Page:A Biographical Dictionary of the Celebrated Women of Every Age and Country (1804).djvu/513

Rh 6 vols. 1733; 3, Les Veillées de Thessalie, 4 vols. 1741; 4, Mémoires Secret, et Intrigues de la Cour de France sous Charles VII. 1741; 5, Anecdotes de la Cour de François I. 8 vols. 1748; 6, Marie d'Angleterre, Reine d'Ecosse, 1749; 7, Annales Galantes de la Cour de Henri II, 9 vols. 1749; 8, Mourat et Turquia, Histoire Africaine, 1752; 9, La Vie du brave Crillon, 2 vols.

L'Advocat's Dictionary, &c.

M.

lady, from intuitive fondness for learning, addicted herself very early in life to reading history, especially that of the Greeks and Romans, from which she imbibed the enthusiastic attachment to liberty so strongly displayed in her writings. In 1760, she married Dr. George Macauley, a physician in London, some of whose writings appear in the Medical Observations. By this gentleman she had one daughter, who was afterwards married to Captain Gregory, in the East-India service.

In 1778, she married secondly, Mr. William Graham. Her first literary production was the History of England from James I. to George I. in 8 vols. 4to. the first published in 1763, the last in 1783. This is a violent attack on the whole race of the Stuarts, and was very popular at the time it first came out; 2, Remarks on Hobbes' Radiments of Government and Society, 8 vols.; 3, Loose Remarks