{"product_id":"poetry-and-prose-of-marie-radcliffe-butler","title":"Poetry and Prose of Marie Radcliffe Butler","description":"xviii, 361 pp. Green cloth, gilt titles, black stamped decorations, all edges gilt, decorated endpapers. ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Marie was the daugh­ter of Fan­nie H. Bur­ridge Rad­cliffe, and wife of min­is­ter Tho­mas Da­ve­nal But­ler. When she was two years old, her fa­mi­ly moved to Cu­ya­ho­ga Falls, Ohio. It was there that, at age 13, Ma­rie wrote one of her first poe­ms, The Fall­ing Leaf, which was pub­lished in its orig­in­al form ma­ny years af­ter­wards, in the Christ­ian Stand­ard. In 1853, her par­ents moved to Wheel­ing, Vir­gin­ia (now West Vir­gin­ia), where her fa­ther died in a chol­e­ra ep­i­de­mic not long aft­er. Her mo­ther then op­ened a school for in­struct­ion in mu­sic, draw­ing and em­broid­e­ry, and Marie be­came her as­sist­ant. While in Wheel­ing, Ma­rie won first prize at the coun­ty fair for a ser­ies of pen­cil sketch­es. In 1857, Mrs. Rad­cliffe ac­cept­ed a gov­er­ness po­si­tion at a pri­vate board­ing school in Browns­bo­ro, Ken­tuc­ky, with Ma­rie again serv­ing as her as­sist­ant. In Browns­bo­ro, Marie's mo­ther mar­ried to Dea­con John S. Chris­to­pher, of Lou­is­ville, Ken­tuc­ky, and soon af­ter, Marie en­tered the Lou­is­ville Fe­male High School to fin­ish her ed­u­ca­tion. Marie con­trib­ut­ed ma­ny po­ems to the Christ­ian Stand­ard and to the New York In­de­pen­dent. By 1876, Ma­rie was liv­ing in De­troit, Mi­chi­gan. She was ac­tive in the Wo­men's Chris­tian Tem­per­ance Un­ion in her lat­er years. - Hymn Time","brand":"Standard Publishing Company","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":40498480513094,"sku":"2331064","price":30.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/1232\/9510\/products\/2331064.jpg?v=1675723934","url":"https:\/\/ym-demo.myshopify.com\/products\/poetry-and-prose-of-marie-radcliffe-butler","provider":"Yesterday's Muse","version":"1.0","type":"link"}