Keary, Eliza. Memoir of Annie Keary. Macmillan.
125
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Literary Setting | Geraldine Jewsbury | During her marriage, Zoe becomes acquainted with a Catholic priest named Everhard Borrows who doubts his faith. They fall in love, and Everhard feels compelled to leave the priesthood for Zoe. One of the novel's... |
Literary responses | Harriet Beecher Stowe | When HBS
later visited England she was a celebrity: crowds waited for her arrival on a Liverpool pier. Charles Kingsley
said in a letter to her that her novel caused him to re-evaluate his opinion... |
Literary responses | Georgiana Fullerton | The Athenæum published a positive review of Constance Sherwood on 16 September 1865, claiming that GFhas written a book which no one can read without deep interest; and she has written it in an... |
Literary responses | Louisa May Alcott | Among a chorus of praise from those who read LMA
when they were young, Edith Wharton
stands out as harder to please. In her memoir A Backward Glance, 1934, she recalls how her mother... |
Literary responses | Augusta Webster | The book could hardly have been written, said the Athenæum, unless Kingsley
's Water Babies and Lewis Carroll
's Alice in Wonderland had preceded it. It pronounced the book's much ado without nothing is... |
Literary responses | Annie Keary | The children of Charles Kingsley
(whose own The Heroes, re-telling Greek mythological stories, had appeared a year before The Heroes of Asgard), were particularly keen on the Keary Norse collection. Keary, Eliza. Memoir of Annie Keary. Macmillan. 125 |
Literary responses | Georgiana Chatterton | Charles Kingsley
, to whom she sent a copy of her Richter volume, wrote: I find gems wherever I open it. “The Ferrers of Baddesley Clinton”. Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. |
Leisure and Society | Queen Victoria | Among her favourite writers were Alfred Tennyson
, Sir Walter Scott
, George Eliot
(whose The Mill on the Floss made a deep impression Victoria, Queen. Queen Victoria in Her Letters and Journals. Editor Hibbert, Christopher, Penguin. 116 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Charlotte Maria Tucker | Marshall's prediction proved true: CMT
's audience disappeared as the Victorian age ended. However, the Dictionary of Literary Biography acknowledges that her successful introduction of imaginative richness into didactic literature influenced other authors and established... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Roma White | The rose-leaves (i.e. petals) of Brownies and Rose-Leaves are said to come from the pot-pourri jar maintained by Mother Carey. (RW
does not explain who this is, for as she says, dear Charles Kingsley |
Intertextuality and Influence | John Strange Winter | Relaying this account in his biography of JSW
, Oliver Bainbridge
wrote that she researched, along with the methods of Wilkie Collins, those of her other favourites including Charles Reade
, Charles
and Henry Kingsley |
Intertextuality and Influence | Charlotte Yonge | It was praised in the Athenæum, and was the last book read by Lord Raglan
before his death in the Crimea the year after its publication. Hayter, Alethea. Charlotte Yonge. Northcote House. 1 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Ellen Mary Clerke | The text opens with several Ballads of the Sea, Clerke, Ellen Mary. The Flying Dutchman, and Other Poems. W. Satchell. 1 |
Friends, Associates | Algernon Charles Swinburne | He had ties to writers Anne Ogle
, Mary Louisa Molesworth
, Ouida
, and Mathilde Blind
. His movement through England's literary circles also brought him into the company of Thomas Carlyle
, James Anthony Froude |
Friends, Associates | Emma Marshall | Her daughter mentions among EM
's friends the gifted Frances Bunnett
(who published her translations as F. E. Bunnett), Frances Alleyne
(also a translator, as S. [Sarah] F. Alleyne), and Frances Mary Owen |
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