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  1. Maria White Lowell (July 8, 1821 – October 27, 1853) was an American poet and abolitionist. Her poems were privately printed by her husband, James Russell Lowell, the poet, two years after her death.

  2. Learn about Maria White Lowell, who wrote poems influenced by nature, abolition, and women's rights. Read some of her poems and texts about her life and legacy.

  3. 8 de dic. de 2017 · A Lowell se le considera fundador de la "poesía confesional", un "concepto polémico, parcial y confuso" que reacciona contra el Modernism y el New Criticism; un movimiento...

  4. 6 de mar. de 2024 · A poem by Maria White Lowell (1821-1853) about the loss of her child and the comfort of faith. She compares herself to an alpine sheep that follows the shepherd to the pastures of heaven.

  5. American poet. Born Anna Maria White in Watertown, Massachusetts, on July 8, 1821; died, possibly of tuberculosis, at Elmwood, the Lowell home in Cambridge, on October 27, 1853; buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge; second daughter of five children of Abijah White (a cattle trader in the West Indies) and Anna Maria (Howard) White; along ...

  6. 9 de dic. de 2020 · The perfect compromise: Maria White Lowell. December 9, 2020. If it comes to Lowell having to change its name, it should be renamed after the poet Maria White Lowell (1821-1853), James Russell Lowell’s first wife.

  7. Maria White Lowell (1821-1853). All of them were politically engaged feminists and abolitionists. Lowell was a member of Margaret Fuller's circle; the Cary sisters worked for a time with Susan B. Anthony. Maria Lowell's poem "The Slave-Mother"8 portrays the agony of a woman who knows that her daughter is destined for a life of shame and ...