Coventry Patmore

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Standard Name: Patmore, Coventry

Connections

Connections Author name Sort ascending Excerpt
Performance of text Virginia Woolf
VW worked long and hard on the lengthy novel which finally became The Years. Its genesis goes back to her speech of 21 January 1931 at the London and National Society for Women's Service
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Augusta Webster
During her tenure she encountered the very best and worst of late Victorian poetry. Her published reviews, which critic Marysa Demoor characterises as expressing a hesitant modernism,
Demoor, Marysa. “Women Poets as Critics in the <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘j’>Athenæum</span>: Ungendered Anonymity Unmasked”. Nineteenth-Century Prose, Vol.
24
, No. 1, pp. 51-71.
61
included appraisals of Robert Bridges ,...
Reception Lucy Walford
In 1887 Coventry Patmore said of LW that her depictions of contemporary life far surpassed those of Dickens , Thackeray , Trollope , Eliot , and Gaskell , declaring her work to be equalled only...
Friends, Associates Lucy Walford
LW had many friends among literary people and those who moved in literary circles. She discussed the books of her childhood with Reginald Palgrave , who shared many of her early reading experiences, and Wilkie Collins
Textual Production Angela Thirkell
AT published, as Leslie Parker, a novel entitled Trooper to the Southern Cross, and under her own name a volume of stories which she called The Demon in the House in a parodic...
Friends, Associates Alfred Tennyson
A sociable man (although distrustful of unknown admirers) Tennyson was acquainted with many of the major artistic and political figures of the nineteenth century, including Edward FitzGerald , Coventry Patmore , Edward Lear , William Ewart Gladstone
Family and Intimate relationships Catherine Sinclair
Several members of CS 's extended family were published authors. Her elder half-sister Janet published religious works. The best-known in her own day was her great-niece Lucy Walford , romantic novelist (whom Coventry Patmore ...
Friends, Associates Christina Rossetti
Around this time she became aware of her brother Dante Gabriel 's involvement with Elizabeth Siddal , although she and Siddal met only in 1854 and were never intimate friends. Close family friends of Christina...
Reception Barbara Pym
Pym is not one of those women writers whose stock has risen through feminist re-evaluation. Five years after the influential Times Literary Supplement article was published, Penelope Lively wrote, I am always surprised that the...
Publishing Caroline Norton
CN 's prolific reviewing included a signed notice, published in Macmillan's Magazine on 8 September 1863, of Coventry Patmore 's The Angel in the House and Christina Rossetti 's Goblin Market.
Intertextuality and Influence Edith Mary Moore
The Lure of Eve is prefaced with a quotation from Coventry Patmore 's poem The Toys. It presents a group of idealistic young men at the beginning of mostly creative careers: Deane the painter...
Publishing Alice Meynell
Four of the poems had previously appeared in magazines. Of these, Why wilt thou Chide?, which was addressed to Coventry Patmore and responded to his violent jealousy of AM 's friendships with other men...
Textual Production Alice Meynell
Poet and editor W. E. Henley , printing the title essay in the Scots Observer, called it one of the best things it has so far been my privilege to print.
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
98
Henley introduced...
Literary responses Alice Meynell
Coventry Patmore praised the volume hyperbolically in the Fortnightly Review: At rare intervals the world is startled by the phenomenon of a woman whose qualities of mind and heart seem to demand a revision...
Dedications Alice Meynell
She dedicated the volume to Coventry Patmore , though their friendship had largely waned.
Badeni, June. The Slender Tree: A Life of Alice Meynell. Tabb House.
131

Timeline

By 10 August 1844: Coventry Patmore published Poems, his first...

Writing climate item

By 10 August 1844

Coventry Patmore published Poems, his first collection, which included The Woodman's Daughter.

October 1854: Coventry Patmore anonymously published The...

Writing climate item

October 1854

Coventry Patmore anonymously published The Betrothal, the first part of his poetic celebration of courtship, marriage, and conservative gender roles, The Angel in the House.

1856: The Espousals, the second part of Coventry...

Writing climate item

1856

The Espousals, the second part of Coventry Patmore 's poemThe Angel in the House, was published.

By 17 December 1859: Under her pseudonym Mrs Motherly, Emily Augusta...

Women writers item

By 17 December 1859

Under her pseudonym Mrs Motherly, Emily Augusta Patmore (Coventry Patmore 's first wife) published her second book of the year, Nursery Poetry, with illustrations.

By 20 October 1860: Faithful for Ever, the third part of Coventry...

Writing climate item

By 20 October 1860

Faithful for Ever, the third part of Coventry Patmore 's poemThe Angel in the House, was published.

1862: The Victories of Love, the fourth and final...

Writing climate item

1862

The Victories of Love, the fourth and final part of Coventry Patmore 's poemThe Angel in the House, was serialised in Macmillian's Magazine.

1881: Marianne Caroline Patmore and her husband,...

Writing climate item

1881

Marianne Caroline Patmore and her husband, Coventry Patmore , published their translationSaint Bernard on the Love of God.

Texts

Procter, Bryan Waller. An Autobiographical Fragment and Biographical Notes, with Personal Sketches of Contemporaries, Unpublished Lyrics, and Letters of Literary Friends. Editor Patmore, Coventry, Roberts Brothers, 1877.
Patmore, Coventry, and Reginald Gordon Cox. “The Woodlanders”. Thomas Hardy: The Critical Heritage, Routledge, 1979, pp. 157-9.