Speight, Helen. “Rachel Speght’s Polemical Life”. Huntington Library Quarterly, Vol.
65
, No. 3/4, pp. 449-63. 452
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Rachel Speght | RS
chose the same publisher as Swetnam's, which seems to indicate a perception of her debate with him as worth pushing along for doctrinal or commercial reasons. Speight, Helen. “Rachel Speght’s Polemical Life”. Huntington Library Quarterly, Vol. 65 , No. 3/4, pp. 449-63. 452 |
Textual Production | Muriel Spark | MS
edited and published A Selection of Poems by Emily Brontë, with an introduction, for the Crown Classics Series published by Grey Walls Press
. Though this was the official publication date, the British Library |
Textual Production | Githa Sowerby | It ran for only nineteen performances. Fitzsimmons, Linda. “Githa Sowerby (1876-1970)”. New Woman Plays, edited by Linda Fitzsimmons and Viv Gardner, Methuen, pp. 135-7. 136 Compton, Fay. Rosemary: Some Remembrances. Alston Rivers. 157 |
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 | Githa Sowerby | A Man and Some Women was never published. A typescript is available in the Lord Chamberlain's collection at the British Library
. |
Publishing | Joanna Southcott | This reached a fourth edition in 1814; a copy of one edition in the British Library
contains manuscript notes. This was just one of a number of collections (for instance, The Prophecies of Joanna Southcott... |
Publishing | Harriet Smythies | The novel was reprinted in volume form in 1880 by J. and R. Maxwell
. Dated from the acquisition stamp in the British Library
copy. Montague Summers writes that upon its reappearance it was thought... |
Textual Production | Harriet Smythies | She was inspired to help the hospital by the fact that she had a daughter with tuberculosis, who died three years after this. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. The... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Lucy Toulmin Smith | Smith provides a thorough summary of the state of librarianship as a profession at the time. She notes that even for men, librarianship is a fledgling profession, so that women seeking to join it may... |
Textual Production | Constance Smedley | An appendix, Women and the State by Ethel Snowden
, was reprinted from the January number of The World's Work, giving a brief history of women in local government and public positions. Smedley, Constance, and Mrs Philip Snowden. Woman: A Few Shrieks!. Garden City Press. 121ff |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Postuma Simcoe | The series of watercolours by EPS
which her husband presented to George III
are now in the British Library
. OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999. |
death | Arabella Shore | She left her sister Emily
's manuscript diary to the British Museum
(that part of it which is now the British Library
) but her will never reached probate and the papers never reached the depository. Gates, Barbara T., and Margaret Emily Shore. “Self-writing as Legacy: The <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Journal of Emily Shore</span>”;. Journal of Emily Shore: Revised and Expanded. |
Publishing | Margaret Emily Shore | The fully indexed text received a second edition in 1898 with drawings by MES
. Shore, Margaret Emily. Journal of Emily Shore. Editors Shore, Louisa Catherine and Arabella Shore, Kegan Paul. 375 |
Author summary | Mary Martha Sherwood | MMSwrote and signed more than 350 books (mostly for children, but including several adult novels), and left almost a score of fat volumes of diary. Some of her children's books, despite their uncompromisingly hell-fire... |
Textual Production | Mary Martha Sherwood | Another of MMS
's books of this kind was The History of Henry Milner, a little boy, who was not brought up according to the fashions of this world, whose hero is based on... |
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