Judd, Denis. Alison Uttley. Michael Joseph.
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Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Features | Catharine Amy Dawson Scott | The historical Sappho
had emerged by this date as a potentially lesbian or bisexual figure, for instance in the work of Swinburne
; Michael Field
's Long Ago was published this same year. Dawson's Sappho... |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Barrett Browning | The poem is innovative in its blend of novelistic discourse and subject-matter—its depiction of the urban landscape and contemporary social issues including wife-beating and prostitution were indebted to both the English and French novel—with the... |
Residence | Alison Uttley | She was excited by her first experience of the south, and called Cambridge a city of light. Judd, Denis. Alison Uttley. Michael Joseph. 65 |
Reception | Mathilde Blind | Again, however, the Athenæum had a reservation: this time the influence of Swinburne
, which it detected in alliteration and other points of technique. Athenæum. J. Lection. 3221 (20 July 1889): 87 |
Reception | Sappho | In England, Swinburne
helped promote a newly sexualized and aestheticized Sappho with Anactoria in Poems and Ballads (1866). |
Reception | Laurence Hope | The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography notes the influence of Swinburne
and the Pre-Raphaelites on this and later volumes by LH
. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Publishing | Ella Wheeler Wilcox | She wrote later that the idea for this book came to her when love-poems, which she had printed in journals but deliberately not included in Maurine, aroused strong interest and requests for copies. Jansen and McClurg |
Occupation | Robert Williams Buchanan | RWB
was a poet, essayist, novelist, and playwright. After arriving in London in 1859, he was engaged by the Athenæum. He wrote for several other periodicals, and became known for his attacks on Dante Gabriel Rossetti |
Occupation | Marie Corelli | Charles MacKay
, now finding it difficult to write, became increasingly pressed to procure a healthy income. Fortunately, one of his physicians was impressed with MC
's piano-playing and he offered his drawing-room for a... |
Literary responses | Elizabeth Siddal | The poems attracted little attention initially, except for their connection to ES
's life. Swinburne
was unusual in his estimation of her as a veritable artist in her own right. He discerned in A Year... |
Literary responses | Ouida | Critic Kenneth Churchill
argues that Ouida was the first English writer to chronicle the sense of growing disillusion Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism. Gale Research. 43: 376 |
Literary responses | Emily Lawless | Algernon Swinburne
wrote Lawless a gushing letter on reading Grania, describing it as one of the most exquisite and perfect works in the language—unique in pathos, humour, and convincing persuasion of truthfulness. Sichel, Edith. “Emily Lawless”. Nineteenth Century, Vol. 76 , pp. 80-100. 85 |
Literary responses | Anna Steele | The Academy gave Condoned a largely negative review, arguing that Steele had with the odd lack of judgment which not seldom distinguishes lady novelists, done nearly all she could to spoil her book. The Academy. 11 (3 February 1877): 91 |
Literary responses | George Eliot | On the whole reviewers were enthusiastic (E. S. Dallas
began his notice in the Times, George Eliot is as great as ever Carroll, David, editor. George Eliot: The Critical Heritage. Barnes and Noble. 131 |
Literary responses | Christina Rossetti | CR
's critical reputation stood very high from the appearance of Goblin Market, although she was not a popular poet. H. Buxton Forman
in Our Living Poets, 1871, got her middle name wrong... |
No bibliographical results available.