Edwards, Peter David. Frances Cashel Hoey, 1830-1908: A Bibliography. Department of English, University of Queensland, 1982.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Jane Francesca, Lady Wilde | Duffy had expected to meet Mr John Fenshaw Ellis, the pseudonym with which Elgee signed her periodical submissions. She stage-managed a grand entrance for herself in order to astonish him. They became close friends and... |
Friends, Associates | Frances Sarah Hoey | In order to help establish herself, the future FSH
took with her an introduction from William Carleton
to William Thackeray
. Edwards, Peter David. Frances Cashel Hoey, 1830-1908: A Bibliography. Department of English, University of Queensland, 1982. 2 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Catherine Byron | Reflections on her own life are intertwined throughout CB
's journey, as she writes on her childhood experience of Catholicism, and her roles as mother, wife, lover, and Irish woman writer. Byron, Catherine. Out of Step. Loxwood Stoneleigh, 1992. passim |
Literary responses | E. Owens Blackburne | EOB
's work is frequently anthologised in nineteenth-century collections of Irish literature, but seldom mentioned in more contemporary works. One collection, Charles A. Read
's The Cabinet of Irish Literature, 1881, describes her as... |
Publishing | Jane Francesca, Lady Wilde | Jane Francesca, Lady Wilde
(as Speranza), wrote a tributary poem in memory of her friend and fellow writer William Carleton
for the Nation. Melville, Joy. Mother of Oscar. John Murray, 1999. 123 |
Textual Production | Jane Francesca, Lady Wilde | Contributors included leading political writers such as John O'Hagan
, Richard D'Alton Williams
, Thomas MacNeven
, William Carleton
, Clarence Mangan
, Denis MacCarthy
, Thomas Davis
, John Blake Dillon
, and women... |
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