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Who was Joanna Baillie? Google Doodle celebrates Scottish poet and descendent of Sir William Wallace


Scottish poet, dramatist and philanthropist Joanna Baillie was born precisely 256 years ago.

Celebrated in the latest Google Doodle, Baillie is best known for her theatrical sequence Plays on the Passions, an incredibly ambitious ten-work project dedicated to “unveiling the human mind under the dominion of those strong and fixed passions” through a series of astute female-led comedies and tragedies.

Joanna, the youngest of three siblings, was born in Bothwell, Lanarkshire, on 11 September 1762, daughter of the Reverend James Baillie, a Presbyterian minister whose family traced its roots back to the legendary Scottish warrior William Wallace, victor over the English army at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297.

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exoplanets discovered Google Doodle celebrates Nasa's discovery of seven earth-sized exoplanets in new solar system Google 65/102 Bessie Coleman Google Doodle honours the first African American woman to get an international pilot licence on her 125th birthday Google 66/102 Caroling Google Doodle celebrates Christmas caroling Google 67/102 Today's Google Doodle features activist Steve Biko Google 68/102 Walter Cronkite Google celebrates Walter Cronkite's 100th birthday 69/102 Ladislao José Biro Google celebrates Ladislao José Biro 117th birthday 70/102 Google Google celebrates its 18th birthday 71/102 The history of tea in Britain Google celebrates the 385th anniversary of tea in the UK 72/102 Autumnal equinox 2016 Google marks the start of fall 73/102 Paralympics 2016 Google marks the start of the Paralympic Games 2016 74/102 Nettie Stevens Google celebrates Nettie Stevens 155th birthday 75/102 Father's Day 2016 Google celebrates Father's Day 76/102 Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Google celebrates Elizabeth Garrett Anderson 180th birthday 77/102 Earth Day 2016 Google celebrates Earth Day 78/102 Ravi Shankar Google marks Pandit Ravi Shankar's 96th birthday 79/102 Olympic Games in 1896 Google are celebrates the 120th anniversary of the modern Olympic Games in 1896 80/102 World Twenty20 final Google celebrates the 2016 World Twenty20 cricket final between the West Indies and England with a doodle Google 81/102 William Morris Google celebrates William Morris' 182 birthday with a doodle showcasing his most famous designs Google 82/102 St Patrick's Day 2016 Googlle celebrates St Patrick's Day on 17 March 83/102 Caroline Herschel Google marks Caroline Herschel's 266th birthday Google 84/102 Clara Rockmore Google celebrates Clara Rockmore's 105th birthday 85/102 International Women's Day 2016 #OneDayIWill video marks International Woman's Day on 8 March 86/102 St David's Day 2016 Google marks St David's Day Google 87/102 Leap Year 2016 Google celebrates Leap Day on 28 February 2 Google 88/102 Lantern Festival 2016 Google celebrates the last day of the Chinese New Year celebrations with a doodle of the Lantern Festival Google 89/102 Stethoscope Inventor, René Laennec Google celebrate's René Laennec's 235th birthday 90/102 Valentine's Day 2016 Google celebrates Valentine's Day with a romantic Doodle 91/102 Dmitri Mendeleev Google celebrate Dmitri Mendeleev's 182nd birthday 92/102 "The televisor" demonstartion Google Doodle celebrates 90 years since the first demonstration of television or "the televisor" to the public 93/102 Professor Scoville Google marks Professor Scoville’s 151st birthday 94/102 Sophie Taeuber-Arp Google marks Sophie Taeuber-Arp's 127th birthday 95/102 Charles Perrault Google celebrates author Charles Perrault's 388th birthday 96/102 Mountain of Butterflies discovery Google celebrates the 41st anniversary of the discovery of the Mountain of Butterflies 97/102 Winter Solstice 2015 Google celebrate the Winter Solstice 98/102 St Andrew's Day 2015 Google marks St Andrew's Day with doodle featuring Scotland's flag and Loch Ness monster 99/102 41st anniversary of the discovery of 'Lucy' Google marks the 41st anniversary of the discovery of 'Lucy', the name given to a collection of fossilised bones that once made up the skeleton of a hominid from the Australopithecus afarensis species, who lived in Ethiopia 3.2 million years ago 100/102 George Boole Google marks George Boole's 200th birthday 101/102 Halloween 2015 Google celebrates Halloween using an interactive doodle game "Global Candy Cup" 102/102 Prague Astronomical Clock Google celebrates the 605th anniversary of the Prague Astronomical Clock, one of the oldest functioning timepieces in the world

Joanna would later immortalise her ancestor in verse, alongside Christopher Columbus and others, in her Metrical Legends of Exalted Characters (1821).

As a child, Baillie staged theatrical productions with her classmates, a practice she continued at boarding school in Glasgow.

Relocating to Windmill Street in Fitzrovia, London, with her mother in 1784 - where Joanna’s late uncle had left the family a property - she gained access to the literary circle of the English capital, meeting the novelist Fanny Burney and finding the encouragement to write her first poem, “Winter Day”.

She began to make a serious study of drama, reading Shakespeare, Racine, Moliere and Voltaire.

When the family relocated to Colchester in 1791, she conceived the idea for what would become Plays on the Passions and spent the decade writing Basil, The Tryal and De Monfort, which would comprise the first published volume of the work in 1798.

With no name on the title page but a lengthy introductory discourse outlining her intentions, the author’s identity was a subject of no little speculation at the turn of the 19th century.

A lavish Drury Lane production of De Monfort appeared in 1800 starring leading actors of the day Sarah Siddons and John Kemple but was not a success despite an 11-night run. A revival of 1821, starring Edmund Kean, fared a little better.

Joanne Baillie was acknowledged as the author of the second volume of Plays when it arrived in 1802, this instalment comprised of The Election, Ethwald and The Second Marriage. A third, consisting of Orra, The Dream, The Siege and The Beacon, would appear, following some delay, in 1814.

In the interim, she relocated to Hampstead, where she would live the remainder of her life with her sister Agnes following the death of their mother in 1806.

Her play The Family Legend was produced in Edinburgh thanks to the patronage of Sir Walter Scott, with whom she had a long friendship – the pair hosting each other on visits north and south of the border and engaging in a prolific correspondence.

Her final collection of poetry, Fugitive Verses, appeared in 1840, revisiting her earliest compositions of 1790 at the advice of friend and fellow poet Samuel Rogers.

Admired throughout her life for intelligence, wit and eye for human frailty, Joanna Bailey was one of the most respected writers of her period, hailed as the finest female poet since Sappho by everyone from William Wordsworth and Lord Byron to John Stuart Mill to Maria Edgeworth. Her philanthropic work on behalf of the poor was also widely admired.

She died at home in Hampstead on 23 February 1851, aged 88.


GOOGLE’S infamous doodle is today paying tribute to Scottish playwright, poet and philanthropist Joanna Baillie.

But who is she? And who is her famous relative? We take a closer look.

The Mitchell Library 4 Google Doodle is celebrating the birthday of Scottish poet Joanna Baillie

Who is Joanna Baillie?

Born in Bothwell, Lanarkshire, on September 11, 1762, Joanna Baillie was a Scottish poet and playwright, known for Plays on the Passions and Fugitive Verses.

She was the youngest of three siblings and the daughter of a Presbyterian minister whose family could trace its roots back to the legendary Scottish warrior Sir William Wallace.

As a child, she enjoyed staging theatrical productions with her fellow classmates and continued this during her days at a Glasgow boarding school.

She claims she was unable to read until she was at least nine years old, but instead displayed a talent for drawing, considerable musical ability and a love of mathematics.

As she got older, her facility in the writing and acting of plays shone through and it was in Glasgow that she visited the theatre for the first time, kindling a lifelong passion for the stage.

In 1784, she moved to Fitzrovia, London, with her mother - a move which gave her access to the capital’s literary circle.

She soon met novelist Fanny Burney who encouraged her to follow her dreams, and soon after, Baillie penned her first poem Winter Day.

She decided to pursue an education in drama and began reading Shakespeare, Racine, Voltaire and Moliere.

After the family moved to Colchester in 1791, Baillie came up with the concept of Plays on the Passion and spent the following decade writing Basil, The Tryal and De Monfort, which would comprise the first published volume of Passions in 1798.

She relocated to Hamsptead and remained there with her sister Agnes following their mother’s death in 1806.

Baillie was admired throughout her lifetime for her intelligence, wit and her eye for human frailty.

Known as one of the most respected writers of her period, Baillie was also hailed as the finest female poet since Sappho and was celebrated by everyone from William Wordsworth and Lord Byron to John Stuart Mill and Maria Edgeworth.

She was also known for her generous philanthropic work on behalf of the poor.

Joanna Baillie died at her Hampstead home on February 23, 1851, at the age of 88.

Google 4 The Scottish playwright, poet and philanthropist was born in Lanarkshire on September 11, 1762

What was her most famous work?

Baillie was best knwon for her three volumes of Plays on the Passions and Fugitive Verses.

Baillie’s work explored moral philosophy and gothic fiction, which combines fiction, horror, death and sometimes romance.

Plays on the Passions “unveiled the human mind under the dominion of those strong and fixed passions” through a series of astute female-led comedies and tragedies.

The first volume of Passions was anonymously published in 1798, under the title of A Series of Plays.

Volume One consisted of Count Basil, a tragedy on love, The Tryal, a comedy on love, and De Monfort, a tragedy on hatred.

In a long introductory discourse, the author defended and explained her ambitious design to illustrate each of the deepest and strongest passions of the human mind.

The author explained that the plays were part of a larger design and were a completely original concept which arose from a particular view of human nature in which sympathetic curiosity and observation of the movement of feeling in others were paramount.

Baillie explained that real passion, “genuine and true to nature” was to be the subject of each instalment, with each play focusing on the growth of one master passion.

London’s citizens in their entirety excitedly tried to figure out who the author could be.

In fact, the authorship was attributed to a male author for some time until someone pointed out that all of the protagonists were middle-aged women, rarely the muses of male authors.

Baillie finally revealed herself as the author in 1800 in the title-page of the third edition.

Google 4 Google celebrated the Autumn Equinox with an appropriately themed doodle

What is a Google Doodle?

In 1998, the search engine founders Larry and Sergey drew a stick figure behind the second 'o' of Google as a message to that they were out of office at the Burning Man festival and with that, Google Doodles were born.

The company decided that they should decorate the logo to mark cultural moments and it soon became clear that users really enjoyed the change to the Google homepage.

In that same year, a turkey was added to Thanksgiving and two pumpkins appeared as the 'o's for Halloween the following year.

Now, there is a full team of doodlers, illustrators, graphic designers, animators and classically trained artists who help create what you see on those days.

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Among the Doodles published in 2018 were ones commemorating cartographer Abraham Ortelius, Egyptian actor Omar Sharif and St Patrick's Day.

And of course there was a whole series for the football World Cup in Russia.

Earlier in the year, the search giant celebrated the Paralympics in 2018 in Pyeongchang with an animated design celebrating each of the sports the winter Paralympians competes in.


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Joanna Baillie, a Scottish writer who was once compared to Shakespeare, was born 256 years ago today.

The poet and playwright is being celebrated in today's Google Doodle and is often hailed as one of the greatest female poets of all time.

Baillie, born today in Bothwell, Lankarshire in 1762, was a descendant of Scottish warrior Sir William Wallace and became notable in her own right through her literary works - which led friend and fellow writer Sir Walter Scott to brand her a "female Shakespeare".

She is perhaps best known for Plays on the Passions, an ambitious three part project published between 1798 and 1812.

The family moved to Colchester in 1791 where she came up with the idea for the sequence of comedies and tragedies about love, hatred and jealousy, which she hoped would unveil "the human mind under the dominion of those strong and fixed passions".

The first volume, made up of Count Basil: A Tragedy, The Tryal: A Comedy and De Monfort: A Tragedy, was originally published anonymously. The work became the talk of London as readers tried to guess the author's identity.

Baillie was revealed as the writer when the second volume was released in 1802. The third volume was published in 1814, by which time she had moved to Hampstead in London, where she spent the rest of her life with her sister Agnes.

The Plays on the Passions are also notable for their Introductory Discourse, which was Baillie's own brand of feminist literary criticism and set the tone for what would come to be known as English Romanticism.

Basil, The Tryal and De Monfort feature in today's doodle, along with Ethwald and Orra.

Baillie became ingratiated into literary circles in London when she and her mother moved into a property on Windmill Street in Fitzrovia in 1784 following the death of an uncle.

It was at this time that she met novelist Fanny Burney and was encouraged to write, shortly after which she penned her first poem Winter Day.

(Image: Popperfoto)

Though born into a well-off Scottish family, they had fallen on hard times after the sudden death of Baillie's father in 1778.

She and her sister were able to buy the cottage in Hampstead where she lived and worked for most of her life thanks to an inheritance from a wealthy uncle. Her brother Matthew, a doctor, had inherited the Fitzrovia house.

She was known for entertaining in her cottage, which was a hub of the literary scene of the time.

(Image: Hulton Archive)

She maintained friendly relationships with many of the important British writers of her time, including William Wordsworth, and Lady and Lord Byron.

As well as her literary prowess, Joanna was remembered for her philanthropy.

But she always remembered the needy, donating half of the earnings from her writing to charity.

She also wrote an essay in support of chimney sweeps, and advocated for women writers as well as other authors who struggled to provide for themselves.

She never married and died aged 88 in Hampstead, London, where she is buried in the parish churchyard.

(Image: Universal Images Group Editorial)

Joanna Baillie's poems

A Summer Day

A Winter Day

Song, Woo’d And Married And A’

To The Rainbow

Hay-Making

A Mother To Her Waking Infant

London

See a full list of Baillie's poems.

Joanna Baillie's plays


GOOGLE has today paid homage to a prolific Scottish poet and playwright, Joanna Baillie, who would have turned 256 years old today.

Baillie’s works came at the start of the English Romantic period in literature and is best known for pieces such as Fugitive Verses and Plays on the Passions.

In honour of Baillie’s birthday, we’ve compiled a list of things you may not know about her.

Astonishing mosaic detail on the Joanna Baillie monument in Bothwell. (Video online in about a week.) pic.twitter.com/DrQpdT9uJI — Scotland Forever (@Guide2Scotland) September 5, 2018

Birth

Joanna was born the youngest of three children to Deborah Hunter and Presbyterian reverend James Baillie, in Bothwell, rural Scotland. She had a twin sister who died shortly after birth. The wealthy Baillies believed they were descendants of the Scottish war hero, William Wallace.

Education

A 10-year-old Baillie was sent to a boarding school in Glasgow, admitting “I could not read …until the age of nine”. Her sister disputer that she had in fact been illiterate until she was 11-years-old.

Baillie loved schoolwork and thrived in subjects such as art, drama, mathematics and music, but writing and performing in her own plays was by far her most treasured pastime at school.

Foray into poetry

The Baillie family moved to London in 1784 and Joanna was encouraged by her aunt, Anne Hunter, to try poetry. She studied a series of French authors like Volatire as well as playwrights like Shakespeare. Seven years later, Joanna had written her most famous piece, Plays on the Passions, which was praised by critics and hailed a new era of English Romanticism in literature.

Work

Baillie’s wildly popular work was often compared to Shakespeare. Her first poem ever published was Winter Day in 1790 and detailed her love of Scotland. Her first collection of poetry was published in the same year, entitled Poems: Wherein it is Attempted to Described Certain Views of Nature an of Rustrice Manners. Baillie donated half of her salary to a variety of charities.

Love life

Baillie lived with her sister Agnes after their parents died. During this time, she wrote songs, one of which was dedicated to her sister Agnes and entitled Lines to Agnes Baillie. Neither woman married but were known to have had relationships with well known people in London’s arts and science communities.

Famous friends

Baillie was well connected at the height of her career in London. She was in regular contact with world famous novelist Sir Walter Scott, author of famed books The Lady of The Lakeor and Ivanhoe. The pair would regularly send each other letters, chatting about their families.

She also became quite close with British nobelman and poet Lord Byron and his wife Anne Isabella Noel Byron, or Lady Byron.

Death

Baillie remained in reasonably good health until she died just before her 90th birthday in February 1851. Baillie and her sister Agnes are both buried beside their mother in Hampstead.

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