Agnes Grozier Herbertson (c. 1875 – 1958) was a Norwegian writer and poet who later lived in Cornwall, United Kingdom.
Herbertson was born in Oslo circa 1875 to a Scots family and privately educated. She grew up in Glasgow, and later moved to Oxford[1] and then Cornwall, where she lived with her sister Jessie Leckie Herbertson.[2]
Henderson began publishing shortly after her teens, writing several fairy tales for The People's Friend circa 1895.[1] Later works included short stories for periodicals including The Windsor Magazine, Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, and Little Folks Magazine, where her stories included "romantic fairy tale" "The Hop-About Man."[3] Henderson's novels include The Plowers (1906), about a woman whose scientist husband conducts inhuman experiments, and The Ship That Came Home in the Dark, about a woman who tries to take the place of a blind man's wife.[2] In a 1919 book of poems, The Quiet Heart, Henderson addresses topics including World War I; her poem "Disabled" is narrated by a wounded soldier who seeks comfort in nature.[4] Another poem, "The Seed-Merchant's Son" centers on a father whose son died in war.[5]
Herbertson died in 1958.[citation needed]
Partial bibliography
edit- A Book without a Man! (1897)
- The Spindle Tree (1900)
- The Pilgrim's Progress (1900)
- The Bee-Blowaways (1900)
- The Plowers: A Novel (1906)
- Heroic Legends (1907)
- How Wry-Face Played a Trick on One-Eye (1908)
- Gulliver's Travels (1908)
- Cap-o'- Yellow and Other Stories for Children (1908)
- The Ship That Came Home in the Dark (1912)
- The Quiet Heart and Other Poems (1919)
- The Dolly Book (1920)
- The Adventures of Be-Wee the Gnome (1921)
- Sing-Song Stories (1922)
- The Needle-Witch's Pepper-Pot (1922)
- The Book of Happy Gnomes (1924)
- Cottons and Cookery: A Comedy for Girls' (1926)
- Bob-Along The Brownie Man (1950)
- The Cherry Cobbler (1958)
- Pip-Pip's Exciting Day (1960, posthumous)
References
edit- ^ a b "Two "People's Friend" Writers". The Evening Telegraph. 29 August 1906. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- ^ a b Kemp, Sandra; Mitchell, Charlotte; Trotter, David, eds. (2005). The Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198117605.
- ^ Kready, Laura Fry (1910). A Study of Fairy Tales. Houghton Mifflin Company. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- ^ Khan, Nosheen (1988). Women's Poetry of the First World War. University Press of Kentucky.
- ^ "The Invisible Poets of WW1". Portsmouth Poetry. Retrieved 7 April 2023.