Staves, Susan. “Church of England Clergy and Women Writers”. Reconsidering the Bluestockings, edited by Nicole Pohl and Betty Schellenberg, Huntington Library, pp. 81-103.
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Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Textual Production | Sarah Trimmer | ST
sought and received support from the Church of England
and the from Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, or SPCK
. Staves, Susan. “Church of England Clergy and Women Writers”. Reconsidering the Bluestockings, edited by Nicole Pohl and Betty Schellenberg, Huntington Library, pp. 81-103. 87 |
Textual Production | Sarah Trimmer | The full title was A Comparative View of the New Plan of Education promulgated by Mr. Joseph Lancaster, in his Tracts concerning the Instruction of the Children of the Labouring Part of the Community; and... |
Textual Production | Laura Ormiston Chant | Public Morals proved sufficiently popular to be reprinted in 1908. Trellis Library Catalogue. http://trellis3.tug-libraries.on.ca. |
Textual Production | Christina Rossetti | CR
published with the Society for the Promotion of Christian KnowledgeSeek and Find: A Double Series of Short Studies of the Benedicite. The Benedicite is a canticle (used in the Anglican
service of... |
Textual Features | Mary Elizabeth Braddon | Despite its sensational plot and purple prose, MEB
's first attempt at infusing a touch of poetry and the subjective into her writing through character painting Wolff, Robert Lee. Sensational Victorian. Garland. 161 |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Ham | The story opens with the young Englishwoman Rhoda Ford (the unbeautiful one of two sisters) and her family in the west of Ireland, where her father has an entrepreneurial scheme. They try to come... |
Textual Features | Mary Elizabeth Braddon | In The Fatal Three the mostly loveless childhood of Mildred, the daughter of a frivolous society woman, is brightened only by the brief sojourn in her household of a woman presumed to be her illegitimate... |
Textual Features | Lucy Knox | The volume contains thirty-three poems. Lament of the loyal Irish in 1869, England and Pauperism, and England and Secular Education speak to social and political concerns, while other poems explore the disappointments of... |
Textual Features | Frances Trollope | FT
was a strong believer in established religion, and as she had frowned upon English practices antithetical to the Church of England
, so too she found American religious pluralism unsettling. In one anecdote, she... |
Textual Features | Evelyn Underhill | Like Practical Mysticism, this small volume attempts to synthesize religious experience and everyday life, but EU
is not here concerned primarily with mysticism. She is instead interested in describing what she finds to be... |
Textual Features | Monica Furlong | This book reflects MF
's wide reading and an impish sense of humour employed to help her and her readers live with the unacceptable. Each chapter comes headed by a very funny cartoon and a... |
Textual Features | Ada Cambridge | For the wife of an Anglican
clergyman, the content was certainly unexpected. Indeed, as A. G. Stephens
has noted: The shock to the Rev. George Cross
[her husband] was overwhelming. Beilby, Raymond, and Cecil Hadgraft. Ada Cambridge, Tasma and Rosa Praed. Oxford University Press. 6 Vickery, Ann. “A ’Lonely Crossing’: Approaching Nineteenth- Century Australian Women’s Poetry”. Victorian Poetry, Vol. 40 , No. 1, pp. 33-54. 40.1 (Spring 2002): 41 |
Textual Features | Catherine Hubback | The later dangers which Agnes faces are chiefly theological: she moves towards Dissent
and specifically Presbyterianism
, but returns to the Church of England
, saved in part by a copy of The Christian Year... |
Textual Features | Monica Furlong | MF
's contributors here, both men and women, look back at childhoods in which belief and observance were integral parts. They include those whose remembered experience was gleaned within different faiths: Anglican
, Roman Catholic |
Textual Features | Catharine Trotter | It records the thinking that led her to return from the Roman Catholic Church
to the Church of England
. CT
uses the first person, in a clear, confident style, hammering her opponents with rhetorical questions. |
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