Matilda Leathes

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Matilda Leathes, née Butt (1830-1922) was a British novelist. She also published as Mrs. Stanley Leathes.

Life[edit]

Matilda Butt was born in 1830 in Swansea.[1] She was the daughter of John Martin Butt, rector of East Garston in Berkshire,[2] and a niece of the novelist Mary Martha Sherwood.[1] On 6 July 1858 she married the Hebrew scholar Stanley Leathes.[2] Their children included Stanley Mordaunt Leathes and John Beresford Leathes.

She died on 17 November 1922 at Box, Wiltshire.[3]

Works[edit]

  • Ruth Levison. London: Joseph Masters, 1860.
  • (as the author of 'Ruth Levison') Charity at home. A tale. London: Joseph Masters, 1863.
  • Soimême: a story of a wilful life. London: Rivingtons, 1869.
  • Penelope: or, Morning clouds dispersed. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1873.
  • (as the author of 'Letty Deane') Our village worthies: or, Stories of village life. London: S.P.C.K., 1876.
  • The girls of Bredon, and Manor House stories. London: S.P.C.K., 1877.
  • On the doorsteps, or, Crispin's story. London: J. F. Shaw, 1880.
  • All among the daisies. London: J. F. Shaw, 1881.
  • Jack and Jill of our own day. London: J. F. Shaw & Co., 1882. Illustrated by Madeleine Erwin.
  • Ingle-nook stories. London: J. F. Shaw & Co., 1883. Illustrated by Madeleine Erwin.
  • The caged linnet: or, Love's labour not lost. London: J. F. Shaw, 1883.
  • Other lives than ours : fables in prose. London: J. F. Shaw, 1884.
  • Afloat: a story. London: J. F. Shaw, 1886
  • Over the hills and far away. London: J. F. Shaw, 1887.
  • To-morrow : a story. London: J. F. Shaw, 1887.
  • Dody and Joss, or, All's well that ends well. London, 1889.
  • Holidays in Summer and Winter. London: Shaw & Co., 1890.
  • Miss Limpett's lodgers. London : Religious Tract Society, 1895. Penny tales for the people, no. 87.
  • Zetty Craig, or, no cross no crown . Edinburgh: Nelson and Sons, 1898.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Author Information: Matilda Leathes, At the Circulating Library. Accessed 7 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Leathes, Stanley". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/16252. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ 'Deaths', The Times, 21 November 1922.