Chandler, Mary. A Description of Bath. James Leake.
title-page
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Wealth and Poverty | Lady Jane Lumley | Since LJL
was her father's last surviving heir, his collections (including his library and her manuscripts) passed at his death to her widower. In 1609, they passed into the royal collection, and in due course... |
Wealth and Poverty | Adelaide O'Keeffe | On her father
's death AOK
applied to the Royal Literary Fund
, which granted her £25. For the Fund she estimated her lifetime literary earnings for herself as not more than £200. This estimate... |
Wealth and Poverty | Marjorie Bowen | When she got back to her mother's household in England, Margaret was distressed at the mismanagement of money and frequent lack of food. She was by then sixteen, and keenly felt that she should be... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Lucy Toulmin Smith | Smith provides a thorough summary of the state of librarianship as a profession at the time. She notes that even for men, librarianship is a fledgling profession, so that women seeking to join it may... |
Textual Production | Charlotte Mew | CM
's manuscripts of poems and short stories and her unpublished letters are held in the British Library
and in the Lockwood Memorial Library at SUNY Buffalo
. The librarians at Buffalo are said to... |
Textual Production | Jane Barker | Most of her extant manuscripts are at the British Library
and at Magdalen College
, Oxford. Just a few which are more widely scattered (one among the family papers of Jacobite diarist Mary Caesar |
Textual Production | Mary Chandler | The British Library
copy is 11630 h. 7. This edition was inscribed to Princess Amelia
(one of George II
's daughters, who had twice visited Bath). Chandler, Mary. A Description of Bath. James Leake. title-page |
Textual Production | Roxburghe Lothian | Its title in print—Lizzie Lothian. An Autobiographical Romance. By E. K. Coulson. With an Introduction by E. F. Coulson—seems to draw attention to the similarity of the names of wife and husband. In... |
Textual Production | Florence Nightingale | While travelling to and through Egypt, FN
kept a diary. It was thought until recently that only one diary survived from this trip, the one covering the period 1 January-15 July 1850, held at... |
Textual Production | Marie Stopes | |
Textual Production | Frances Wright | The play was published the same year by Matthew Carey
at Philadelphia. A London edition followed in 1822. The British Library
holds copies of each edition containing manuscript notes. 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. |
Textual Production | Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington | Since it is listed by neither the British Library
nor the Bodleian
, and since the four copies listed by OCLC are all in the USA, it may perhaps have remained unpublished in England. Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington,. “Introduction”. Conversations of Lord Byron, edited by Ernest J. Lovell, Princeton University Press, pp. 3-114. 82 |
Textual Production | Cassandra Cooke | As well as writings by CC
now among the Beachcroft family private archive (at the Bodleian Library
) and the Stoneleigh papers (at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
, Stratford-upon-Avon), the letters whose backs Frances Burney |
Textual Production | Evelyn Glover | EG
's correspondence with the Society of Authors
, 1921-1941, is now in the British Library
, catalogued as Add MSS 63250, 3. ff. 10-71. National Archives,. “National Register of Archives (NRA)”. National Archives (UK). “The British Library Manuscripts Catalogue”. The British Library Website. |
Textual Production | Anne Irwin | AI
wrote letters that were admired. Some, like her travel letters, are lost. Some are in the British Library
. Those to her father, preserved in the Castle Howard archives, have been published by the... |