William Godwin's Diary

Wollstonecraft, Mary (Godwin)

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This person is mentioned in the diary a total of 280 times, but was not at home (N) 6 times, and was a venue (V) 51 times.

You may also examine their meals and meetings in more detail.

1791

13  November  1791

1792

15  March  1792 22  September  1792

1796

8  January  1796 14  January  1796 13  February  1796 (NV) 14  April  1796 15  April  1796 (V) 21  April  1796 (V) 22  April  1796 22  April  1796 23  April  1796 (V) 23  April  1796 29  April  1796 (V) 6  May  1796 (NV) 7  May  1796 13  May  1796 (V) 15  May  1796 19  May  1796 21  May  1796 (V) 24  May  1796 (V) 28  May  1796 (V) 1  June  1796 2  June  1796 (NV) 8  June  1796 (NV) 9  June  1796 10  June  1796 (V) 16  June  1796 (V) 18  June  1796 (V) 21  June  1796 22  June  1796 (V) 24  June  1796 28  June  1796 (V) 30  June  1796 1  July  1796 (NV) 13  July  1796 16  July  1796 24  July  1796 (V) 25  July  1796 (V) 26  July  1796 28  July  1796 30  July  1796 (V) 1  August  1796 (V) 2  August  1796 (V) 3  August  1796 (V) 5  August  1796 (V) 6  August  1796 (V) 6  August  1796 8  August  1796 (V) 10  August  1796 (NV) 11  August  1796 (V) 13  August  1796 (V) 15  August  1796 16  August  1796 17  August  1796 (V) 18  August  1796 20  August  1796 20  August  1796 21  August  1796 23  August  1796 24  August  1796 25  August  1796 (V) 26  August  1796 27  August  1796 29  August  1796 30  August  1796 31  August  1796 1  September  1796 3  September  1796 4  September  1796 5  September  1796 6  September  1796 8  September  1796 9  September  1796 9  September  1796 10  September  1796 11  September  1796 11  September  1796 12  September  1796 (V) 12  September  1796 13  September  1796 14  September  1796 15  September  1796 16  September  1796 17  September  1796 21  September  1796 22  September  1796 23  September  1796 24  September  1796 26  September  1796 26  September  1796 28  September  1796 28  September  1796 29  September  1796 29  September  1796 30  September  1796 1  October  1796 3  October  1796 (V) 4  October  1796 5  October  1796 6  October  1796 7  October  1796 8  October  1796 (V) 9  October  1796 10  October  1796 22  October  1796 (V) 24  October  1796 25  October  1796 29  October  1796 29  October  1796 30  October  1796 30  October  1796 (V) 31  October  1796 31  October  1796 (V) 2  November  1796 (V) 3  November  1796 3  November  1796 (V) 5  November  1796 (V) 7  November  1796 9  November  1796 (V) 11  November  1796 11  November  1796 12  November  1796 12  November  1796 14  November  1796 15  November  1796 (V) 15  November  1796 17  November  1796 (V) 18  November  1796 19  November  1796 20  November  1796 20  November  1796 21  November  1796 22  November  1796 23  November  1796 23  November  1796 24  November  1796 25  November  1796 26  November  1796 28  November  1796 29  November  1796 30  November  1796 (V) 30  November  1796 1  December  1796 2  December  1796 3  December  1796 3  December  1796 7  December  1796 8  December  1796 9  December  1796 (V) 10  December  1796 11  December  1796 13  December  1796 15  December  1796 16  December  1796 17  December  1796 (V) 18  December  1796 20  December  1796 21  December  1796 22  December  1796 23  December  1796 24  December  1796 25  December  1796 26  December  1796 27  December  1796 28  December  1796 (V) 28  December  1796 30  December  1796 31  December  1796

1797

2  January  1797 3  January  1797 3  January  1797 5  January  1797 6  January  1797 7  January  1797 9  January  1797 10  January  1797 11  January  1797 11  January  1797 12  January  1797 13  January  1797 16  January  1797 17  January  1797 18  January  1797 19  January  1797 21  January  1797 22  January  1797 23  January  1797 25  January  1797 26  January  1797 28  January  1797 30  January  1797 31  January  1797 1  February  1797 3  February  1797 5  February  1797 6  February  1797 7  February  1797 7  February  1797 (V) 8  February  1797 9  February  1797 10  February  1797 12  February  1797 14  February  1797 16  February  1797 20  February  1797 22  February  1797 23  February  1797 25  February  1797 1  March  1797 2  March  1797 4  March  1797 7  March  1797 8  March  1797 9  March  1797 11  March  1797 12  March  1797 13  March  1797 17  March  1797 20  March  1797 22  March  1797 23  March  1797 24  March  1797 25  March  1797 27  March  1797 28  March  1797 29  March  1797 30  March  1797 31  March  1797 2  April  1797 3  April  1797 4  April  1797 (V) 5  April  1797 10  April  1797 12  April  1797 16  April  1797 16  April  1797 19  April  1797 20  April  1797 23  April  1797 24  April  1797 25  April  1797 26  April  1797 28  April  1797 1  May  1797 6  May  1797 10  May  1797 14  May  1797 15  May  1797 16  May  1797 19  May  1797 19  May  1797 23  May  1797 28  May  1797 28  May  1797 21  June  1797 25  June  1797 27  June  1797 2  July  1797 4  July  1797 4  July  1797 7  July  1797 12  July  1797 12  July  1797 18  July  1797 21  July  1797 (V) 22  July  1797 23  July  1797 25  July  1797 26  July  1797 29  July  1797 30  July  1797 31  July  1797 3  August  1797 11  August  1797 15  August  1797 18  August  1797 29  August  1797 9  September  1797 10  September  1797

  • Name: Wollstonecraft, Mary (Godwin)
  • Gender: Female
  • Birth Date: 27  April  1759
  • Death Date: 10  September  1797
  • Occupation: author
  • Occupation: advocate of women's rights

Godwin refers to Wollstonecraft as either 'Wolstencraft' or 'Wt', using a form of his personal shorthand developed throughout the diary. However, when referring to their sexual relationship, she is referred to as 'elle' (For a complete account of Godwin and Wollstonecraft’s sexual relationship, and Godwin’s codes of dashes, dots, and indications in French see St. Clair, pp. 497–503). Using foreign words, generally in Latin or French, was Godwin’s general practice when referring to sensitive or discrete matters. Other examples of this, with reference to Wollstonecraft, are three mentions of 'fievre' and 'frieze', probably indicating matters of health, and 'humour' and 'bonne' which have been interpreted by St Clair as references to Wollstonecraft’s recurring bouts of depression. ( IThere are four diary entries for Imlay, although these in fact refer to Wollstonecraft. See the discussion in the biographical note on Imlay).

The examples of 'chez elle', indicating an excursion to Wollstonecraft’s home, and also 'chez moi' are easily certifiable through cross-referencing surviving correspondences. Curiously, however, there are three mentions of 'chez elle' in entries that follow the premature death of Wollstonecraft in 1797 that occur on 25 June 1798, 26 June 1798, and 9 July 1798. At the time of these entries, Godwin was conducting research for his volume on the life of Wollstonecraft, Memoirs of the Author of the Vindication of the Rights of Women. Godwin and Wollstonecraft maintained separate residences, even after their marriage: *Wollstonecraft moved into Godwin's house in the Polygon in Somers Town, London, while he—respecting their mutual desire to combine conjugal intimacy with continued independence—rented a study nearby for use during the day. (DNB) Various letters were exchanged during the first months after their marriage, including requests for books. Wollstonecraft also announced her visits to Godwin’s household: 'I shall probably knock at your door in my way to Opie's'. (to Godwin, from Mary Wollstonecraft (London, 20 April 1797) – in Collected Letters, p. 410). Godwin himself states in Memoirs: It is perhaps scarcely necessary to mention, that, influenced by the ideas I had long entertained upon the subject of cohabitation, I engaged an apartment, about twenty doors from our house in the Polygon, Somers Town, which I designed for the purpose of my study and literary occupations. (Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman. p. 173). Locke states in his biography of Godwin: Godwin moved his own rooms further up Chalton Street, to No. 17 in the Evesham buildings, while Mary went with Fanny to Clarendon Square right at the top of the road where a set of thirty-two paired houses, four stories high and linked by wedge-shaped wings, formed an enclosed shape, gardens in the middle, of sixteen sides…it was known as the 'Polygon'….it stood on the very edge of town, separated from the villages of Camden town and Chalk Farm by market gardens and open fields. This rural setting would be Godwin’s base for the next ten years…his practice was to leave the Polygon immediately on rising, to work in the Evesham buildings through the morning, and visit friends in the afternoon, not returning home until after dinner. Then the evenings would be their time together, seeming 'to combine, in a considerable degree, the novelty and lively sensation of a visit, with the more delicious and heartfelt pleasures of domestic life.' (Locke, p. 125) This would indicate that the post-mortem 'chez elle' visits might have been research trips for Memoirs, particularly since Godwin revises the book the day after the 26th June visit. A note in the Diary for 20 September 1797, however, states that Godwin removes from Evesham Buildings, making the Polygon his sole residence. Another possibility is that there was a mistake in Godwin’s own transcription of the diary, though this is less likely. We have chosen not to code these post-mortem examples of 'chez elle' as Wollstonecraft for obvious reasons. However, it is likely that they indicate a visit to her home and should probably have a 'place name' tag. They will also appear in single-word searches along with the list of other examples of 'chez elle', though separate from lists of occurrences of Wollstonecraft..

For other members of the Wollstonecraft family, see note to WOL03.

  • DNB
  • St Clair
  • Locke
  • The Collected Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft, ed. by Janet Todd (New York: Columbia University Press, 2003).
  • William Godwin, Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman (London: Joseph Johnson, 1798).

This table lists the people this person is most frequently noted with in the diary.

Name Number of Meetings
Holcroft, Thomas 13
Hays, Mary 11
Robinson, Mary (née Darby, Perdita, Polly Derby) 8
Montagu, Basil 6
Alderson, Amelia (Opie) 6
Opie, John 6
Reveley, Maria (Gisborne) (née James) 6
Tuthill, Sir George Leman 5
Inchbald, Elizabeth 5
Nicholson, William 4
Twiss, Francis 4
Taylor, John 4
Cotton, 4
Fenwick, Elizabeth (Eliza) (née Jaco, pseudonym Reverend David Blair) 4
Fenwick, John 4
Tarleton, Sir Banastre (baronet) 3
Tooke, William 3
Horne Tooke, John 3
Johnson, Joseph 3
Godwin, Hannah 3
Wolcot, Dr John (pseudonym Peter Pindar) 3
Newton, John Frank 3
Marshall, James 2
Plumptre, Annabella (Bell) 2
Lawrence, Sir Thomas 2
Parry, 2
Stoddart, John 2
Barry, James 2
Robinson, George 2
Paine, Thomas 2
Newton, Cornelia (née Boinville) 2
Stewart, John (Walking Stewart) 2
Barlow, Joel 2
Dyson, George 2
Cristall, Anne 2
Reveley, Willey 2
Dibbin, Henry 2
Godwin, Joseph 1
Smith, Charlotte (née Turner) 1
Plumptre, Anne 1
Otton, 1
Cooper, Elizabeth Priscilla 1
Banks, Thomas 1
Moore, C[harles]? 1
Phillips, 1
Harwood, Colonel William 1
Kearsley, Thomas 1
Fromont, Charlotte Maria 1
Scott, Thomas Hobbes 1
Wedgwood, Josiah (jr.) 1
Carlisle, Sir Anthony 1
Tooke, William 1
Warner, John 1
Fergusson, Robert Cutlar 1
Fuseli, Henry (Johann Heinrich Füssli) 1
Woodhouse, Robert 1
Southey, Robert 1
Tobin, James Webbe 1
Harvey, Thomas 1
Wedgwood, Thomas 1
Hamilton, Samuel 1
Jones, Louisa 1
Brown, William Cullen 1
Northcote, James 1
Cooper, Thomas (Abthorpe) 1
Cristall, Joshua 1
Moore, John 1
Christie, Thomas 1
Dealtry, Peregrine (Perry) 1
Mackintosh, Sir James (of Kyllachy) 1
Parr, Catherine Jane 1
Parr, Sarah Anne (Wynne) 1
Parr, Samuel 1
Smith, George 1
Christie, Rebecca (Thomson) 1
Petion, Jerome 1
Marsh, Charles 1
Bosville, William 1
Pratt, Samuel Jackson (pseudonym Courtney Melmoth) 1
Bourgeois, Peter Francis 1
Jerningham, 1
Francis, Sir Philip 1
Chalmers, Alexander 1
Gregory, George 1
Porson, Richard 1
Barbauld, Anna Letitia (née Aikin) 1
Boaden, James 1
Allen, Robert 1
Weld, 1
Este, Reverend Charles 1
Malkin, Benjamin Heath 1
Jardine, Major Alexander 1