Religious Tract Society

Connections

Connections Author name Sort ascending Excerpt
Textual Production Frances Browne
FB issued with the Religious Tract Society a didactic volume entitled The Nearest Neighbour and Other Stories, apparently her last publication before her death.
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
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Publishing Frances Browne
The final publication by FB , another illustrated tale called The First of the African Diamonds, was published posthumously by the Religious Tract Society in its Ninepenny Series.
The Dictionary of Literary Biography lists...
Textual Production Emma Frances Brooke
The tract was published in London by the Religious Tract Society , whose purpose was to distribute evangelical, non-denominational tracts to the working classes, urging them to consider the sinfulness of their ways and to...
Textual Production Emma Frances Brooke
Following God's Gift to Two; or Margaret Redfern's Discipline, and after she had already embarked on her career as a novelist, EFB published a second and final religious pamphlet with the Religious Tract Society
Textual Production E. Owens Blackburne
This text is different from the publication Irish Stories held by the Belfast Central Library, Ulster and Irish Studies . Published by the Religious Tract Society in 1889, this unattributed collection of moral tales for...
Textual Production Isabella Bird
IB followed Journeys in Persia and Kurdistan with two articles in the Contemporary Review about the persecution of Christians in Asiatic Turkey.
Stephen, Sir Leslie, and Sidney Lee, editors. The Dictionary of National Biography. Smith, Elder.
Another travel narrative which she based on the same trip, Among the...
Textual Features Mary Frances Billington
From her concluding chapter, it is clear that MFB was deeply invested in the teachings of Christianity and attributed the sacrifices of serving women to its widespread principles. She writes: The noble army of serving...
Textual Features Matilda Betham-Edwards
This man, a French Protestant condemned to the galleys as a heretic, had published authentic memoirs of his harrowing experiences in 1757. Oliver Goldsmith (who may possibly have met Marteilhe) had translated them pseudonymously into...

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