Jenkins, Elizabeth. The View from Downshire Hill. Michael Johnson, 2004.
13
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Elizabeth Jenkins | His father, Ebenezer Jenkins
, was a Methodist
missionary in India during the 1840s. James Heald Jenkins was his only son. Jenkins, Elizabeth. The View from Downshire Hill. Michael Johnson, 2004. 13 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Cassandra Cooke | Cassandra's cousin Jane Austen
criticised the household management of Samuel Cooke (who was her godfather), judging him a disagreable, fidgetty master to his servants. qtd. in 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, 1990. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Susanna Wesley | SW
bore the child who became the most famous of all her offspring: John Wesley
, father of Methodism
. Wesley, Susanna. “Introduction”. Susanna Wesley: The Complete Writings, edited by Charles, Jr Wallace, Oxford University Press, 1997. xiii |
Friends, Associates | Fanny Kemble | Dr William Ellery Channing
, an American Unitarian
and friend of Lucy Aikin
, met and befriended FK
. His views came to influence hers. 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, 1990. Marshall, Dorothy. Fanny Kemble. Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1977. 93 |
Literary responses | Judith Cowper Madan | Roger Lonsdale
in 1990 followed Falconer Madan
in supposing that her child-bearing and the influence of John Wesley
and the Methodists
amounted to sufficient explanation for her ceasing to write. Valerie Rumbold
suggested in 1996... |
Literary responses | Ethel Wilson | Later critics concede that the work has value despite the apparent vapidity of the Aunt Topaz character. William H. New
has argued that her lack of depth helps illustrate her anachronistic function, which reveals the... |
Literary responses | Mary Bosanquet Fletcher | Three biographies appeared in the years following MBF
's death, and went through many re-issues. Local memory of her remained strong (as instanced by the Memorial Chapel at Leyton Wesleyan church), and so did international... |
Literary Setting | Arnold Bennett | Like AB
's early novels and two collections of short stories, these are set in the five towns of the Potteries. Clayhanger is set in the past: during the industrial revolution and the days... |
Literary Setting | Elizabeth Charles | This one-volume novel was based on the lives of MethodistsGeorge Whitefield
and John Wesley
. Shattock, Joanne. The Oxford Guide to British Women Writers. Oxford University Press, 1993. Sutherland, John, b. 1938. The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Stanford University Press, 1989. |
Material Conditions of Writing | Judith Cowper Madan | JCM
continued occasionally to address short poems to her husband. One survives which she wrote to her two daughters, and two written to a baby grandson (one before and one after his death). Madan, Falconer. The Madan Family. Oxford University Press, 1933. 270-2 |
Material Conditions of Writing | Catherine Phillips | That same year CP
published Reasons why the People called Quakers cannot so fully unite with the Methodists, in their Missions to the Negroes in the West Indian Islands and Africa, as freely to... |
Occupation | Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence | EPL
began to be active in the Working Girls' Club
of the MethodistWest London Mission
. Some sources, for instance the website of the Women's Library
, date her work with the club as... |
Occupation | Ethel Wilson | Until the age of thirty-one EW
continued to live with her grandmother Annie Malkin
and two elderly aunts. The household was severe for a young woman: on Sundays, Annie Malkin's strict Methodist
sensibilities led her... |
Occupation | Samuel Taylor Coleridge | The son of a vicar, he preached publicly and toyed with the idea of entering the Unitarian
ministry. He worked as a journalist for the Morning Post and lectured widely on both literature and philosophy. Drabble, Margaret, editor. The Oxford Companion to English Literature. 5th ed., Oxford University Press, 1985. |
politics | Mary Bosanquet Fletcher | MBF
seems to have been too much occupied with the religious life to have much thought to spare for earthly politics. At the beginning of December 1792, however, after a conversation with someone anxious about... |
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