
Sarah Doudney (15 January 1841,
Portsea, Portsmouth, Hampshire – 8 December 1926,
Oxford)
[Charlotte Mitchell]
"Doudney, Sarah (1841–1926)"
''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, May 2005, retrieved 11 July 2008 was an English fiction writer and poet. She is best known for her children's literature and her hymns.
Family and life
Doudney's father ran a candle and soap-making business. One of her uncles was the
evangelical clergyman
David Alfred Doudney
David Alfred Doudney (1811–1893) was an English printer, journalist and author, who became an evangelical clergyman. He is known as a founder of schools.
Life
The son of John Doudney (died 1834), he was born on 8 March 1811 at his father's hous ...
, editor of ''
The Gospel Magazine
The ''Gospel Magazine'' is a Calvinist, evangelical Christian magazine from the United Kingdom, and is one of the longest running of such periodicals, having been founded in 1766. Most of the editors have been Anglicans. It is currently published ...
'' and ''Old Jonathan''.
Doudney was educated at a school for French girls, and started to write poetry and prose as a child. "The Lesson of the Water-Mill", written when she was 15 and published in the
Anglican
Anglicanism is a Western Christian tradition that has developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the context of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. It is one of th ...
''Churchman's Family Magazine'' (1864), became a well-known song in Britain and the United States. Doudney continued to live with her parents near
Catherington until she was 30.
Doudney's first novel, ''Under Grey Walls'', appeared in 1871. Success came with her third, ''Archie's Old Desk'', in 1872. In the 1881 census Doudney described herself as a "Writer for Monthly Journals".
She contributed poetry and fiction to periodicals that included
Dickens's ''
All the Year Round'', the ''Churchman's Shilling Magazine'',
the
Religious Tract Society's ''
Girl's Own Paper'', ''
The Sunday Magazine'', ''
Good Words'' and ''
The Quiver''.
By 1891, when she described herself in the census as a novelist, she had written about 35 novels.
Most of these were written for young girls, but she also wrote some for adults. Many of them end tragically, but look forward to happiness after death. ''Anna Cavaye, or, The Ugly Princess'' tells of a dying child comforted by knowing she has brought other people together.
Doudney's hymns include ''The Christian's Good Night'', set by
Ira D. Sankey
Ira David Sankey (August 28, 1840 – August 13, 1908) was an American gospel singer and composer, known for his long association with Dwight L. Moody in a series of religious revival campaigns in America and Britain during the closing decades o ...
in 1884 and sung at
Charles Spurgeon's funeral.
Sarah's mother Lucy Doudney died in 1891 and her father in 1893. Sarah Doudney then moved to
Oxford, where she died in December 1926.
Selected works
*''The Angels of Christmas'', 1870
*''Harvest Hymn'', 1870
*''Psalms of Life'', 1871. A collection of 60 hymns.
*''Under Gray Walls'', 1871
*''Faith Harrowby: Or the Smugglers' Cave'', 1871
*''Archie's Old Desk'', 1872
*''Self-pleasing. A New Year's Address to Senior Scholars'', 1872
*''The Beautiful Island, and Other Stories'' (the other stories by other authors), 1872
*''Loser and Gainer'', 1873
*''Janet Darney. A Tale of Fisher-life in Thale Bay'', 1873
*''Wave upon Wave'', 1873
*''Marion's Three Crowns'', 1873
*''The Cottage in the Woods, and other tales'', 1874
*''Miss Irving's Bible, 1875
*''Oliver's Oath, and How He Kept It'', 1875
*''The Great Salterns'', 1875
*''Nothing But Leaves'', 1875
*''The Pilot's Daughters'', 1875
*''Brave Seth'', 1877
*''Stories of Girlhood, or the Brook and the River'', 1877
*''Monksbury College: A Tale of Schoolgirl Life'', 1878
*''Faith's Revenge'', 1879
*''The Scarlet Satin Petticoat'', 1879
*''While It Is Day. A New Year's Address to Senior Scholars'', 1879
*''A Story of Crossport, and Other Stories'', 1879
*''Old Anthony's Secret, and Other Stories'', 1879
*''Stepping Stones, a Story of our Inner Life'', 1880
*''Strangers Yet. A Story'', 1880
*''A Child of the Precinct'', 1880
*''Stepping-Stones: A Story of Our Inner Life'', 1880
*''Anna Cavaye; or, the Ugly Princess'', 1882
*''Michaelmas Daisy. A Young Girl's Story'', 1882
*''What's in a Name?'', 1883
*''Miss Stepney's Fortune'', 1883
*''Nelly Channell'', 1883
*''A Woman's Glory'', 1883
*''The Strength of Her Youth'', 1884
*''A Long Lane with a Turning'', 1884
*''When We Two Parted. A Tale'', c. 1884
*''Prudence Winterburn'', 1885
*''Who Is the Enemy? and How He Was Discovered. A tale'', 1886
*''When We Were Girls Together'', 1886
*''The Missing Rubies'', 1887
*''A Son of the Morning'', 1887
*''Thy Heart's Desire. A Story of Girls' Lives'', 1888
*''Miss Willowburn's Offer'', 1888
*''The Vicar of Redcross; Or, Till Death Us Do Part'', 1888
*''Under False Colours'', 1889
*''Where the Dew Falls in London. A Story of a Sanctuary'', 1889
*''Christmas Angels'' (in verse), 1890
*''The Family Difficulty: The Story of a Young Samaritan'', 1891
*''Godiva Durleigh'', 1891
*''Where Two Ways Meet, etc.'', 1891
*''Drifting Leaves'' (poems), 1892
*''My Message'' (poem), 1892
*''Voices in the Starlight'' (poem), 1892
*''The Love-Dream of Gatty Fenning. A Tale'', 1892
*''Through Pain to Peace'', 1892
*''A Romance Of Lincoln's Inn'', 1893
*''Violets for Faithfulness'' (verse), 1893
*''Louie's Married Life'', 1894
*''Katherine's Keys. A Tale'', 1896
*''A Vanished Hand'', 1896
*''Bitter and Sweet. A Story'', 1896
*''Pilgrims of the Night'', 1897
*, ''
Girl's Own Paper'', XX, 1898
*''Lady Dye's Reparation'', 1901
*''Silent Strings'', 1904
*''One of the Few'', 1904
*''A Cluster of Roses'', 1906
*''Shadow and Shine'', 1906
*''When My Ship Comes Home'', 1906
*''Thistle-Down''
*''My Wish for Thee'' (single poem)
*''The Lesson of the Water Mill'' (with Bond Andrews)
[Additional titles, corrections etc. from Doudney's ODNB entry; booksellers' catalogues; the British Library Integrated Catalogue]
Retrieved 6 December 2011
Web Archive list: .
See also
;English women hymnwriters (18th–19th centuries)
*
Eliza Sibbald Alderson
*
Augusta Amherst Austen
*
Sarah Bache
*
Charlotte Alington Barnard
Charlotte Alington Pye Barnard (23 December 1830 in Louth, Lincolnshire – 30 January 1869 in Dover) was an English poet and composer of ballads and hymns, who often wrote under the pseudonym Claribel. She wrote over 100 songs as well as two vol ...
*
Charlotte Elliott
*
Ada R. Habershon
Ada Ruth Habershon (8 January 1861-1918) was an English Christian hymnist, best known for her 1907 gospel song "Will the Circle Be Unbroken?" for which the tune was composed by Charles H. Gabriel.
Biography
Ada R. Habershon was born in Maryle ...
*
Katherine Hankey
Arabella Katherine Hankey (12 January 1834 – 9 May 1911) was an English missionary and nurse who is best known for being the author of the poem ''The Old, Old Story'', from which the hymns " Tell me the old, old story" and "I Love to Tell the ...
*
Frances Ridley Havergal
Frances Ridley Havergal (14 December 1836 – 3 June 1879) was an English religious poet and hymnwriter. ''Take My Life and Let it Be'' and ''Thy Life for Me'' (also known as ''I Gave My Life for Thee'') are two of her best known hymns. She also ...
*
Maria Grace Saffery
Maria Grace Saffery (1773–1858) was a Baptist poet and hymn-writer from England.
Early life
Maria Grace Andrews was born in 1773 in the Westbury district of Wiltshire, England. Saffery was possibly the daughter of William Andrews of Stroud Gr ...
*
Anne Steele
*
Emily Taylor
*
Emily H. Woodmansee
Emily Hill Woodmansee (March 24, 1836 – October 18, 1906) was an English-born American Mormon poet and hymnwriter. Although only one of her hymns "As Sisters In Zion" is included in the 1985 LDS English language edition of the LDS Church's hym ...
References
External links
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Biographyat the Cyber Hymnal
{{DEFAULTSORT:Doudney, Sarah
1841 births
1926 deaths
English children's writers
English hymnwriters
British women hymnwriters
19th-century English writers
Victorian novelists
Victorian women writers
20th-century English novelists
20th-century English women writers
English women novelists
19th-century English women writers
Women religious writers
Anglican writers
Writers from Portsmouth
Writers from Oxford
People from Catherington