Eckhardt, Celia Morris. Fanny Wright. Harvard University Press, 1984.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Reception | Josephine Butler | In 1980 the Church of England
formally commemorated her in a revised edition of the Book of Common Prayer, marking December 30, the date of her death, as a day of observance. This recognition... |
Reception | Evelyn Underhill | EU
received most of her accolades during her lifetime. In addition to becoming the first woman both to lecture in religion at Oxford
and head retreats in the Anglican Church
, she was elected a... |
Reception | Jane Taylor | Like her sister
many years later, she replied robustly to complaint about her overtly Dissenting code of conduct. She reveals a clear sense of the disparity between standards applied to hegemonic beliefs and those applied... |
Residence | Marie Belloc Lowndes | In late 1939, about seven weeks after the declaration of war, MBL
and her husband moved out of 9 Barton Street in central London to the suburban address of 28 Crooked Billet, near Wimbledon Common... |
Residence | Frances Wright | The Mylnes had had charge of their brother during the years following their parents' deaths. The two Wright girls lived with them and their five children in a small college house. Eckhardt, Celia Morris. Fanny Wright. Harvard University Press, 1984. 12 |
Residence | Charlotte Maria Tucker | CMT
had always been deeply interested in India, where her father and many other relatives had built their careers. No less than five of the family were there at the time of the Mutiny.... |
Residence | Charlotte Maria Tucker | At his point in her life, her close relatives having either died or grown up, CMT
felt that she had no further family responsibilities and was free to devote herself to missionary work in India... |
Textual Features | Charlotte Yonge | This is, as the title implies, a personal defence of the High Anglican
position. |
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. |
Textual Features | Elinor James | This work (fuller title Mrs. James's Vindication of the Church of England, In An Answer to a Pamphlet Entituled, A New Test of the Church of England's Loyalty) summarises and defends her career so... |
Textual Features | Jane Johnson | She writes of women's virtues as domestic ones, and the family as the proper province for private women to shine in. Whyman likens her letters, in their aim and scope, to those of Richardson
... |
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 | Doreen Wallace | DW
writes as from the field of battle, reporting developments which are still ongoing. She exhibits shrewd and informed understanding of farm economics and church economics. She convincingly depicts both the law and the Church... |
Textual Features | Elinor James | This is her defence of the High-Church preacher Henry Sacheverell
, who had got into trouble with a flagrantly Jacobite sermon preached on 5 November 1709. James calls him a Church of England
angel in... |
Textual Features | Doreen Wallace | Tom, who felt the call to the ministry as a captain in the Merchant Navy
, and is husband to the protagonist, Mary Barry, is unquestioningly, effortlessly good and generous. (He performs miracles preserving the... |
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