Angelina Grimké was not only an author, poet, and essayist, she was a passionate abolitionist and a women's rights advocate. Angelina’s work was romanticism because it emphasized her expression of opinion and separation or rebellion against social rules and standards. On August 30, 1835, Angelina wrote a life changing letter to William Lloyd Garrison, a leader in the American Anti-Slavery Society and editor of The Liberator, an abolitionist newspaper. Surprisingly, her letter was printed in his newspaper and was reprinted. Angelina and her letter were famous and her letter later became part of a popularly-read antislavery pamphlet. After this numerous people were angry with her work and tried
Angelina Grimké was not only an author, poet, and essayist, she was a passionate abolitionist and a women's rights advocate. Angelina’s work was romanticism because it emphasized her expression of opinion and separation or rebellion against social rules and standards. On August 30, 1835, Angelina wrote a life changing letter to William Lloyd Garrison, a leader in the American Anti-Slavery Society and editor of The Liberator, an abolitionist newspaper. Surprisingly, her letter was printed in his newspaper and was reprinted. Angelina and her letter were famous and her letter later became part of a popularly-read antislavery pamphlet. After this numerous people were angry with her work and tried