Grizelda Elizabeth Cottnam Tonge, who wrote under the name Portia, (1803–1825) was a Nova Scotian poet who has been called the "highly-gifted songstress of Acadia." Tonge's poetic talent, combined with the tragic circumstances of her early death, built her reputation as a pioneer of Nova Scotian literature.[1]
Born in Windsor, Nova Scotia, Tonge was the daughter of William Cottnam Tonge, an orator. Her grandmother Martha Grace Cottnam Tonge and great grandmother Deborah Howe Cottnam were both poets. Although Tonge probably received little formal education, she was part of an educated family living in a university town.
In 1825, Tonge sailed to Demerara in what is now Guyana to join her father.[2] Soon after her arrival in South America, she died of a tropical disease.
Notable works
edit- "Lines composed at midnight . . . occasioned by the recollection of my sisters,"
- "To my dear grandmother, on her 80th birth day"
- "A hymn of praise"
- "Lines . . . composed in the church yard of Windsor, N.S., . . ."
- "Extempore lines, occasioned by seeing the corpse of Mary, youngest daughter of the Hon. James Fraser. . . ."
References
edit- ^ Canadian Biography Online - Grizelda Tonge
- ^ Thomas B. Vincent. "TONGE, GRIZELDA ELIZABETH COTTNAM".
Further reading
edit- David Curry. Some Literary Figures from Windsor’s Past: Deborah How Cottnam (“Portia”), Griselda Tonge & Sir Charles G.D. Roberts. West Hants Historical Society. 2006
- Gwendolyn Davies, "Researching Eighteenth-Century Maritime Women Writers: Deborah How Cottnam - A Case Study", in Working in Women's Archives: Researching Women's Private Literature and Archival Documents, ed. Helen M Buss and Marlene Kadar (Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2001), 35-50
- "Literary Culture in the Maritime Provinces", in History of the Book in Canada, vol. 1, 368-83