Everything about Sarah Fielding totally explained
Sarah Fielding (
November 8,
1710 –
1768) was a
British author and sister of the novelist
Henry Fielding. She was the author of
The Governess, or The Little Female Academy (1749), which was the first novel in English written especially for children (
children's literature), and had earlier achieved success with her novel
The Adventures of David Simple (1744).
Childhood
Sarah Fielding was born in
East Stour,
Dorset, and was the fourth of seven children of Edmund Feilding and Sarah Gould. Sarah's older siblings were Catharine,
Henry and Ursula, and her younger siblings were Anne, Beatrice, and Edmund. Sarah's father, Edmund Feilding, the third son of John Feilding, was a military officer and relative of the
Earls of Denbigh (his father, John, was the youngest son of the 3rd Earl). Although Edmund spelled his last name "Feilding" as often as "Fielding," both Henry and Sarah spelled the name "Fielding." When asked by an Earl of Denbigh why, Henry Fielding's son said, "I can't tell, my Lord, except it be that my branch of the family were the first that knew how to spell" (Battestin 7-8). Sarah's mother, Sarah Gould, was the daughter of Sir Henry Gould, a judge on the King's Bench who had been reappointed to the
Queen's Bench, and Sarah Davidge Gould. This descent is important for understanding the early life and education of Edmund Feilding's children.
Edmund left the care of his children to his wife's mother, Sarah Davidge Gould, while he built his career in London. The children grew up in her home in
Glastonbury and their paternal grandfather's house in
East Stour (John Feilding being a
latitudinarian Cambridge-educated parish priest with three livings and whom had been considered for a bishopric in
Ireland) (Battestin 10). Henry was sent to
Eton, but all of the daughters were sent to Mary Rookes's boarding school in
Salisbury.
When Edmund's first wife (Sarah's mother) died in 1718, Edmund married Anne Rapha, a
Roman Catholic widow, who brought with her several children, and later bore Edmund a son and half-brother for Henry and Sarah, the future reformer
John Fielding. Sarah Davidge Gould and Sir Henry Gould (Sarah's maternal grandparents) had fallen out with Edmund prior to children's mother's death, and Lady Gould was extremely displeased with Edmund's second marriage, and Anne Rapha Fielding was the subject of much anti-Catholic sentiment from the elder generation of the family. Lady Gould was so set against Anne and her enlargement to the family that in
1721, she sued for custody of the children and ownership of the family house in East Stour. She eventually won, leaving the children unable to see their father for years.
Writing career
In the 1740s, Sarah Fielding moved to
London, sometimes living with her sisters and sometimes with her brother Henry and his family. The women of the family lacked sufficient money for a
dowry, and consequently none married. Even when Lady Gould died in
1733, there was little money for the children.
Sarah turned to writing to make a living. While she lived with her brother and acted as his housekeeper, she began to write. In
1742,
Henry Fielding published
Joseph Andrews, and Sarah is often credited with having written the letter from Horatio to Leonora (two of the characters in the book). In
1743, Fielding published his
Miscellanies (containing his life of
Jonathan Wild), and Sarah may have written its narrative of the life of
Anne Boleyn.
In
1744, Sarah published a novel,
The Adventures of David Simple. As was the habit, it was published anonymously. The novel was quite successful and gathered praise from contemporaries, including the publisher and novelist
Samuel Richardson. Richardson, who was himself the target of Henry Fielding's satire, said that he thought Sarah and Henry were possessed of equal gifts of writing.
David Simple went into a second edition within ten weeks, and was translated into French and German. The title pages to Sarah Fielding's novels often carried the advertisement that they were written by "the author of David Simple". The novel was sufficiently popular that Sarah wrote
Familiar Letters between the Principal Characters in David Simple as an
epistolary furtherance to the novel in
1747. In
1753, she wrote a sequel to
David Simple entitled
David Simple: Volume the Last.
David Simple was one of the earliest
sentimental novels, featuring a wayfaring hero in search of true friendship who triumphs by good nature and moral strength. He finds happiness in marriage and a rural, bucolic life, away from the corruptions of the city. David Simple is an analog, in a sense, to the figure of Heartsfree, in Henry Fielding's
Jonathan Wild and Squire Allworthy in his
Tom Jones. However, he also shares characteristics with other sentimental figures who find their peace only with escape from corruption and the harmony of a new
Utopia. In her
Volume the Last, however, Sarah's fiction, like Henry's, is darker and shows less of a faith in the triumph of goodness in the face of a corrosive, immoral world.
Fielding also wrote three other novels with original stories. The most significant of these was
The Governess, or The Little Female Academy in
1749, which is the first novel in English written especially for children (
children's literature). In addition, she wrote
The History of the Countess of Delwyn in
1759, and
The History of Ophelia in
1760.
As a critic, Sarah Fielding wrote
Remarks on Clarissa in
1749, concerning the novel
Clarissa by Samuel Richardson. As a biographer, she wrote
The Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia in
1757, a history, written from Greek and Roman sources, on the lives of
Cleopatra and
Octavia, two famous women from Roman times. As a translator she produced
Xenophon's Memoirs of Socrates, with the Defense of Socrates Before His Judges in
1762, a work by the Ancient Greek writer and soldier
Xenophon concerning the philosopher
Socrates.
Final Years
Sarah's sisters died between
1750 and
1751, and Henry died in
1754. Sarah retired from London and moved to a small house just outside
Bath. The famous philanthropist
Ralph Allen and the similarly famous
Elizabeth Montagu (a member of the
Blue Stockings Society) gave her some financial aid. In around 1767, the novelist
Sarah Scott, sister of Elizabeth Montagu, invited Sarah Fielding to come and live with her in a female utopian community, an attempt to create the utopia described in
Millenium Hall, but Sarah declined the invitation. Sarah Fielding died in 1768. There is a memorial plaque to her on the west porch of
Bath Abbey.
List of works
- 1744 - The Adventures of David Simple
- 1747 - Familiar Letters between the Principal Characters in David Simple
- 1749 - The Governess, or The Little Female Academy
- 1749 - Remarks on Clarissa
- 1753 - David Simple: Volume the Last
- 1754 - The Cry: A New Dramatic Fable (probably with Jane Collier)
- 1757 - The Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia
- 1759 - The History of the Countess of Dellwyn
- 1761 - The History of Ophelia
- 1762 - Xenophon's Memoirs of Socrates, with the Defense of Socrates Before His Judges
Further Information
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