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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FAT-FLA |
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FERRIER, SUSAN EDMONSTONE (17821854) , Scottish novelist, born in Edinburgh on the 7th of September 1782, was the daughter of James Ferrier, for some years factor to the duke of Argyll, and at one time one of the clerks of the court of session with Sir Walter Scott. Her mother was a Miss Coutts, the beautiful daughter of a Forfarshire farmer. James Frederick Ferrier, noticed above, was Susan Ferrier's nephew. Miss Ferrier's first novel, Marriage
Marriage
work
Clark
work
with an inexhaustible fund of humour. It is true her books portray the eccentricities, the follies, and foibles of the society in which she lived, caricaturing with terrible exactness its hypocrisy, boastfulness, greed, affectation, and undue subservience to public opinion . Yet Miss Ferrier wrote less to reform than to amuse. In this she is less like Miss Edgeworth than Miss Austen. Miss Edgeworth was more of a moralist; her wit is not so involuntary, her caricatures not always so good-natured. But Miss Austen and Miss Ferrier were genuine humorists, and with Miss Ferrier especially a keen sense of the ludicrous was always dominant. Her humorous characters are always her best. It was no doubt because she felt this that in the last year of her life she regretted not having devoted her talents more exclusively to the service of religion. But if she was not a moralist, neither was she a cynic; and her wit, even where it is most caustic, is never uncharitable.Miss Ferrier's mother died in 1797, and from that date she kept house
House
spring had given way." He would pause, and gaze blankly and anxiously round him. " I noticed," says Lockhart, " the delicacy of Miss Ferrier on such occasions. Her sight was bad, and she took care not to use her glasses when he was speaking; and she affected to be also troubled with deafness, and would say, ` Well, I am getting as dull as a post; I have not heard a word since you said so-andso,'being sure to mention a circumstance behind that at which he had really halted. He then took up the thread with his habitual smile of courtesyas if forgetting his case entirely in the consideration of the lady's infirmity."Miss Ferrier died on the 5th of November 1854, at her brother's house in Edinburgh. She left among her papers a short unpublished article, entitled " Recollections of Visits to Ashestiel and Abbotsford." This is her own very interesting account of her long friendship with Sir Walter Scott, from the date of her first visit to him and Lady Scott at Ashestiel, where she went with her father in the autumn of 1811, to her last sad visit to Abbotsford in 1831. It contains some impromptu verses written by Scott in her album at Ashestiel. Miss Ferrier's letters to her sister, which contained much interesting biographical matter,'were destroyed at her particular request, but a volume of her correspondence with a memoir by her grand-nephew, John Ferrier, was published in 1898. End of Article: FERRIER, SUSAN EDMONSTONE (17821854) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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