Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English writer Mary Martha Sherwood.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Mary Martha Sherwood was a nineteenth-century English children's writer of more than four hundred works. The best known include The History of Little Henry and his Bearer (1814), The History of Henry Milner (1822โ1837), and The History of the Fairchild Family (1818โ1847). Her evangelicalism permeated her early writings, but later works cover common Victorian themes such as domesticity. She married Captain Henry Sherwood and moved to India, converted to evangelical Christianity and began to write for children, with those of military encampments there in mind, but her work was well received in Britain, where the Sherwoods returned after a decade. She opened a boarding school and published texts for children and the poor, as "one of the most significant authors of children's literature of the nineteenth century". Her depictions of domesticity and ties with India may have influenced many young readers, but her work fell from favour as children's literature broadened in the late nineteenth century.
it is the very nature of sin to prevent man from meditating on spiritual things.
all religions seem alike to me, one mass of absurdities and lies - I know that there is a God, but I know no more of him; and I believe that all those are liars who pretend to know more than I do.
. . . a dirty exterior is a great enemy to beauty of all descriptions.
Where the habits are simple, and the mind truly elevated, then is society in the best state.