British Library

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Mary Matilda Betham
Matilda Betham published at Ipswich her first book, Elegies, and other Small Poems (including many in ballad metre), dedicated to Lady Jerningham .
The British Library has a copy of this work published in London...
Textual Production Elizabeth Cobbold
The frontispiece features a portrait of the cookery writer Hannah Glasse (drawn by EC herself), who is heroicised in the text. This poem answers The Sovereign, a poem by Charles Small Pybus , addressed...
Textual Production Michael Field
The two writers' vast journal, kept over many years, was not originally intended for publication but soon developed into a more self-consciously produced collaborative text by MF . Excerpts were published by T. Sturge Moore
Textual Production Catherine Talbot
CT kept journals which survive in the British Library . She kept her journal in French when writing about an unidentified man with whom she was in love with in the 1740s.
Myers, Sylvia Harcstark. The Bluestocking Circle: Women, Friendship, and the Life of the Mind in Eighteenth-Century England. Clarendon, 1990.
112
Textual Production Catherine Talbot
Following the renunciation of her love for George Berkeley , it seems that CT wrote a series of at least ten poems of passionate feeling.
Myers, Sylvia Harcstark. The Bluestocking Circle: Women, Friendship, and the Life of the Mind in Eighteenth-Century England. Clarendon, 1990.
117
She, or more probably Elizabeth Carter acting after her...
Textual Production Adelaide O'Keeffe
The British Library holds two of her letters.
Textual Production Githa Sowerby
A Man and Some Women was never published. A typescript is available in the Lord Chamberlain's collection at the British Library .
Textual Production Catherine Gore
Henry Colburn exploited the publicity created by the association of CG 's Mrs. Armytage with a sensational murder: it is said that he promptly re-issued the novel.
The catalogues of the British Library and Bodleian
Textual Production Mary Jones
It was reprinted later in the century, at Salisbury and at Edinburgh, as The Lass at [or on] the Brow of the Hill: from its opening or closing line: At the brow...
Textual Production Frances Burney
The most substantial parts of FB 's immense hoard of personal and family papers are in the New York Public Library (Berg Collection) and in the British Library . Their division (sometimes two torn and...
Textual Production Dorothea Du Bois
Its full title was The Case of Ann, Countess of Anglesey, lately Deceased, lawful wife of Richard Annesley, late Earl of Anglesey , and of her three surviving Daughters, Lady Dorothea, Lady Caroline, and Lady...
Textual Production Elizabeth Warren
Its fuller title is The Old and Good Way Vindicated: In a Treatise, Wherein Divers Errours, (Both in Judgement and Practice, Incident to These Declining Times) are Unmasked, for the Caution of Humble Christians...
Textual Production Mary Anne Schimmelpenninck
The British Library copy of this translation by MAS is 1200 a. 30, has a manuscript note giving the original author's name. The pamphlet ends with a list of other works by MAS .
Textual Production Thomas Hardy
The manuscript, which survives in the British Library , is an extraordinary palimpsest of sets of revisions for different versions of the novel: in serialized and volume form, in Britain and the USA.
Hardy, Thomas. “General Introduction”. Tess of the D’Urbervilles, edited by Juliet Grindle and Simon Gatrell, Clarendon Press, 1983, pp. 1-103.
55-60
Textual Production Elizabeth Baker
Typescripts of EB 's unpublished plays can be found in the Lord Chamberlain's collection at the British Library and the Theatre Museum study room in London.

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