Gotch, Rosamund Brunel. Maria, Lady Callcott, The Creator of ’Little Arthur’. J. Murray.
4, 159, 285
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | A. S. Byatt | |
Cultural formation | Mary Caesar | |
Cultural formation | Maria Callcott | |
Cultural formation | Ada Cambridge | AC
worshipped in the AnglicanChurch
both as a child and adult, and her early novellas, hymns, and poems emphasize her strong religious faith. Bradstock, Margaret, and Louise Wakeling. Rattling the Orthodoxies: A Life of Ada Cambridge. Penguin. 5 |
Cultural formation | Ada Cambridge | Critics Margaret Bradstock
and Louise Wakeling
write that AC
's faith was strongly challenged by the deaths of her first two children: this was probably . . . the beginning of her questioning of Divine... |
Textual Features | Ada Cambridge | For the wife of an Anglican
clergyman, the content was certainly unexpected. Indeed, as A. G. Stephens
has noted: The shock to the Rev. George Cross
[her husband] was overwhelming. Beilby, Raymond, and Cecil Hadgraft. Ada Cambridge, Tasma and Rosa Praed. Oxford University Press. 6 Vickery, Ann. “A ’Lonely Crossing’: Approaching Nineteenth- Century Australian Women’s Poetry”. Victorian Poetry, Vol. 40 , No. 1, pp. 33-54. 40.1 (Spring 2002): 41 |
Cultural formation | Rosa Nouchette Carey | In religion RNC
was an earnest HighAnglican
. Her friend Helen Marion Burnside
said she had never known a writer who so consistently lived her religion, to the extent of putting family duties before her writing. Wilson, Katharina M. et al., editors. Women Writers of Great Britain and Europe: An Encyclopedia. Garland. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Carter | |
Cultural formation | Barbara Cartland | |
Cultural formation | Willa Cather | WC
was proud to be an American, whose family, Irish in origin, had been in Virginia since colonial times. Lee, Hermione. Willa Cather: A Life Saved Up. Virago. 24 |
Cultural formation | Jane Cave | JC
, daughter of Welsh and English parents, Schürer, Norbert. “Jane Cave Winscom: Provincial Poetry and the Metropolitan Connection”. Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Vol. 36 , No. 3, pp. 415-31. 417 |
Cultural formation | Lady Jane Cavendish | LJC
was born to privilege and her father's career took her into the highest ranks of English society. He professed himself a devout member of the Church of England (into which his children followed him)... |
Cultural formation | Margaret Cavendish | She has sometimes been said to be a Catholic (perhaps because her husband's family had long had leanings that way); but she was an Anglican
who explained in her Philosophical Letters that she followed the... |
Cultural formation | Dorothea Celesia | Her father was Scottish in origin and had changed his name to Mallet from Malloch (a fact that was held against him by politically-motivated satirists). Dorothea grew up English and became Genoese by marriage. She... |
Cultural formation | Marianne Chambers |
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