis. Her father was a wealthy Boston merchant. Her mother was an intelligent and independent woman who spent much time away from her husband, inspiring in her daughter the idea to seek self-fulfillment.

In 1837, she married physician Robert William Hooper, though her friends said they were not a good match because he was intellectually inferior. Margaret Fuller, for example, said the match was like "perfume... wasted on the desert wind". The couple had three children, one of whom, Marian "Clover" Hooper, married Henry Adams and became a celebrated Washington, D.C., hostess and photographer.

Her poetry was regularly commissioned by Ralph Waldo Emerson and published in The Dial. Her poems also appeared in Elizabeth Peabody's Æsthetic Papers (1849), and the final stanzas of one of her poems, The Wood-Fire, appear in Henry David Thoreau's Walden (1854).

Ellen Sturgis Hooper died of tuberculosis at age 36. Her early death is said to have "enshrined her in the memories of her associates as a Transcendental angel."

References

Ellen Sturgis Hooper Wikipedia