Williams, Helen Maria, was born in the
North of England in 1762. She published
a volume of poems when only twenty-one
years old, and in 1786 her Poems appeared
in two small volumes. She visited Paris in
1788, and lived there for some years with
a sister who had married a French Protestant.
This was during the period of the
Revolution and the Reign of Terror. She
was an outspoken republican in her sympathies,
448
and was imprisoned by Robespierre
because of some of her utterances
in advocacy of the Girondist cause, being
released from prison only after his death,
in 1794. Her Letters from France (1790
and 1795) were published in England,
America, and France. They dealt with political,
religious, and literary questions,
and showed her to be a woman of more
than ordinary intellectual strength. She
published many volumes between 1786 and
1823, when her last volume appeared, titled
Poems on Various Occasions, being a
collection of all her previously published
poems. She lived partly in England, but
mostly in France, though the closing years
of her life were spent in Holland in the
home of a nephew who lived at Amsterdam
and was pastor of the reformed
Church there. Her death occurred at Paris
December 14, 1827.
| While thee I seek, protecting Power |
517 |
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