Chisholm, Kate. “Bluestocking Feminism”. New Rambler, pp. 60-6.
63
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Features | Elizabeth Carter | As a youngster of twenty-one (in May 1739), EC
addressed the eminent businessman Edward Cavebreezily, mingling the domestic and the literary. Chisholm, Kate. “Bluestocking Feminism”. New Rambler, pp. 60-6. 63 |
Publishing | Elizabeth Carter | EC
issued, through Cave
, in a small number of copies intended purely for friends and patrons, a slim quarto bearing her name: Poems upon Particular Occasions. Myers, Sylvia Harcstark. The Bluestocking Circle: Women, Friendship, and the Life of the Mind in Eighteenth-Century England. Clarendon. 51 Bigold, Melanie. Emails to Isobel Grundy about Trotter, Carter, and Rowe. |
Publishing | Jane Brereton | In the Gentleman's Magazine, Edward Cave
announced his competition for a poem on the busts of British worthies set up in Queen Caroline
's Cave or Grotto at Richmond. Gentleman’s Magazine. Various publishers. 3 (1733): 208 |
Textual Production | Jane Brereton | JB
dated her inscription to Queen Caroline
of the first poem in a sixteen-page quarto issued by Cave
as by a Lady: Merlin: A Poem . . . To which is added, The Royal... |
Publishing | Jane Brereton | Edward Cave
(for whom JB
had been a regular contributor) posthumously published, by subscription, her Poems on Several Occasions . . . with Letters to her Friends, bearing the date of 1744. Both The... |
Friends, Associates | Jane Brereton | In her youth JB
knew |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jane Brereton | Cave
seems thus to have inspired JB
to write the second major poem in her publication of October 1735—Merlin: A Poem . . . To which is added, The Royal Hermitage: A Poem—though... |
Textual Production | Jane Brereton | The Four Last Things in Christian theology are Death, Judgement, Heaven, and Hell. Cave
had initially, untheologically, added Life at the beginning of the list, so JB
's poem is entitled Thoughts on Life, Death... |
Publishing | Mary Barber | She had sent the poem nearly two years before this in a letter to Edward Cave
. |
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