Houghton, Walter E., and Jean Harris Slingerland, editors. The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals 1824-1900. University of Toronto Press.
1: 750
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
politics | Dorothy Richardson | With varying degrees of commitment (usually minor), Richardson immersed herself in various philosophical movements of the period. She did much of her reading at the British Museum
's Reading Room, which she revered, but elsewhere... |
Publishing | Mary Delany | She began using the new technique in 1772. The idea of the collection dates from 1774, but she included in it a few representations made before that. She titled the volumes Plants copied after Nature... |
Publishing | Elizabeth Rigby | While ER
was writing Fellowship she was also collaborating with Harriet Grote
on an article calling for reforms to the British Museum
. Their article appeared anonymously in the January 1868 Quarterly Review. Houghton, Walter E., and Jean Harris Slingerland, editors. The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals 1824-1900. University of Toronto Press. 1: 750 |
Publishing | Maria Callcott | She made some editorial changes, for publication, to all her South American writings done while she was actually there, and resolved to omit all quotation from private letters or conversation, though her editor says she... |
Publishing | Susanna Watts | SW
's authorship of this work was not known in her lifetime. This was a member of a very new genre: it represented only the third or fourth guidebook in English about a non-resort location... |
Publishing | Louisa Stuart Costello | She had been working on these translations for some years. This handsome work was (in the words of the old Dictionary of National Biography) enriched with curious illustrations laboriously executed by hand, by... |
Reception | Josephine Tey | Daviot was sued for plagiarism by Gillian Oliver
, the author of a novel about Richard II titled The Broomscod Collar (1930). The case was settled out of court, and the arbitrator judged that the... |
Reception | Amy Levy | For years the British Museum
(that part which is now the British Library
) shelved its copy of this poem in the suppressed safe Ashworth, Jenn. “Amy Levy (1861 - 1888)”. Breaking Bounds. Six Newnham Lives, edited by Biddy Passmore, Newnham College, pp. 26-39. 36 |
Reception | Anne Damer | AD
's art and her gender made her a kind of tourist attraction. She complained of being teazed and tired to death with the number of persons coming to see her work, and making crass... |
Residence | Anna Atkins | After he retired from the British Museum
, her father came to live with her and her husband in 1840. Nicholls, C. S., editor. The Dictionary of National Biography: Missing Persons. Oxford University Press. |
Residence | Elizabeth Thomas | After she was widowed, |
Residence | Virginia Woolf | Virginia was keen to regain access to the amenities of London—music, the British Museum
, social life (her delight in parties, she wrote, was a piece of jewellery I inherit from my mother) Woolf, Virginia. The Diary of Virginia Woolf. Editors Bell, Anne Olivier and Andrew McNeillie, Hogarth Press. 2: 250 |
Textual Features | Henrietta Rouviere Mosse | The title-page quotes Shakespeare
, who is then cited in the preface to justify the genre of historical fiction. HRM
mentions her consultations of records and documents, and expresses her thanks to the gentlemen of... |
Textual Features | Barbara Hofland | BH
explains that she intends to vindicate the character of Richard III
(who in her view came back as Perkin Warbeck
) and expose Henry VII
as a villain. She used the British Museum
again... |
Textual Features | Amelia B. Edwards | ABE
seizes the attention of her audience from her first paragraph with her claim that to the surprise of scholars, ancient Egyptian woman turns out to have been always free, respected, and in the full... |
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