Beale, Catherine Hutton, editor. Catherine Hutton and Her Friends. Cornish Brothers.
61
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Helme | She was apparently born into the English lower middle class. Her novels reflect an interest in Scotland, a solid British patriotism, and a dislike of Presbyterianism
compared with the Anglican
church. |
Characters | Elizabeth Helme | The title-page bears an epigraph from James Thomson
, about the moral struggle of honour and aspiration against ease and luxury. It opens on an old-fashioned couple in their great Yorkshire house, Mr and Mrs... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Heyrick | She was born a Dissenter
and until her marriage attended the Presbyterian
church in East Bond Street, Leicester. John Wesley
visited the Coltman household during her youth. Later, during her widowhood, she became a Quaker
. Beale, Catherine Hutton, editor. Catherine Hutton and Her Friends. Cornish Brothers. 61 Aucott, Shirley. Women of Courage, Vision and Talent: lives in Leicester 1780 to 1925. Shirley Aucott. 121 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Susanna Hopton | Susanna's stepfather, whose name was Harcourt Leighton
, was a Shropshire man whose religious and political allegiances were the opposite of her royalist father's. He was a Presbyterian
in religion, and when the Civil War... |
Textual Features | Catherine Hubback | The later dangers which Agnes faces are chiefly theological: she moves towards Dissent
and specifically Presbyterianism
, but returns to the Church of England
, saved in part by a copy of The Christian Year... |
politics | Lucy Hutchinson | As a member of the Council of State (instituted after the king
's death as chief executive body) John Hutchinson
found himself with power over his old opposites and enemies of . . . the... |
Cultural formation | Lucy Hutchinson | She grew up in the Puritan
part of the Anglican
faith. She came to share some of the beliefs of the Baptist
s, and later still of the Presbyterian
s or Independents
. She then... |
Cultural formation | Sheila Kaye-Smith | From childhood SKS
was fervently religious. Her parents were Anglicans
(though her mother had been brought up a Presbyterian
). Walker, Dorothea. Sheila Kaye-Smith. Twayne. 18 |
Cultural formation | Anna Leonowens | AL
was Presbyterian
but also studied Hinduism and Buddhism. Dow, Leslie Smith. Anna Leonowens: A Life Beyond The King and I. Pottersfield. 126 |
Cultural formation | Liz Lochhead | A Scotswoman whose parents both came from industrial Lanarkshire, Lochhead describes her family as posh working class—my father wore a shirt and tie to work but he'd never have described himself as middle class... |
Cultural formation | Agnes Maule Machar | AMM
was a Presbyterian
like her parents (both Scottish born). Her moral outlook was inflected by liberal Christianity, and she actively supported Presbyterian missions in India. She was strongly influenced by the Social Gospel movement... |
Cultural formation | Shena Mackay | SM
came from the Scottish middle class, though her father sometimes worked at manual jobs while she was growing up. She says she was brought up with quite liberal values but with a Presbyterian
moral... |
Cultural formation | Sara Maitland | Brought up a Presbyterian
, SM
was received into the Anglo-Catholic church in 1972 (the year of her marriage and of her husband's appointment as a parish priest) and later became a Roman Catholic
. “Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC. |
Cultural formation | Olivia Manning | OM
's family was lower-middle-class. (The Braybrookes' biography remarks that having come from this narrowest, most prejudiced class in England . . . . she had successfully declassed herself.) Braybrooke, Neville, and Isobel English. Olivia Manning: A Life. Chatto and Windus. 187 |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Melvill | At the Presbyterian
religious gathering later called the communion of [or at] Shotts,EM
retired to pray privately in the bed (a curtained alcove), but then consented to pray aloud, while thousands gathered... |
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