Dorothy Leigh

Dorothy Leigh
BornDorothy Kemp (or Kempe)
DOB unknown
England
Diedc. 1616
England
OccupationWriter
Notable worksThe Mother's Blessing
SpouseRalph Leigh

Dorothy Leigh (née Kemp or Kempe; died c. 1616) was a 17th-century British writer remembered for The Mother's Blessing (1616).

Biography

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Dorothy Kemp (or Kempe) was the daughter of William Kemp (or Robert Kemp), of Finchingfield, Essex. She married Ralph Leigh of Cheshire (or Ralph Lee of Sussex), a soldier under the Earl of Essex at Cádiz.[1][2]

The Mother's Blessing was dedicated to the Princess Elizabeth, wife to the Count Palatine. It includes a prefixed a poem entitled "Counsell to my Children, George, John, and William Leigh". In 1626, her son William was appointed Rector of Groton, in Suffolk.[1]

Dorothy Leigh died in or before 1616.[3]

Selected works

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  • 1616, The mothers blessing, or, The godly counsaile of a gentle-woman not long since deceased, left behind her for her children : containing many good exhortations, and godly admonitions, profitable for all parents to leave as a legacy to their children, but especially for those, who by reason of their young yeeres stand most in need of instruction

References

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  1. ^ a b Earwaker, John Parsons (1876). Local gleanings relating to Lancashire and Chesire (Public domain ed.). pp. 46–47.
  2. ^ The Society (1846). Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society (Public domain ed.). The Society p=156.
  3. ^ "The Mothers Blessing by Dorothy Leigh - Folgerpedia". folgerpedia.folger.edu. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
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