Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 36.djvu/225

This page has been validated.
Marsh-Caldwell
219
Marshal

dington rectory on 24 Aug. 1864. He was married three times: first, in November 1806, to Maria, daughter of Mr. Tilson—she died 24 July 1833; secondly, on 21 April 1840, to Lady Louisa, third daughter of Charles, first earl of Cadogan—she died in August 1843; thirdly, on 3 March 1848, to the Honourable Louisa Horatia Powys, seventh daughter of Thomas, baron Lilford.

Besides numerous addresses, lectures, single sermons, speeches, introductions, and prefaces, Marsh printed:

  1. ‘A Short Catechism on the Collects,’ Colchester, 1821; third ed. 1824.
  2. ‘Select Passages from the Sermons and Conversations of a Clergyman [i.e. W. Marsh],’ 1823; another ed. 1828.
  3. ‘The Criterion. By J. Douglas,’ revised and abridged, 1824.
  4. ‘A few Plain Thoughts on Prophecy, particularly as it relates to the Latter Days,’ Colchester, 1840; third ed. 1843.
  5. ‘The Jews, or the Voice of the New Testament concerning them,’ Leamington, 1841.
  6. ‘Justification, or a Short Easy Method of ascertaining the Scriptural View of that important Doctrine,’ 1842.
  7. ‘Passages from Letters by a Clergyman on Jewish Prophetical and Scriptural Subjects,’ 1845.
  8. ‘The Church of Rome in the Days of St. Paul,’ lectures, 1853; two numbers only.
  9. ‘Invitation to United Prayer for the Outpouring of the Holy Spirit,’ 1854. Similar invitations were issued in 1857, 1859, 1862, and 1863.
  10. ‘The Right Choice, or the Difference between Worldly Diversions and Rational Recreations,’ 1857; another ed. 1859.
  11. ‘The Duty and Privilege of Prayer,’ 1859.
  12. ‘Eighty-sixth Birthday. Address on Spiritual Prosperity,’ 1861.
  13. ‘An Earnest Exhortation to Christians to Pray for the Pope,’ 1864.
  14. ‘A Brief Exposition of St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans,’ 1865.

[Life of Rev. W. Marsh, by his daughter, 1868, with portrait; Colvile's Warwickshire Worthies, 1869, pp. 529–33.]

G. C. B.


MARSH-CALDWELL, Mrs. ANNE (1791–1874), novelist, born in 1791, was the third daughter and fourth child of James Caldwell, J.P., of Linley Wood, Staffordshire, recorder of Newcastle-under-Lyme, and deputy-lieutenant of the county. Her mother was Elizabeth, daughter and coheiress of Thomas Stamford of Derby. In July 1817 Miss Caldwell married Arthur Cuthbert Marsh, latterly of Eastbury Lodge, Hertfordshire. Her husband was son of William Marsh, senior and sleeping partner in the London banking firm of Marsh, Stacey, & Graham, which was ruined by the gross misconduct in 1824 of Henry Fauntleroy [q. v.], a junior partner. There were seven children of the marriage. Mrs. Marsh wrote for her amusement from an early age, and at the suggestion of her friend, Miss Harriet Martineau, published her first novel, ‘Two Old Men's Tales,’ in 1834. Her husband died 23 Dec. 1849. On the death of her brother, James Stamford Caldwell, in 1858, Mrs. Marsh succeeded to the estate of Linley Wood, and resumed by royal license the surname of Caldwell in addition to that of Marsh. She died at Linley Wood, 5 Oct. 1874.

Mrs. Marsh was one of the most popular novelists of her time, and maintained that position for nearly a quarter of a century. Her novels were published anonymously, and are therefore difficult to identify. They are didactic in character, but possess some dramatic power (Blackwood, May 1855). They chiefly describe the upper middle class and the lesser aristocracy. ‘Mount Sorel,’ 1845, and ‘Emilia Wyndham,’ 1846, are perhaps her best works. Many of her novels passed through several editions, and a collection of them, filling fifteen volumes, was published in Hodgson's ‘Parlour Library,’ 1857. She wrote also two historical works, ‘The Protestant Reformation in France and the Huguenots,’ 1847, and a translation of the ‘Song of Roland, as chanted before the Battle of Hastings by the minstrel Taillefer,’ 1854.

The titles of Mrs. Marsh's other works are:

  1. 'Tales of the Woods and Fields,' 1838.
  2. 'Triumphs of Time,'1844.
  3. 'Aubrey,' 1845.
  4. 'Father Darcy, an Historical Romance,' 1846.
  5. 'Norman's Bridge, or the Modern Midas,' 1847.
  6. 'Angela, or the Captain's Daughter,' 1848.
  7. 'The Previsions of Lady Evelyn.'
  8. 'Mordaunt Hall,' 1849.
  9. 'The Wilmingtons,' 1849.
  10. 'Lettice Arnold,' 1850.
  11. 'Time the Avenger,' 1851.
  12. 'Ravenscliffe,' 1851.
  13. 'Castle Avon,' 1852.
  14. 'The Heiress of Haughton,' 1856.
  15. 'Evelyn Marston,' 1856.
  16. 'The Rose of Ashurst,' 1867.

Mrs. Marsh-Caldwell has been wrongly credited with Mrs. Stretton's 'Margaret and her Bridesmaids,' and other books published by the author of that work.

[Allibone's Dict. ii. 1224-6; Ann. Reg. 1874, 171; Burke's Landed Gentry. iv. 597-8; Athenæum, 1874. ii. 512-13; information from Mrs. Marsh-Caldwald's daughter.]

E. L.


MARSHAL, ANDREW (1742–1813), physician and anatomist, born in 1742 near Newburgh in Fifeshire, was son of a farmer. He was educated at Newburgh and Abernethy, and was at first intended for a farmer; but when he was about sixteen he decided