Black, Helen C. Pen, Pencil, Baton and Mask: Biographical Sketches. Spottiswoode.
225
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Laurence Hope | LH
's eldest maternal uncle, Harcourt Griffin
, was a composer, and a number of his pieces are held by the British Library
. One of these, Weep not for the Dead, features words... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire | Elizabeth Carter
was Lady Spencer's mentor on religion and reassured her that her high social station made it necessary, even meritorious, to be to a large extent worldly. The Althorp MSS at the British Library |
Employer | Marjorie Bowen | In her early teens, MB
began earning money as a research assistant at the British Museum
, a job which encouraged her interest in historical research and her hope for a career in writing. She... |
Employer | Michèle Roberts | The first year of her course gave her a position as Library Scholar in the Department of Printed Books at the then British Museum
. She worked on the enquiry desk, then at cataloguing. She... |
Education | Flora Klickmann | FK
had a British Museum
reading-room ticket at seventeen: a newspaper article on the reading room mentioned (though not by name) the charming sight she and her mother made as they studied there—apparently in contrast... |
Education | L. T. Meade | As soon as LTM
reached London she began to study daily at the British Museum
. Black, Helen C. Pen, Pencil, Baton and Mask: Biographical Sketches. Spottiswoode. 225 |
Education | Marjorie Bowen | She also started drawing, despite having no money for paints or canvases, and gained permission to copy at the National Gallery
and the British Museum
. There, she learned the techniques of oil painting and... |
Education | Christine Brooke-Rose | After being demobbed from her wartime position at Bletchley she had spent some time reading daily in the British Library
(then the British Museum reading room) to prepare for the entrance exams to Somerville. Brooke-Rose, Christine. Remake. Carcanet. 137 |
Education | Emma Roberts | Her memoirist says her thirst for letters was unquenchable, and the extent of her reading proves that her early years must have been years of application. Unsigned, and Emma Roberts. “Memoir”. Notes of an Overland Journey Through France and Egypt to Bombay, W. H. Allen, p. xi - xxviii. xiv |
Education | Elizabeth Strickland | To train herself as a historian, ES
plunged enthusiastically into working in the British Museum
at history itself and also the study of early handwriting (palaeography), which she would need for deciphering original sources. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. |
Education | Helen Waddell | HW
enrolled as a postgraduate student at Somerville College, Oxford
, in November 1920, but never finished either the thesis or the residence requirements for her D.Phil. She developed at this stage an over-riding interest... |
Dedications | Charlotte Lennox | Again Johnson supplied her with a dedication (to the future George III
; a sheet of George's notes on the plays is bound into his presentation copy, now in the British Library
). The work... |
Dedications | Lady Mary Walker | LMW
dedicates her second book to a friend she has known for twelve years (identified in a manuscript note in the British Library
copy, shelfmark C 175 l. 4, as Lady Marchmont
). Lady Marchmont... |
death | Arabella Shore | She left her sister Emily
's manuscript diary to the British Museum
(that part of it which is now the British Library
) but her will never reached probate and the papers never reached the depository. Gates, Barbara T., and Margaret Emily Shore. “Self-writing as Legacy: The <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Journal of Emily Shore</span>”;. Journal of Emily Shore: Revised and Expanded. |
death | Elizabeth Tollet | She was buried on 11 February in the church there, where her monument (before it was obliterated by the feet of the passing congregation) recorded her poems in various languages . . . adorned with... |
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