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  1. Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt (1774–1843) was an English journalist and walker, and wife of the essayist William Hazlitt.

  2. 18 de ene. de 2013 · The journal was written during a three-month trip to Scotland and Ireland as Sarah awaited the progress of divorce proceedings from her husband, the essayist, William Hazlitt. The article looks at the journal in its context as travel writing of the Romantic period and examines Sarah's identities performed in the text.

  3. Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt (1774-1843) was, in many ways, a woman ahead of her time. A relatively little known figure of the British Romantic era, Stoddart’s extraordinary walking tours and the journal in which she recorded them can be of great value for understanding and analyzing nineteenth-century women’s writing, travel, and lifestyle.

  4. Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt set out on her walking tours of Scotland twenty years later, and in rather different circumstances than Sarah Murray’s. Far from being independently wealthy, Stoddart Hazlitt was reliant on her husband, William Hazlitt, for support.

  5. This paper is concerned with Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt and her text, Journal of My Trip to Scotland, written in 1822 and first published by Le Gallienne in 1893. The journal was written during a three-month trip to Scotland and Ireland as Sarah awaited.

  6. 7 de oct. de 2020 · Arriving in Edinburgh on April 21, 1822, aboard the Leith Smack Superb, Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt stepped onto the docks toward a most uncertain future. She had journeyed for seven days up the British east coast from the Thames in order to be divorced by her husband of fourteen years, the essayist William Hazlitt , who had become infatuated with ...

  7. If it was indeed Sarah Stoddart who raised the memorial stone to Hazlitt, it is a touching fact, and does both her and him great credit. The handsome memorial vanished long ago, and now there is only a flat gravestone marking the spot where Hazlitt lies in St Anne's churchyard.