Emily Bowes Explained

Emily Bowes Gosse (10 November 1806  - 10 February 1857[1] [2]) was a prolific religious tract writer and author of evangelical Christian poems and articles.[3]

Biography

Emily Bowes was born in London, England, to William and Hannah Bowes, both from old New England families. Her early years were divided among Merioneth, Exmouth, and London, and in 1824 she commenced work as a governess to Revd John Hawkins in Berkshire, later moving to the home of Revd Sir Christopher John Musgrave, in Hove.

After these spells, Emily returned to London to stay with her parents in Clapton, North London. She attended the Plymouth Brethren assembly in Hackney, where she met her future husband, Philip Henry Gosse. They had known each other for several years before they married at Brook Street Chapel, Tottenham, in 1848. Emily was 42, and her husband was 38. Emily gave birth to their only child, Edmund in 1849.[3]

Emily died in Islington after a painful and protracted battle with breast cancer and was buried in Abney Park Cemetery, Stoke Newington. Among her last words were: "I shall walk with Him in white. Won't you take our lamb and walk with me?"[4]

Painting

It has been incorrectly claimed that Emily was a Victorian landscape painter who studied with John Sell Cotman, and an illustrator whose work includes the uncredited chromolithographs for her husband P. H. Gosse's book The Aquarium: an unveiling of the wonders of the deep sea (1854).[5] [6] [7]

Publications

Gosse was a writer of Christian poetry books[8] and a religious tract author and periodical contributor. Of sixty Narrative Tracts in book form,[9] fifty-four were written by her and the rest by her husband. In total, at least sixty-three Emily Gosse narrative or gospel tracts were published, with an aggregate sale of seven million copies by 1866. She authored 40 periodical articles.[10] Her book Abraham And His Children (1855) consisted of object lessons using Biblical characters to illustrate parenting principles.[3]

Further reading

References

  1. Gosse, Philip Henry, A Memorial of the Last Days on Earth of Emily Gosse, 1857, pp. 78-79.
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=8jmfva8TTEcC Bynum, William F., The Western Medical Tradition:1800 to 2000, pp. 204-208, Cambridge University Press, 2006
  3. http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/11113 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  4. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7469054 Profile
  5. Gates, Barbara T., Kindred Nature: Victorian & Edwardian Women Embrace The Living World, University of Chicago Press, 1998.,
  6. Gosse, Philip Henry, Aquarium, London: John Van Voorst, 2nd ed., 1856
  7. Some writers have confused the first “Mrs. Philip Henry Gosse” (née Emily Bowes) with the second "Mrs. Philip Henry Gosse" (née Eliza Brightwen, 1813-1900). Emily Bowes Gosse was neither a painter nor an illustrator, did not study with John Sell Cotman and did not illustrate P. H. Gosse’s Aquarium (see R. B. Freeman and Douglas Wertheimer, "Emily Gosse: A Bibliography", Brethren Historical Review 17, 2021, p. 27, n.7).
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=dsO2AAAACAAJ Boyd, R., Emily Gosse: A Life of Faith and Works : the Story of Her Life and Witness with Her Published Poems and Samples of Her Prose Writings, Olivet Books 2004
  9. https://books.google.com/books?id=usYFGwAACAAJ Gosse, Emily & Gosse, P. H., Narrative Tracts, Morgan & Scott, 1865
  10. [R. B. Freeman]