John Gay

Standard Name: Gay, John

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Mary Barber
Here a mother teaching her children out of Gay's Fables, 1727, finds her fav'rite Son so moved by the tale of the hare and many friends that she has to assure him that if...
Textual Production Anna Maria Porter
The first volume had a frontispiece designed by AMP 's brother R. K. Porter . The epigraph came from the introduction to Gay 's Fables (1727) : From objects most minute and mean, / A...
Textual Production Mary Latter
The title-page has a quotation from John Gay about the outspoken integrity of the poet (as contrasted with courtiers).
Latter, Mary. Liberty and Interest. James Fletcher.
title-page
A copy was offered for sale in late twentieth century by C. R. Johnson as...
Textual Production Helen Mathers
HM continued after this to keep up a rate of one or two new novels a year (though 1897 and 1899 were fallow years). They include T'other Dear Charmer, 1892 (titled from John Gay
Textual Production Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
These poems have been linked since first publication with the names of Pope and Gay . But there are many reasons to think that the contributions of these two were far smaller than has been...
Textual Production Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
These poems were three of the six eclogues (one for each weekday) preserved in the poetry album which Montagu claimed as her own, and printed as Six Town Eclogues in 1747. Monday, the first...
Textual Features Ann Candler
Other poems address public or personal topics, sometimes blending the two together. One may assume that in her poems on political issues AC expressed her actual opinions, even while mindful of remaining acceptable. Her Serious...
Textual Features Elizabeth Tollet
The long epistle mentioned on the title-page, a philosophical poem On the Origin of the World, and the two Latin psalms are the works that show most revision since the earlier volume.
Londry, Michael, and Elizabeth Tollet. The Poems of Elizabeth Tollet. Oxford University.
37
A...
Textual Features L. E. L.
This novel provides a satirical portrait of high society in early eighteenth-century England. It centres on Henrietta, Countess of Marchmont, an upper-class orphan enduring a loveless marriage and imperilled by her first visit to...
Textual Features Elizabeth Boyd
EB offers original, discriminating praise for women's writing: Susanna Centlivre (her inspiration, she says), Eliza Haywood (though she regrets her exposure of women's faults), Aphra Behn , and Delarivier Manley , whom she calls the...
Publishing Mary Barber
There appeared at Dublin an anonymous poem by MB : A Tale, Being an Addition to Mr. Gay 's Fables.
English Short Title Catalogue. http://estc.bl.uk/.
Publishing Mary Barber
He concluded, let Mrs Howard know that I recommend you to the Queen ,
Stewart, Wendy. “The Poetical Trade of Favours: Swift, Mary Barber, and the Counterfeit Letters”. Lumen, Vol.
xviii
, pp. 155-74.
170
though he declined to supply a direct introduction to a potential royal patron. Two months later Gay wrote to Swift...
Performance of text Alexander Pope
John Gay , AP , and John Arbuthnot 's farce Three Hours After Marriage was first staged; it was published anonymously the same month.
The London Stage 1660-1800. Southern Illinois University Press.
2: 431
Monthly Catalogue, 1714 - 1717. Bernard Lintot.
Occupation Charlotte Charke
CC , at Henry Fielding 's Haymarket Theatre , appeared in male roles: as Macheath (John Gay ), Falstaff (Shakespeare ), George Barnwell (George Lillo ), and Lothario (Nicholas Rowe ).
The London Stage 1660-1800. Southern Illinois University Press.
3: 402ff
Occupation Leah Sumbel
She received rave reviews for this first appearance, as Mrs Cadwallader in The Author (a burlesque portrayal of a woman writer). Later that summer she swashbuckled as Macheath in a famous transvestite production of Gay

Timeline

January 1716: John Gay published Trivia; or, The Art of...

Writing climate item

January 1716

John Gay published Trivia; or, The Art of Walking the Streets of London.

20 January 1724: Elizabeth Harrison wrote for publication,...

Women writers item

20 January 1724

Elizabeth Harrison wrote for publication, with her name, A Letter to Mr. John Gay , On his Tragedy, call'd The Captives. To which is annex'd a copy of verses to the Princess.

By June 1727: John Gay published his first series of F...

Writing climate item

By June 1727

John Gay published his first series of Fables.

1728: Ephraim Chambers attempted in his Cyclopaedia...

Writing climate item

1728

Ephraim Chambers attempted in his Cyclopaedia to offer a digest of all existing modern knowledge.

29 January 1728: John Gay's The Beggar's Opera opened at Lincoln's...

Writing climate item

29 January 1728

John Gay 's The Beggar's Opera opened at Lincoln's Inn Fields . It was published on 14 February.

30 March 1730: Henry Fielding's The Author's Farce opened...

Writing climate item

30 March 1730

Henry Fielding 's The Author's Farce opened at his Little Theatre in the Haymarket , which was currently presenting its first season.

7 December 1732: John Rich opened a new theatre in Covent...

Building item

7 December 1732

John Rich opened a new theatre in Covent Garden , the Theatre Royal, and moved his farces and pantomimes there from the other Theatre Royal in Drury Lane .

8 June 1829: Douglas William Jerrold's play Black-Ey'd...

Writing climate item

8 June 1829

Douglas William Jerrold 's playBlack-Ey'd Susan premiered at the Surrey Theatre in London.

Texts

Gay, John et al. Three Hours After Marriage. Bernard Lintot, 1717.