Myers, Sylvia Harcstark. The Bluestocking Circle: Women, Friendship, and the Life of the Mind in Eighteenth-Century England. Clarendon, 1990.
112
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 |
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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