Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, née Pierrepont, is …

Years: 1730 - 1730

Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, née Pierrepont, is the most colorful Englishwoman of her time and a brilliant and versatile writer.

Chiefly remembered today for her letters, relates the story of her voyage to Constantinople and of her observations of Eastern life in the Turkish Embassy Letters, a series of lively letters full of graphic description; Letters is often credited as being an inspiration for subsequent female travel writers, as well as for much Orientalist art.

From the Ottoman Empire, Lady Mary (who herself bears the scars of smallpox, and had lost her brother to it) had brought back the practice of inoculation against the disease, had had her own children inoculated, and has encountered a vast amount of prejudice in bringing the matter forward.

Before starting for the East she had met Alexander Pope, and during her absence he had written her a series of extravagant letters, which appear to have been chiefly exercises in the art of writing gallant epistles.

Very few letters passed have between them since Lady Mary's return, and various reasons have been suggested for the subsequent estrangement and violent quarrel.

The last of the Letters during the embassy to Constantinople is addressed to Pope and purports to be written on November 1, 1718, from Dover.

It contains a parody on Pope's Epitaph on the Lovers struck by Lightning.

The manuscript collection of these letters has been passed round a considerable circle, and Pope may be offended at the circulation of this piece of satire.

Jealousy of her friendship with Lord Hervey has also been alleged, but Lady Louisa Stuart says Pope had made Lady Mary a declaration of love, which she had received with an outburst of laughter.

In any case Lady Mary always professes complete innocence of all cause of offense in public.

She is alluded to in the Dunciad, which Pope had published anonymously in 1728, in a passage to which Pope affixed one of his insulting notes.

A Pop upon Pope is generally thought to be her work, and Pope believes she is part author of One Epistle to Mr A. Pope (1730).

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