Agnes C. Hall
{{Short description|Scottish writer}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2019}}
Agnes C. Hall (née Scott) (1777–1846) was a Scottish writer of novels and non-fiction articles, and also a translator. She used the pseudonym Rosalia St Clair.{{cite ODNB|id=11939|title=Hall, Agnes C.|first= M. Clare|last=Loughlin-Chow}}
Life
Born in Roxburghshire, she was the wife of Dr. Robert Hall who died in 1824. She survived him, dying in London on 1 December 1846.{{cite DNB|wstitle=Hall, Agnes C.|volume=24}} Her time in the literary world brought her in particular the acquaintance of John Stuart Mill; but her financial difficulties were serious, and she applied in particular to the Royal Literary Fund.{{Cite journal |last=Leary |first=Patrick |date=1994 |title="Fraser's Magazine" and the Literary Life, 1830-1847 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/20082761 |journal=Victorian Periodicals Review |volume=27 |issue=2 |pages=105–126 |jstor=20082761 |issn=0709-4698}}
Works
Hall was a contributor on literary and scientific topics to Olinthus Gregory's Pantologia, William Nicholson's British Encyclopedia, and Rees's Cyclopædia; also to John Aikin's Old Monthly, and Knight's Printing Machine. She wrote the notes to Anton Zacharias Helms's Buenos Ayres (1806). During her later years she contributed to the Annual Biography, the Westminster Review, and Fraser's Magazine.
In fiction, she published Rural Recreations; Obstinacy (1826), a tale for young people; First and Last Years of Wedded Life, a story of Irish life in the reign of George IV; and a historical novel based on the massacre of Glencoe.
Hall translated the Travels of F. R. J. De Pons (1807), Jean Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent, Michel Ange Bernard de Mangourit (Travels in Hanover), Aubin-Louis Millin de Grandmaison and François Pouqueville (1813), Goldberry and Michaux. Other translations included Vittorio Alfieri's Autobiography (1810), Madame de Genlis's historical romance La Duchesse de La Vallière (1804), and some other works by the same writer, and some of the tales of August Heinrich Lafontaine.
Bibliography
= Fiction =
- Son of O'Donnel (1819)
- The Highland Castle, and the Lowland Cottage (1820), 4 volumes
- Clavering Tower (1822), 4 volumes
- The Banker's Daughters of Bristol: or Compliance and Decision (1824)
- Fashionables and Unfashionables (1827)
- The First and Last Years of Wedded Life (1827), 4 volumes
- Ulrica of Saxony; A Romantic Tale of the Fifteenth Century (1828)
- Eleanor Ogilvie: The Maid of the Tweed; A Romantic Legend (1829), 3 volumes
- The Sailor Boy; or, The Admiral and His Protegée (1830), 4 volumes
- The Doomed One; or, They Met at Glenlyon. A Tale of the Highlands (1832), 3 volumes
- The Pauper Boy, or The Ups and Downs of Life (1834)
- Marston (1835), 3 volumes
Notes
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20160305050422/http://english.unl.edu/corvey/html/Projects/CorveyNovels/StClairRosalia/UlricaBio.htm Corvey Novels Project, Rosalia St. Clair.]
;Attribution
{{DNB|wstitle=Hall, Agnes C.|volume=24}}
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Category:19th-century Scottish women writers
Category:19th-century Scottish translators
Category:Scottish women writers
Category:19th-century Scottish novelists
Category:Scottish women novelists
Category:19th-century pseudonymous writers
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