Stouck, David. Ethel Wilson: A Critical Biography. University of Toronto Press.
19
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | John Strange Winter | |
Cultural formation | John Strange Winter | She was English, a descendant of the Palmer family of Wingham inKent. Although they claimed to have some aristocratic forebears (notably the Roman Catholic, Jacobite diplomatist Roger Palmer, Earl of Castlemaine
), Castlemaine had... |
Education | Ethel Wilson | The ten-year-old Ethel Bryant (later EW
) was enrolled in Miss Jessie Gordon
's Anglican
school for girls, Crofton House
in Vancouver. Stouck, David. Ethel Wilson: A Critical Biography. University of Toronto Press. 19 |
Cultural formation | Anna Williams | When AW
felt her self close to death, she had the Church of England
's office of the Communion of the Sick performed in her bedroom, being too weak to get up. Johnson, Samuel. The Letters of Samuel Johnson. Editor Redford, Bruce, Princeton University Press. 4:187 |
Cultural formation | Anna Williams | |
Cultural formation | Jane Williams | Her writings evince considerable pride in being Welsh as well as a certain chauvinism with respect to the English. Though not a native speaker, she learned Welsh while still young. She had prominent Nonconformist
ancestors... |
Cultural formation | Joan Whitrow | JW
, a Londoner with possible Welsh heritage, was a restless seeker after religious truth, apparently throughout her life. She sometimes dressed in sackcloth and ashes as a mark of penitence, for as much as... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Joan Whitrow | |
death | Joan Whitrow | She was buried, according to her own instructions in the garden of Mathias Perkins
, her executor, “People. Joan Whitrow”. The Twickenham Museum. |
Cultural formation | Anne Whitehead | She was baptised an Anglican
, and her Anglican family disowned her when she joined the Society of Friends
. Her conversion, which made her the first Londoner to join the Quakers, probably happened around... |
politics | Dorothy White | |
Cultural formation | Roma White | |
Textual Production | Dorothy White | She addressed it especially to the Anglican
congregation of St Paul's Cathedral—which may mean she had caused some disturbance there. |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth White | Nothing is known of her family except that they were Anglicans
. They probably belonged somewhere in the English middling classes. |
Cultural formation | Dorothy Whipple |
No bibliographical results available.