Anna Harriette Leonowens (1834–1915)
Author of The English Governess at the Siamese Court
About the Author
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Works by Anna Harriette Leonowens
Our Asiatic Cousins 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Edwards, Anna Harriette Emma (born)
- Birthdate
- 1834-11-05
- Date of death
- 1915-01-19
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- governess
travel writer
memoirist
lecturer
social activist - Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Ahmadnagar, India (now Pakistan)
- Places of residence
- Bombay, India
Bangkok, Thailand
New York, New York, USA
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Montréal, Québec, Canada (death)
Singapore (show all 7)
Australia - Place of death
- Montréal, Québec, Canada
Members
Reviews
The English governess at the Siamese court; being recollections of six years in the royal palace at Bangkok by Anna Harriette Leonowens
Mrs. Leonowens experiences have been romanticized in a subsequent novel by Margaret Landon (Anna and the King of Siam) and in movies (1946 and 1999). If you start reading this book you should not expect to find a romance novel, a memoir, a psychological study, a gossip column, a rendering of royal palace grapevine talk. The book contains none of these things.
Rather imagine yourself visiting Mrs. Leonowens for tea on several occasions and asking her: 'What was it like?'
You know something of show more her background of course. She lost her husband when her children were still small. Instead of coming back to the civilized world like any normal woman would do, she went to Siam for 6 years no less! By request of his royal majesty the king she taught english to his awful amount of children and (dare you think it) the ladies of his harem. You shudder to think of her being there, a woman alone. You somehow question the sanity of the woman. Still, Mrs. Leonowens must be thought of as one of us, a respectable woman. And the position at a royal palace must be thought of as a distinction, even if it is a court in a heathen country. And oh, those people, the heat! You cannot imagine (but think you can) what she has suffered.
And so you have a morbid curiosity. To hear her say it.
And Mrs. Leonowens tells you how she came to be there, her journey, where she lived. What the country is like. How it is governed. What the people are like, what the social structure is, what they believe (they are not christians). What Siam's history is. How the king came to be king. What kind of ruler the king is. What the children were like. And yes, she did meet the ladies of the harem, and she tells you some of their lot in life. She tells you what kind of crops and exports Siam has. How they dispose of their dead. She tells you about his eldest son, named Chulalongkorn. She tells you about the king's grief when a lovely child princess died very sadly. She tells you something of her dealings with the king himself. She even shows you some of the king's letters. But she is very discreet. She tells you something of a most extraordinary structure in Cambodia (Angkor Wat she calls it).
They are amazing tales she tells. And she tells her stories well.
You think that Mrs. Leonowens' occupation of teacher suits her intelligence, because you notice how much she has knows about Siam, how much she has seen and heard. She does not spare the heathens in some of her more gruelling tales, but you can tell she also has an admiration of sorts for this strange country. Still, you thank the lord that you live in a christian country.
You cannot avoid noticing how tired she looks. Between the lines you hear how lonely it must have been, independent and headstrong woman as she is. And you are glad she is safely back in civilized country. show less
Rather imagine yourself visiting Mrs. Leonowens for tea on several occasions and asking her: 'What was it like?'
You know something of show more her background of course. She lost her husband when her children were still small. Instead of coming back to the civilized world like any normal woman would do, she went to Siam for 6 years no less! By request of his royal majesty the king she taught english to his awful amount of children and (dare you think it) the ladies of his harem. You shudder to think of her being there, a woman alone. You somehow question the sanity of the woman. Still, Mrs. Leonowens must be thought of as one of us, a respectable woman. And the position at a royal palace must be thought of as a distinction, even if it is a court in a heathen country. And oh, those people, the heat! You cannot imagine (but think you can) what she has suffered.
And so you have a morbid curiosity. To hear her say it.
And Mrs. Leonowens tells you how she came to be there, her journey, where she lived. What the country is like. How it is governed. What the people are like, what the social structure is, what they believe (they are not christians). What Siam's history is. How the king came to be king. What kind of ruler the king is. What the children were like. And yes, she did meet the ladies of the harem, and she tells you some of their lot in life. She tells you what kind of crops and exports Siam has. How they dispose of their dead. She tells you about his eldest son, named Chulalongkorn. She tells you about the king's grief when a lovely child princess died very sadly. She tells you something of her dealings with the king himself. She even shows you some of the king's letters. But she is very discreet. She tells you something of a most extraordinary structure in Cambodia (Angkor Wat she calls it).
They are amazing tales she tells. And she tells her stories well.
You think that Mrs. Leonowens' occupation of teacher suits her intelligence, because you notice how much she has knows about Siam, how much she has seen and heard. She does not spare the heathens in some of her more gruelling tales, but you can tell she also has an admiration of sorts for this strange country. Still, you thank the lord that you live in a christian country.
You cannot avoid noticing how tired she looks. Between the lines you hear how lonely it must have been, independent and headstrong woman as she is. And you are glad she is safely back in civilized country. show less
The English Governess and the Siamese Court: The True Story Behind 'The King and I' by Anna Harriette Leonowens
The interesting thing about this book is, that it contains the real memoirs of Anna Leonowens, who was a teacher of the royal children of King Rama IV. However, many people doubt if she wrote her real memoirs. They believe that she mixes fact and fiction. Whatever may be true, I get the impression that her memoirs are real. That makes the book worthwhile. Only three stars, because the style of writing is quite old-fashioned and nowadays not really gripping. A historic document.
English schoolteacher Anna Leonowens has traveled to Siam to educate the 58 children of King Mongkit. If she has preconceived ideas about the East, the King has similar notions about the West. But amid the danger of growing political unrest, their respect for each other slowly turns into something more. PG-13 147 minutes Jodie Foster Chow Yun-Fat
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- Rating
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- ISBNs
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