Marianne Francis (1790–1832) was an English evangelical, now known principally as a correspondent of Hester Piozzi and Sarah Wesley. She has been called an "evangelical bluestocking", and is recognised as a significant participant in debate about religious enthusiasm.[1]
Early life
She was the daughter of Clement Francis (died 1792), a physician and medical writer, and his wife Charlotte Ann Burney, daughter of Charles Burney and sister of Frances Burney.[2] Her mother married, secondly, in 1798, Ralph Broome (1742–1805), against her father's wishes.[3]
Marianne early studied Latin, Greek, Hebrew and Arabic. She showed mathematical ability, and undertook a wide course of reading. She wrote hymns, at least from age ten.[4] She "impressed all she knew by her linguistic ability, learning, and brilliant performances on the pianoforte."[5] Charles Burney, himself a musician, wrote to his daughter Frances that Marianne was a "marvellous performer":
She may perhaps be styled a Bravura performer. But her courage & persistence in attacking difficulties of all kinds, is unparalleled, so that in spite of my civility to her countenance, I pronounce her to be—a monster.[6]
In Bath in 1805, Marianne met Hester Piozzi, and an extensive correspondence ensued.[7] The Francis family shortly moved to Exmouth, in 1806, and kept in touch.[8] Marianne's diaries 1803–9, and 1820–1, are extant.[9]
Wilberforce and Young
Introduced to William Wilberforce at Gore House, Marianne became a classical tutor and secretary in the family, and came to know the Clapham Sect more generally, including the Thornton family.[10] She told Barbara Wilberforce (1799–1821), daughter of the house and a reluctant pianist, that "you may, by practising an hour a day be able to manage a hymn & any simple melodies" without a musician's dedication.[11]
Her mother's life was now itinerant: to Richmond, Surrey to stay with her daughter Charlotte Barrett; at Brighton for the sea air; much time on the continent of Europe with her invalid son Clement who had become a Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. This nomadic existence, however, did not suit Marianne.[12]
In early 1811 Marianne underwent painful eye treatment in London under Jonathan Wathen Phipps, and Piozzi's friend Sir William Pepys, 1st Baronet kept her company as she recovered.[13] Later that year, she went with her mother on a visit to Bradfield Hall, Essex, with the aging Arthur Young; a close friendship resulted with Young, who died in 1820.[14] She acted as secretary to Young, who suffered from cataract, and lost his sight.[7] An account of the Bradfield Hall household when Marianne was a visitor, sleeping over the servant's hall, including Young's French secretary St Croix, was given by Young's daughter in a letter of 1814.[15]
Young's son the Rev. Arthur Young (1769–1827) owned an estate in the Crimea, near Kaffa, and in June 1817 Young told Francis he had heard from him. A month or so later Lewis Way enquired of Young about the estate, Karagos, as a potential community for Jewish converts to Christianity.[16] Francis visited the Poune's Court synagogue in Brighton, for Yom Kippur (20 September 1817).[17][18] In a letter of February 1818 to Piozzi, she gave an account of Hebrew tuition she had there from a German Jew named Fishel; whom she asked to read the New Testament.[19]
Francis engaged in Wilberforce's philanthropic work with the poor.[20] She taught in charity schools, including Young's near Bradfield Hall where she introduced the monitorial system;[4][21] she visited workhouses and prisons.[10]
Later life
Marianne Francis had religious views in common with her cousin Frances (Fanny) Raper, who followed "enthusiastic" and Irvingite preachers;[22] her own mother and sister came to think she took too much account of Irvingite views, and wished to include them.[23] She predeceased her mother, dying on 15 March 1832, aged 42.[24]
"Evangelical bluestockings"
It has been noted of the literary circle around Sarah Wesley, of which Marianne Francis was a member, that they circulated writings privately, rather than published them. Others in the group were Elizabeth Benger, Agnes Bulmer, Maria Spilsbury and Mary Tighe.[25] They debated in particular "whether or not religious enthusiasm, properly regulated, had a place in social and religious life and particularly whether women had a role in securing this place."[26]
Correspondence
An Edition of the Letters of Marianne Francis (1790–1832) to Hester Lynch Piozzi (1741–1821), 1808–10 (1975), editor Diane Menagh.[27] Almost all that survives of the Francis–Piozzi correspondence consists of Marianne's letters to Hester.[7] Hester mentioned Marianne in letters to Thomas Sedgwick Whalley, including a conversation of Marianne with Hannah More at Wilberforce's house in 1813.[28]
As part of a larger correspondence between the Burney and Wesley families, Marianne was in touch with both Sarah Wesley and her brother Samuel Wesley.[29]
The Burney Papers collection of New York Public Library holds more than 100 letters from Arthur Young to Marianne.[30] There are also family letters at the NYPL and the British Library, from Marianne to her sister Charlotte Barrett.[31][32]
^Winckles, Andrew O. (1 June 2018). "Sisters of the Quill: Sally Wesley, the Evangelical Bluestockings, and the Regulation of Enthusiasm". Women's Literary Networks and Romanticism: 16–46. doi:10.5949/liverpool/9781786940605.003.0002. S2CID191987825.
^Burney, Fanny (1975). The Journals and Letters of Fanny Burney (Madame D'Arblay).: France 1803-1812, letters 550-631. Vol. VI. Clarendon Press. p. 634 note 2. ISBN978-0-19-812467-2.