Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger
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Standard Name: Benger, Elizabeth Ogilvy
Birth Name: Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger
Pseudonym: E. Benger
Indexed Name: Elizabeth Ogilvie Benger
Used Form: Miss Benger
EOB
, a writer of the Romantic period, remains best-known for her precocious yet astonishingly mature Female Geniad (a poem celebrating women writers); but her other works in poetry, fiction, history, and memoirs show a steady concern with women's history and women's tradition which is almost equally remarkable.
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Elizabeth Hamilton | Her friendship with the younger Elizabeth Benger
, her future biographer, was especially close and important to both of them, though for much of its duration they lived far distant from each other, and (apparently)... |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Hamilton | Early in her life EHhad recourse to the pen by stealth. Benger, Elizabeth Ogilvy. Memoirs of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1818, 2 vols. 1: 51-2 |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Hamilton | It was published by the next month, Critical Review. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall, 5 series. n. ser. 17: 241 |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Hamilton | This was published at Bath and London. EH
did serious historical research for this book, reading all the Roman history she could find in English and even commissioning translations. There was already women's work... |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Hamilton | Elizabeth Benger
published her Memoirs of EH
, including much of Hamilton's previously unpublished work, by May 1818. The full title was Memoirs of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, with a Selection from Her Correspondence... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Sarah Josepha Hale | SJH
does in the main a fine job in her coverage of British women writers, having something to say even about the extremely obscure. Dorothea Primrose Campbell
, for instance (who was living in poverty... |
Friends, Associates | Eliza Fenwick | Other more or less radical friends of EF
included Thomas Holcroft
, Anne Plumptre
, Elizabeth Benger
, Jane Porter
, Henry Crabb Robinson
, Charles
and Mary Lamb
, and their friend Sarah Stoddart |
Literary responses | Susannah Dobson | The Critical began its notice by praising the extensive research of the original and by condemning its prolixity, a fault now remedied by SD
, who, it says, has told Petrarch's story in a manner... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Selina Bunbury | She drew chiefly on the histories written by George Cavendish
and Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger
, and that in Agnes
and Elizabeth Strickland
's Lives of the Queens of England. Bunbury, Selina. The Star of the Court. Grant and Griffith, 1844. vi |
Intertextuality and Influence | Henrietta Maria Bowdler | Although HMB
was provoked to write by William Hayley
's unpleasant Philosophical, Historical and Moral Essay on Old Maids, 1785, she gives a mixed message. This begins with an epigraph drawn from Elizabeth Hamilton |
Friends, Associates | Joanna Baillie | On 11 May 1812 Henry Crabb Robinson
recorded in his diary meeting JB
and other women writers on a visit to Miss Benjers (Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger
). In his account of this pleasant evening... |
Friends, Associates | Lucy Aikin | In her memoirs LA
claims to have been acquainted with all the notable literary women of her time. She was a close friend of Joanna Baillie
and Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger
. Another important friend and... |
Textual Production | Lucy Aikin | LA
memoir of Anna Letitia Barbauld
, in her edition of Barbauld's Works, June 1825, represents a well-planned if largely unsuccessful attempt to establish and preserve Barbauld's reputation after systemic attack by political conservatives... |
Friends, Associates | Sydney Owenson Lady Morgan | In London in 1824 she had a socially unsuccessful meeting with Wordsworth
, who was by now a thorough reactionary in politics. He went to some pains to snub her; she refused to notice this... |
Leisure and Society | Mary Lady Champion de Crespigny | Her patronage of authors shows up in subscriptions and dedications. She subscribed to works by Mary Deverell
, Isabella Kelly
, Eliza Parsons
, Sarah Scudgell Wilkinson
, and no doubt many more. Many of... |
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