British Library

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Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Mary Charlton
This novel was advertised as soon to be published in July (at which date the title was to be Laure; or, The Parisian), and as recently published on 30 October.
Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press, 2000, 2 vols.
1
It has a...
Textual Production Mary Ferrar
Numbers of Ferrar manuscripts remain in the Bodleian Library , the British Library , Cambridge University Library , and the library of Magdalene College, Cambridge .
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
under Nicholas Ferrar
Various selections have been edited: by...
Textual Production Christabel Pankhurst
OCLC lists forty copies of this publication surviving in libraries (many at bible colleges or theological seminaries), but not one outside North America: the title is not held by the British Library , the Bodleian
Textual Production Enid Blyton
The first number appeared of Enid Blyton's Magazine, the month after the end of her previous periodical for children, Sunny Stories.
Her biographer Barbara Stoney gives the title as Enid Blyton Magazine...
Textual Production Edith Lyttelton
The Churchill Archives Centre at Churchill College , Cambridge, hold EL 's unpublished memoirs and correspondence from 1888 to 1945. The British Library also holds some of her letters, including correspondence with the League of Dramatists
Textual Production Frances Cornford
Cornford's papers are kept at the British Library .
Dowson, Jane et al. “Introduction”. Selected Poems, edited by Jane Dowson and Jane Dowson, Enitharmon Press, 1996, p. xiii - xxv.
xxiv
Some of her letters have been published in Understand the Weapon, Understand the Wound, an edition of the works of her son John Cornford .
Textual Production Antonia Fraser
She and Pinter decided to sell their manuscripts to the British Library . In July 1994 they went to pay our manuscripts a visit. They found that while Pinter's were stored in conventional box-files, hers...
Textual Production Sarah Green
The literary-critical preface, unusually for such a satirical work, bears her intials. Green says she has reasons for concealing her name, but will affix the REAL initials of that name to this advertisement. ....
Textual Production Mary Ann Kelty
This novel is rare (not listed in OCLC WorldCat) though the British Library has two copies.
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
The similarity of the heroine's name to that of Eliza Rivers in MAK 's first novel suggests some...
Textual Production Charlotte Brontë
CB 's stay in Brussels (as well as contributing eventually to Villette) produced a number of French exercises or devoirs, plus her subsequent letters to Constantin Heger . Four of the letters (of which...
Textual Production Lucas Malet
Surviving papers of LM 's are in private hands, in the British Library , and at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin .
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
153
Textual Production Sarah Dixon
Elizabeth Bunce was a niece or cousin of the poet. She and her husband preserved this poem (perhaps written too late for the volume, perhaps regarded as still too private) with others in transcriptions laid...
Textual Production Isabella Whitney
The British Library holds the world's only surviving copy, C. 39 b. 45; again, one cannot tell for certain whether it is a first edition or a re-issue. Richard Jones seems to have marketeed Nicholas Breton
Textual Production Constance Smedley
An appendix, Women and the State by Ethel Snowden , was reprinted from the January number of The World's Work, giving a brief history of women in local government and public positions.
Smedley, Constance, and Mrs Philip Snowden. Woman: A Few Shrieks!. Garden City Press.
121ff
The...
Textual Production Maude Royden
The Women's Library holds most of MR 's papers (including a folder of correspondence with Ursula Roberts, the writer Susan Miles), while the British Library , Lambeth Palace Library , and the Bodleian Library hold some letters.
“The Papers of Agnes Maude Royden”. Archives Hub: London Metropolitan University: Women’s Library.
“Papers of Ursula Roberts”. AIM25. London Metropolitan University: Women’s Library.

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