Crabbe, George. Selected Letters and Journals. Editors Faulkner, Thomas C. and Rhonda L. Blair, Clarendon Press.
117, 194
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Textual Production | Mary Anne Schimmelpenninck | The British Library
copy of this translation by MAS
is 1200 a. 30, has a manuscript note giving the original author's name. The pamphlet ends with a list of other works by MAS
. |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Heyrick | One manuscript note in the British Library
copy ascribes this to Eliza Coltman (which could mean either EH
, called by her birth name, or her mother
), while another note re-ascribes it to Mr... |
Textual Production | Mary Rich, Countess of Warwick | The manuscript of her meditations is now in the British Library
. |
Textual Production | Lady Anne Barnard | Her South African writings are only the most striking of a huge mass of LAB
's personal narratives. At the end of her life she worked hard to burn and put my papers in order... |
Textual Production | Alethea Lewis | AL
's surviving correspondence with George Crabbe
is now British Library
MS Egerton 3709A and Bodleian
MS Autog. c. 9. The former also contains his correspondence with Mary Leadbeater
. Crabbe, George. Selected Letters and Journals. Editors Faulkner, Thomas C. and Rhonda L. Blair, Clarendon Press. 117, 194 |
Textual Production | Hester Mulso Chapone | HMC
's surviving letters span the years both before and after her marriage. Apart from her best-known letters, exchanged with Richardson
himself, Richardson's circle, and other Bluestockings of the original generation, she corresponded with Frances Burney |
Textual Production | Eliza Fenwick | EF
's personal letters, as represented by the survivors among them from every stage of her life, are still highly readable. She wrote to her son Orlando while he was away at school, and to... |
Textual Production | Githa Sowerby | The Play Actors
were a London society whose mandate was to encourage new authors, many of them from outside London. Nicoll, Allardyce. English Drama, 1900-1930. Cambridge University Press. 272 |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Pipe Wolferstan | EPW
privately printed the first edition of her poem Flora & Pomona's Fête; or, The Origin of Botanical & Horticultural Meetings. A Poem After the Butterfly's Ball, in order to raise money for the... |
Textual Production | Mathilde Blind | Some of MB
's letters survive in the British Library
. |
Textual Production | Edith Lyttelton | The Churchill Archives Centre
at Churchill College
, Cambridge, hold EL
's unpublished memoirs and correspondence from 1888 to 1945. The British Library
also holds some of her letters, including correspondence with the League of Dramatists |
Textual Production | Maria Susanna Cooper | She identified herself on the title-page as the Authoress of the Exemplary Mother, and used Dodsley
, her usual publisher. She dedicated her novel in its new form to Letitia, Lady Beauchamp-Proctor
(wife of the... |
Textual Production | Rumer Godden | The British Library
, however, has three copies. British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo. |
Textual Production | Catherine Talbot | CT
must have written this by 1754, when George Berkeley
transcribed it with notes on making use of it for his sermons. His copy (now British Library
Additional MS 46689) is titled Meditations. It... |
Textual Production | Maria Elizabetha Jacson | This book appeared, like her next, as by a Lady; the British Library
copy (filmed for Eighteenth Century Collections Online) has a manuscript note identifying the author on the printed testimony of Erasmus... |
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