Harriet Mathew

This lady ranked among the distinguished blue-stockings of her day; was once known to half the Town, the polite and lettered part thereof, as the agreeable, fascinating, spirituelle Mrs. Mathew, as, in brief, one of the most 'gifted and elegant' of women.

As she does not, like her fair comrades, still flutter about the bookstalls among the half-remembered all-unread, and as no lettered contemporary has handed down her portrait, she has disappeared from us.

Henry Mathew, merit remembrance from the lovers of Art, as the first discoverers and fosterers of the genius of Flaxman, when a boy not yet in teens, and his introducer to more opulent patrons.... She was an encourager of musicians, a kind friend to young artists.

"[1]John Thomas Smith was introduced to Blake by Mrs Mathew and heard him read and sing his poetry on several occasions; it was here that the qualities of his voice and the reception of his audience were recorded in his contemporary biographical notes.

[2] Smith also notes she was "extremely zealous in promoting the celebrity of Blake" and was responsible, via her husband and his friends, for the printing of his Poetical Sketches (1783).

Harriet Mathew by John Flaxman c. 1783