Elizabeth Cobbold
Elizabeth Cobbold | |
---|---|
![]() Portrait attributed to George Frost | |
Born |
Elizabeth Knipe 1765 London |
Died | 1824 |
Occupation | writer and poet |
Elizabeth Cobbold or Carolina Petty Pasty born Elizabeth Knipe (1765–1824) was a British writer and poet.
Life
Cobbold was born Elizabeth Knipe in London in 1765[1] and baptised in the now lost church of St Olave Silver Street before living in Manchester.[2] Her first marriage was to William Clarke who worked for the customs at Ipswich. William was older than her and disabled and he died after less than a year. By this time she had published her first novel The Sword, or Father Bertrand's History of his own Times[1] which was influenced by her friend Clara Reeve.[2] The following year after becoming a widow she married the Ipswich brewer John Cobbold and she became the stepmother of fifteen children as well as, in time, giving birth to an additional seven.[1] In 1814 they moved to a house at Holywells Park in Ipswich from their previous house, The Cliff.
Despite this number of children she published under the pseudonym of Carolina Petty Pasty a poetical piece which included a portrait which was her work too. In 1803 she served as editor to a volume of poems by Ann Candler. She continued to do charitable work and in 1812 she started a clothing society for small children and in 1820 a charitable bazaar.[1]
From 1806 Cobbold was known for Valentine Day cards which had verses written by herself and she published these in 1813 and 1814.[1] The verses were attached to cleverly cut paper and it has been said that the skill of the cutting exceeded the quality of the poetry.
Works and legacy
![](../I/m/Acila_cobboldiae.jpg)
There are extant oil paintings of Elizabeth and her husband John which are attributed to George Frost.[3] Her son Richard Cobbold was also a noted writer.[2] A rare species of shellfish, Acila cobboldiae was named for her by George Sowerby.[1]
- Poems on various subjects. 1783.
- Six narrative poems 1787.
- The sword; or, Father Bertrand's history of his own times[1] 1791.
- The mince pie, an heroic epistle 1800.
- Cliff valentines. 1813, 1814
- An ode on the victory of Waterloo 1815.
- Monody to the memory of Mrs. Byles 1818.
- Poems, with a memoir of the author [ed. Laetitia Jermyn]. 1825.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Cobbold, Elizabeth (DNB00). Wikisource.
- 1 2 3 Elizabeth Cobbold, Spenserians, retrieved 15 January 2015
- ↑ Paintings by George Frost at the Art UK site