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Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton

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Name
  
Sarah Apthorp


Role
  
Poet

Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
May 14, 1846, Quincy, Massachusetts, United States

Spouse
  
Perez Morton (m. 1778–1837)

Books
  
The Power of Sympathy, Ouabi; Or the Virtues of Nature: An Indian Tale in Four Cantos

People also search for
  
Perez Morton, William Hill Brown, Hannah Webster Foster

Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton (1759 – May 14, 1846) was an American poet.

Contents

Biography

She was born in Boston to a successful merchant family (descended from Charles Apthorp) on her father's side and John Wentworth (Lieutenant-Governor) on her mother's side. In 1781, she was married to Boston lawyer Perez Morton at Trinity Church, Boston, and the couple lived on a family mansion on State Street. The marriage began to deteriorate by 1788, however, when an affair between Perez and Sarah's sister Frances (Fanny) became public. The family backlash led to Frances' suicide. The couple were later reconciled, but Sarah lost three of the five children she carried.

In 1796, the couple moved to Dorchester. From an early age, Sarah had begun writing poetry, but until 1788 her works had only circulated among her friends. She began publishing under the pen name Philenia, and her first book was printed in 1790. Her work was widely acclaimed, with Robert Treat Paine, Jr., in the Massachusetts Magazine dubbing her the "American Sappho". In 1792, she wrote an anti-slavery poem entitled "The African Chief", which was, in fact, an elegy on a slain African at St. Domingo in 1791.

At one time she was thought to be the author of The Power of Sympathy (1789), but that has since been attributed to William Hill Brown.

Her Dorchester home is a site on the Boston Women's Heritage Trail.

Selected works

  • Ouabi; Or the Virtues of Nature: An Indian Tale in Four Cantos 1790
  • The African Chief, 1792.
  • Beacon Hill. A Local Poem, 1797.
  • The Virtues of Society. A Tale Founded on Fact, 1799.
  • My Mind and Its Thoughts, in Sketches, Fragments, and Essays, 1823.
  • References

    Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton Wikipedia