Lydia Mackenzie Falconer Miller or Harriet Myrtle (1812 – 11 March 1876) was a Scottish children's writer.
Biography
She was born Lydia Mackenzie Falconer to Elizabeth Lydia McLeod (''d''. 1865), a schoolteacher, and her husband, an
Inverness
Inverness (; from the gd, Inbhir Nis , meaning "Mouth of the River Ness"; sco, Innerness) is a city in the Scottish Highlands. It is the administrative centre for The Highland Council and is regarded as the capital of the Highlands. Histori ...
-based merchant, William Fraser (1789–1828). She was baptised in 1812. After her father's business failed her mother's family helped pay for her education.
[ She was schooled at Inverness Academy and later in Edinburgh, where she lodged with the musician ]George Thomson George Thomson may refer to:
Government and politics
* George Thomson (MP for Southwark) (c. 1607–1691), English merchant and Parliamentarian soldier, official and politician
* George Thomson, Baron Thomson of Monifieth (1921–2008), Scottish p ...
, a friend of the poet Robert Burns.
After some time in England she returned to Scotland, setting up a small school in Cromarty, where her family then lived. In Cromarty she met Hugh Miller. Both were well read and intelligent; she had lived in Edinburgh's literary society. Her family objected but they were engaged in 1832 and they married on 7 January 1837. Together they had four surviving children. Her husband was appointed to manage the periodical ''The Witness'' in Edinburgh and Lydia assisted and wrote contributions for the publication.
Under the pseudonym Mrs Harriet Myrtle, she wrote about 20 educational and moral stories for children which were often adventurous and light-hearted.
In 1847 she anonymously published her only adult novel, ''Passages in the Life of an English Heiress, or, Recollections of Disruption Times in Scotland'', the background drawn from her own and her husband's upbringing and their discussions. It was unsuccessful but considered a brave attempt to write fiction from an evangelical perspective at a time when most Scottish evangelical Presbyterians considered the fiction to be corrupting and intrinsically immoral.
Her husband, unwell and depressed, possibly fearful of insanity, shot himself at their home in Edinburgh on 23 December 1856. Their daughter, the poet and novelist was said to have been affected by this the rest of her life.[W. G. Blaikie, ‘Davidson, Harriet Miller (1839–1883)’, rev. Pam Perkins, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 200]
accessed 8 Dec 2014
/ref> She completed the publication of her husband's unfinished works, and assisted Peter Bayne
Peter Bayne (1830–1896) was a Scottish author. He used the pseudonym Ellis Brandt.
Life
Bayne was born at the manse, Fodderty, Ross-shire on 19 October 1830, the second son of Isabella Jane Duguid and Reverend Charles John Bayne (1797-1832), t ...
write her husband's biography. In widowhood, she was financially assisted by a civil list pension that was given to her in 1857. She moved to Inverness in 1863 where she continued to write for children.[Marian McKenzie Johnston, ‘Miller , Lydia Mackenzie Falconer (bap. 1812, d. 1876)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 200]
accessed 2 Feb 2015
/ref>
Lydia Miller died on 11 March 1876, at her son-in-law's manse at Lochinver, Sutherland, and was buried on 20 March beside her husband in the Grange cemetery in Edinburgh.
Selected works
* '' Adventure of a Kite''
* ''The water lily''
* ''Passages in the life of an English heiress : or, Recollections of disruption times in Scotland.'' (1847)
* ''Two dear friends''
* ''The duck house''
* ''Home and its pleasures : simple stories for young people''
* ''Bertha and the bird''
* ''Little Amy's birthday''
* ''Going to the cottage''
* ''A story-book of country scenes''
* ''The little foundling : and other tales''
* ''The man of snow and other tales''
* ''Amusing tales for young people''
* ''A story book of the seasons: Spring''
References
Further reading
*
External links
Onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu
*
Online books by Harriett Myrtle
{{DEFAULTSORT:Miller, Lydia Mackenzie Falconer
1812 births
1876 deaths
British children's writers
British women children's writers
19th-century British writers
19th-century British women writers
Scottish children's writers
19th-century Scottish women writers
19th-century Scottish writers