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  1. of letters addressed to Sarah Stoddart, the wife at one time of Wil-liam Hazlitt. Miss Stoddart's matrimonial misfortunes are not her only claim to be remembered. She is less unhappily thought of as the correspondent of Charles and Mary Lamb, and previously unpub-lished letters, two from the sister and one from the brother, are

  2. Hazlitt.2 Stoddart’s Journal has received little attention as an independent work, but rather has been used in discussions of William’s life and character. 3 The

  3. In this, Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt, like Murray, and also Dorothy Wordsworth, demonstrate that a different way of evaluating and valuing women’s walking accounts is urgently needed. Louise Ann Wilson has written about what she terms a “female sublime” in women’s writing about walking of this period.

  4. I am not sure when Hazlitt met John's sister, Sarah; but presumably it was not long after the boys first met that Hazlitt knew, at least, of Sarah's existence. As we know, Sarah Stoddart was in 1806 with her brother at Malta. Their father had died and their mother, by then, was mad and probably institutionalized.

  5. 19 de mar. de 2022 · Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt, "Journal of My Trip to Scotland." An annotated map of her travels [Google Earth], via The Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt Project. Interview with Kerri Andrews about Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt and other notable walkers / hikers, including Nan Shepherd whose work inspired the short documentary "The Living Mountain: A Cairngorms Journey."

  6. Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt. Hazlitt, Sarah Stoddart: The Journals of Sarah and William Hazlitt, 1822-1831 (University of Buffalo Studies v24 #3; 1959), also by William Hazlitt, ed. by Willard Hallam Bonner (page images at HathiTrust; US access only) See also what's at your library, or elsewhere.

  7. I am not sure when Hazlitt met John's sister, Sarah; but presumably it was not long after the boys first met that Hazlitt knew, at least, of Sarah's existence. As we know, Sarah Stoddart was in 1806 with her brother at Malta. Their father had died and their mother, by then, was mad and probably institutionalized.