Feeney, Denis. “Caesar’s Body Shook”. London Review of Books, Vol.
33
, No. 18, pp. 19-20. 19
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Literary Setting | Elizabeth Tollet | On the Death of Sir Isaac Newton dwells on the honorific funeral which Tollet, as a woman, would not have attended. On the analogy of Cicero
's restoration of the tomb of Archimedes
, she... |
Occupation | Petrarch | Petrarch
contributed importantly to the revival of learning when in the chapter library of Verona he discovered a manuscript containing letters by Cicero
, whose text had been lost for centuries. Feeney, Denis. “Caesar’s Body Shook”. London Review of Books, Vol. 33 , No. 18, pp. 19-20. 19 |
Textual Features | Mary Shelley | This novel has an epigraph from John Ford
's The Lover's Melancholy, 1629, about the storms and turmoil of human life. Shelley, Mary. Lodore. Editor Vargo, Lisa, Broadview. 47 |
Textual Features | Queen Elizabeth I | |
Textual Features | Rosina Bulwer Lytton, Baroness Lytton | The essays include Samuel Pepys
and Francis Bacon
, Lord Verulam
and Viscount St. Albans, A Curiosity of Literature not Mentioned by Isaac Disraeli and Servants. Rosina Bulwer Lytton, Baroness Lytton,. Shells from the Sands of Time. Bickers and Son, http://U of Toronto. title-page |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Montagu | The letters of EM
's youth—to the Duchess of Portland
and to her sister Sarah Scott
—are sparkling, irreverent, and inventive. Some of these were conveyed via Elizabeth Elstob
. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. |
Textual Production | Hannah Arendt | It was ten years since she had sketched out parts of this book, as what she then called a kind of second volume of The Human Condition. Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth. Hannah Arendt. For Love of the World. Yale University Press. 420 |
Textual Production | Una Marson | The subject-matter of her contributions was dictated and limited by her editor, Dunbar T. Wint
, who did not believe that women had any place in the political or intellectual arena. UM
nevertheless found opportunities... |
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