Peet, Henry. Mrs. Charles Tinsley, Novelist and Poet. Butler and Tanner.
4
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Features | Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna | The protagonist of The Deserter is a young Irish soldier in the British army. When he deserts (having got into bad company) he is arrested and re-possessed by the army. Serving in India, he... |
Textual Features | Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna | Yet often the political critique runs counter to the novel's religous concerns. Indeed, even as it attacks the outrageous conditions of the industrial poor, the novel seems to welcome the moral scourge they provide, as... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna | Written specifically for use in Sunday Schools, it relates the sufferings of Protestant Martyrs such as Anne Askew
, Katherine Hut
, and Elizabeth Thackvel
. The sufferings of Anne Askew (here seen as martyr... |
Cultural formation | Annie Tinsley | AT
's family came from the middle classes of Lancashire and Scotland, but lived a rootless, unsettled life as her father pursued his career. Both sides had been Jacobites during the eighteenth century. Peet, Henry. Mrs. Charles Tinsley, Novelist and Poet. Butler and Tanner. 4 |
death | Annie Tinsley | She was buried in the Roman Catholic
section of the Gravesend cemetery. Her husband outlived her by fourteen years. Peet, Henry. Mrs. Charles Tinsley, Novelist and Poet. Butler and Tanner. 29-30 |
Cultural formation | Katherine Cecil Thurston | |
death | Dylan Thomas | DT
, Welsh poet, died of pneumonia in St Vincent's, a private hospital in New York run by Roman Catholic
nuns. He had been in a deep coma for four or five days. Lycett, Andrew. Dylan Thomas. A New Life. Overlook Press. 374 |
Cultural formation | Gertrude Thimelby | GT
was a member of an English gentry family who became Roman Catholics
during her childhood. Her minority religious allegiance shaped her life. |
Cultural formation | Winefrid Thimelby | She was a cradle Catholic
born into an English gentry family which harboured priests, celebrated the mass in secret, and suffered persecution for their faith. A recent commentator, Dorothy L. Latz
, regrets the way... |
Cultural formation | Sydney Owenson, Lady Morgan | Sydney Owenson was born to an English Methodist
mother with leanings towards the sect called the Countess of Huntingdon's Connection
, and an Irish, originally Catholic
, father. She aligned herself strongly with the Irish... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anna Swanwick | AS
begins with the feelings that assailed her when she first stood on a summit and contemplated the prospect of transcendent magnificence, the peaks and glaciers of the Alps. Such, she says, is the prospect... |
Cultural formation | Alice Sutcliffe | She was born into the English gentry and at a time of religious turmoil and change she probably held to the old religion of Catholicism
, not openly but at least in sympathy, in view... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Strickland | Elizabeth, while remaining a practising Anglican
, became remarkable for her capacity to think herself into the mindset of British Roman Catholics
at a time when the generally dominant party in England saw them as... |
Cultural formation | Ray Strachey | |
Cultural formation | G. B. Stern | At the end of the Second World War, GBS
converted to Catholicism
from her purely nominal Judaism. “Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC. |
No bibliographical results available.