This text is part of:
[362]
sisters, of whom the eldest, under the name of “Susan Coolidge,” became a very influential writer for young people.
She came first to Newport as the intimate friend of Mrs. Helen Maria Fiske Hunt, who was more generally known for many years as “H. H.”
The latter came among us as the widow of one of the most distinguished officers whom the West Point service had reared.
She was destined in all to spend five winters at Newport, and entered upon her literary life practically at that time.
She lived there as happily, perhaps, as she could have dwelt in any town which she could christen “Sleepy Hollow,” as she did Newport; and where she could look from her window upon the fashionable avenue and see, she said, such “Headless Horsemen” as Irving described as having haunted the valley of that name.
After her second marriage she lived far away at the middle and then at the extreme western part of the continent, and we met but few times.
She wrote to me freely, however, and I cannot do better than close by quoting from this brilliant woman's very words her description of the manner in which she wrote the tale “Ramona,” now apparently destined to be her source of permanent fame.
I do not know in literary history so vivid a picture of what may well be called spiritual inspiration in an impetuous woman's soul.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.