Mary Collyer
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Mary Collyer, née Mitchell (c. 1716 – 1762) was an English translator and novelist.
Nothing is known of Mary's early life. She married Joseph Collyer the elder (1714/15–1776), a writer and bookseller; their son, Joseph Collyer the younger, was an engraver, and illustrated one edition of his mother's translation Death of Abel.
[edit] Works
- The Virtuous Orphan (1743), a translation of La vie de Marianne by Marivaux
- Memoirs of the Countess de Bressol … from the French (2 vols., 1743)
- Felicia to Charlotte: being letters from a young lady in the country, to her friend in town. Containing a series of most interesting Events, interspersed with Moral Reflections; chiefly tending to prove, that the Seeds of Virtue are implanted in the Mind of Every Reasonable Being. (1744–9, in 2 vols). Collyer's own novel
- The Christmas Box (1748–9)
- Death of Abel (1761), a translation of Solomon Gessner's Der Tod Abels (1758)
- The Messiah (2 vols., 1763), a translation of Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock's Der Messias. Completed and published by Collyyer's husband.
[edit] Further reading
- Katherine Sobba Green, The Courtship Novel, 1740-1820: A Feminized Genre. 1991.
[edit] External links
- Joyce Fullard, ‘Collyer , Mary (1716/17–1762)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 13 Nov 2006