Margaret Fuller (1810-1850)
Sarah Margaret Fuller (1810-1850) was one of the most prominent literary women of the nineteenth century, and is sometimes thought of as America’s first feminist. After a rigorous classical education in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, she sought out Ralph Waldo Emerson, the most eminent philosopher and literary critic of the day. A vivid, brilliant conversationalist, Fuller applied many of Emerson’s Transcendental ideas to women in a series of open discussions. These conversations, which included some of the finest minds of the day, pioneered the idea that women could argue philosophy on par with men, and that their opinions mattered. Fuller’s feminist tract, Women in the Nineteenth Century, grew out of these conversations. She and Emerson founded The Dial, and when it folded, she was summoned by Horace Greeley to write for the New York Tribune. She was sent to Rome as foreign correspondent, and there met Marchese Giovanni Ossoli, a lieutenant in the Italian Unification Movement, whom she married. After the revolt failed, she set off for America, but perished when her ship was wrecked off Fire Island.
POEMS
Flaxman
