Salzman, Paul. “How Alexander Dyce Assembled Specimens of British Poetesses: A Key Moment in the Transmission of Early Modern Women’s Writing”. Women’s Writing, Vol.
26
, No. 1, pp. 88-105. 92
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Henrietta Battier | HB
's earliest identified Irish satire, the only one known to precede her collected volume, was An Epistle from Patrick Pindar, to the Hills and the Vallies, and All Whom it May Concern, 1790... |
Reception | Emily Lawless | Many of EL
's papers survive, although they are scattered. The largest collection is at Marsh's Library
in Dublin. Collections of her correspondence survive in the Bodleian Library
, Oxford, the Hove Central Library |
Reception | Katherine Philips | KP
was never wholly forgotten. Alexander Dyce
, anthologizing her in 1825, said her work was impregnated with thought. Salzman, Paul. “How Alexander Dyce Assembled Specimens of British Poetesses: A Key Moment in the Transmission of Early Modern Women’s Writing”. Women’s Writing, Vol. 26 , No. 1, pp. 88-105. 92 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Tighe | MT
's father, the Rev. William Blachford
, was Librarian of Marsh's Library
in Dublin. He died while Mary was still a baby of seven months. Tighe, Mary. “Introduction”. Verses Transcribed for H. T., edited by Harriet Kramer Linkin. |
Education | Frances Power Cobbe | Her continuing studies, particularly of theology, benefitted from access to Archbishop Marsh's Library
in Dublin (though it was ostensibly open only to gentlemen and graduates). Her reading at this period may have included Marian Evans, later George Eliot |
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