Society of Friends

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Residence George Egerton
The landlord, however, refused to take children, so Chavelita and at least one of her sisters spent some time staying with neighbours. These neighbours were Quakers , whose home, GE wrote many years later (in...
Residence Katharine Bruce Glasier
After her husband's death in 1921, KBG and her son Glen moved to a former mill cottage just outside Earby in Yorkshire. The cottage was discovered for her by a member of the Society of Friends
Residence Margaret Fell
Thomas Fell's estate, Swarthmoor Hall in Lancashire, was MF 's home for most of her adult life, and has since become a shrine to the history of the Society of Friends .
Residence Dorothy Richardson
DR , after another illness, resigned from her job in London and lived quietly for these years with a Quaker family on a Sussex fruit farm.
Staley, Thomas F., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 36. Gale Research, 1985.
209
Fromm, Gloria G. Dorothy Richardson: A Biography. University of Illinois Press, 1977.
59-62
Richardson, Dorothy. “Chronology; Editorial Commentary”. Windows on Modernism: Selected Letters of Dorothy Richardson, edited by Gloria G. Fromm, University of Georgia Press, 1995, p. xxix - xxxiii; various pages.
xxx
Residence Joan Vokins
Charney Manor, at Charney Bassett, the village where JV grew up, is now (2016) a conference centre owned by the Society of Friends , which especially welcomes delegates involved in conflict resolution and international...
Residence Hester Biddle
Late in life HB lived in a room behind the Peel meeting house in London, a place set aside for poor widows, and received an allowance of five shillings a week from that congregation...
Textual Features Constance Smedley
The Emotions of Martha is a religious novel, in that Martha Spence's spiritual and emotional development run side by side. At the outset she feels certain that she has a remarkable artistic talent (her subjects...
Textual Features Margaret Forster
Carr's biscuits were a staple of British diet. The firm was started and run by one of the great Quaker trading families, a centre of progressive employment practices and local civic responsibility. Both family and...
Textual Features Charlotte Nooth
The nobility of the skin means a class system based on race as others are based on birth or money. Nooth's translation has no preliminary pages, no address by translator to reader. Grégoire cites his...
Textual Features Elizabeth Heyrick
She does not eschew politics on account of her readers' youth, but delivers an anti-war and anti-imperial message: The finest sight that could possibly be exhibited to me on earth, would be not a great...
Textual Features Anna Trapnel
This offers another narrative of AT 's falling into a trance, uttering prophecies, and foiling attempts to interrupt her (this time by Quaker men) by singing over and through them. She presents herself as a...
Textual Features Susanna Parr
To sum up, PS's text gives the impression that she had a difficult man to deal with, and one who was not slow to use her gender as a weapon against her when he saw...
Textual Features Catherine Phillips
These make up an important document in Quaker history. Though she begins her memoirs in formal, somewhat wordy style, CP tells a good story, particularly in the passages about her adventures in North America...
Textual Features Margaret Fell
Although not prone to harping on God's vengeance, MF here calls the rival sect of the Rantersbeasts who, because of their libertinism, tend downwards into the earth instead of upwards to God.
Kunze, Bonnelyn Young. Margaret Fell and the Rise of Quakerism. Macmillan, 1994.
190
Ranters...
Textual Features Susanna Wright
It argues (before such arguments had been put forward in America by Abigail Adams , Judith Sargent Murray , or Mercy Otis Warren , but drawing on beliefs current among Quakers since their mid-seventeenth-century origins)...

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