Rebecca Hey (née Roberts), also known as Mrs Hey, (1797–1859) was an English botanical artist and poet.
Biography
Rebecca Hey was born in
Leeds and baptised at St. Peter on 21 April 1797. She was the third daughter of merchant Thomas Roberts and Esther Lucy.[1] She married
William Hey III (1796-1875) in 1821.[2] He was an apothecary-surgeon, who became principal surgeon at
Leeds General Infirmary in 1830, and with other medical practitioners set up the
Leeds School of Medicine in 1831.[3] William Hey was one of the original 300 Fellows of the
Royal College of Surgeons in 1843.[4]
Rebecca Hey's first book was called The Moral of Flowers, which was an encyclopaedia of English flowers. Each article was written by her and was preceded by a colour engraving of a painting of the flower by artist William Clark, former draughtsman and engraver of the
London Horticultural Society.[5] In the preface Hey credits the authors
Sir J. E. Smith and
Mr Drummond for the botanical information included in the descriptions.[6]Moral of Flowers focuses on flower poems that convey religious and moral messages, with a modest amount of botanical information including flowers' scientific names. Hey’s purpose is to “draw such a moral from each flower that is introduced as its appearance, habits, or properties might be supposed to suggest".[7] The book was popular and was reprinted in 1835 and 1849.[8]
Hey's next book was an encyclopaedia of trees, this time using her own paintings as well as her poems. Her works were originally published anonymously.[9]
Her final publication Holy Places, and Other Poems focused more on religion and the proceeds from the book went to Special Missions in India.[10]
Selected works
The Moral of Flowers (London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman, 1833)[11]
Sylvan Musings; or The Spirit of the Woods (London: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans, 1837)[12]
Recollections of the Lakes, and Other Poems (London: Tilt & Bogue, 1841)[13]
Holy Places, and Other Poems (London: J. Hatchard, 1859)
References
^"Hey, Rebecca". jacksonbibliography.library.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 30 November 2021.