Cannan, May, and Bevil Quiller-Couch. “Editorial Materials”. The Tears of War, edited by Charlotte Fyfe, Cavalier Books, 2000, p. Various pages.
145
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Catherine Carswell | Catherine had met Jackson, the brother-in-law of her former teacher Walter Raleigh
, only that September, while she was staying with the Raleighs at Farnham. He was a painter, an ex-soldier, and a handsome man... |
Friends, Associates | Lady Cynthia Asquith | LCA
's mother invited to Stanway a wide variety of guests: Arthur Balfour
, Walter Raleigh
, George Wyndham
, Harry Cust
, Charles Whibley
, H. G. Wells
, Evan Charteris
, Hugh Cecil |
Instructor | Catherine Carswell | CC
attended the Glasgow School of Art. On her return from Frankfurt she studied English Literature at Queen Margaret's College
, the women's college which for nearly a decade had been part of Glasgow University |
Literary responses | May Cannan | The critic and family friend Sir Walter Raleigh
, who saw these poems before publication, called them heart-breaking and terribly naked. Cannan, May, and Bevil Quiller-Couch. “Editorial Materials”. The Tears of War, edited by Charlotte Fyfe, Cavalier Books, 2000, p. Various pages. 145 |
Reception | Mary Wollstonecraft | Katharine Marion Metcalfe
, a recent graduate at Oxford University
, did something extraordinary in enquiring of Professor Sir Walter Raleigh
whether materials existed for research on MW
. Raleigh proposed that Metcalfe should edit Jane Austen
instead. Barchas, Janine. “The Lost Books of Austen Studies”. States of the Book. CSECS/SCEDHS annual conference. |
Textual Features | Anne Ridler | Her introduction to the first selection, she said later, was more influenced by Coleridge
than by Charles Williams
. Ridler, Anne. Memoirs. The Perpetua Press, 2004, p. 240 pp. 96 |
Travel | Catherine Carswell | A visit that Catherine Macfarlane made to her old teacher Walter Raleigh
in September 1904, at his house in England, at Farnham in Surrey, proved decisive for the course of her life. |