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The Female Advocate

Mary Scott's The Female Advocate; a poem occasioned by reading Mr. Duncombe's Feminead (1775) is both a celebration of women's literary achievements, as well as an impassioned piece of advocacy for women's right to literary self-expression.

The poem
The Female Advocate takes John Duncombe's The Feminead: or, female genius. A poem (1754) as its inspiration. Scott expresses gratitude and admiration for Duncombe, then justifies her own project with her stated wish to expand his original list of "female geniuses", as well as to include some of those who came to prominence since he wrote (page v). Duncombe's poem is celebratory; it rehearses the accomplishments of women writers of the mid-eighteenth-century. Scott cast further back in time in order to "tell what bright daughters BRITAIN once could boast" (l. 25) and introduces a series of women from the previous two centuries that would have already been familiar to most of her readers, beginning with the learned Protestant sixth wife of Henry VIII, Catherine Parr. She continues chronologically into the quarter-century between when Duncombe's poem was published two decades earlier and the time of her own writing. Her poem combines the tradition of the catalogue of exemplary women that Duncombe follows, with that of another genre that would also have been familiar to her readers: the defence of women. Scott's poem consists of 522 lines of heroic couplets. It is dedicated to her close friend, Mary Steele, and contains several references to people within their circle. ==Names==
Names
Pastoral pseudonyms, or noms de plumes, were popular in the eighteenth century, and Scott uses them in this poem, both widely known ones such as "Orinda" for Katherine Philips, as well as pen names employed in a more limited way, within her own circle. Female writers often published anonymously. Scott includes two anonymous writers in the body of the poem and mentions a third in the introduction. ==Literary figures treated in The Female Advocate==
Literary figures treated in The Female Advocate
In the introduction In the introduction, Scott mentions four writers who had "started up since the writing of this little piece": Hester Chapone (1727–1801), Hannah More, Phillis Wheatley, and the unnamed author of "poems by a lady" "lately published" by G. Robinson in Paternoster Row. She implies that there is no shortage of subjects: "Authors have appeared with honour, in almost every walk of literature." In the poemCatherine Parr (1512–1548): queen consort and author of three works • Jane Grey (1537–1554): reputation for excellent humanist education • Elizabeth Tudor (1533–1603): monarch and sometime poet • Margaret Roper (née More; 1505–1544) • Elizabeth Dauncey (née More; 1506–1564) poet and playwright • Catharine Macaulay (née Sawbridge; 1731–1791): historian • Anna Williams (1706–1783): poet • Sarah Pennington (née Moore; – 1783): author of conduct literatureElizabeth Montagu (née Robinson; 1718–1800): patron of the arts, salonnière, literary critic, writer, Blue StockingDorothea Celesia (bap. 1738, died 1790): poet, playwright, translator • Catherine Talbot (1721–1770): essayist and Blue StockingRose Roberts (1730–1788): not openly named in the poem • Jael Pye (née Mendez; – 1782): author of four works; not openly named in the poem • Anna Laetitia Barbauld (née Aikin; 1743–1825): poet, essayist, literary critic, editor, author of children's literature • John Duncombe (writer) (1729–1786): author of The Feminead (1754) • Thomas Seward (1708–1790): author of The Female Right to Literature, in a Letter to a Young Lady from Florence (1766) • Anna Seward / "Athenia" (1742–1809): poet; mentioned by Scott as the beneficiary of Thomas Seward's progressive ideas about female education • William Steele IV / "Philander" (1715–1785): Mary Steele's father In the footnotesKatherine Grey (1540–1568) • Mary Sidney (later Herbert; 1561–1621): poet • Laetitia Pilkington ( – 1750): poet; included in Duncombe's The Feminead ==See also==
Electronic text
• Full text at Scott, Mary. ''The Female Advocate; a poem occasioned by reading Mr. Duncombe's Feminead'' (London: Joseph Johnson, 1775). Google Books
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