Spedding, Patrick. “Eliza Haywood, Writing (and) Pornography in 1742”. Women Writing 1550-1750, edited by Jo Walwood and Paul Salzman, English Program, School of Communication, Arts and Critical Enquiry, La Trobe University, 2001, pp. 237-51.
244
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Dedications | Eliza Haywood | EH
issued her third singly-published novel this year, The Rash Resolve, dedicated to Lady Rumney or Romney
, with 1724 on its title-page and a prefatory poem by Richard Savage
. Lady Romney, a... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Eliza Haywood | After a possible affair with Richard Savage
, EH
seems to have begun her twenty-year liaison with William Hatchett
, playwright and seemingly quintessential Grub Street hack, Spedding, Patrick. “Eliza Haywood, Writing (and) Pornography in 1742”. Women Writing 1550-1750, edited by Jo Walwood and Paul Salzman, English Program, School of Communication, Arts and Critical Enquiry, La Trobe University, 2001, pp. 237-51. 244 Haywood, Eliza. “Introduction and Chronology of Events in Eliza Haywood’s Life”. The Injur’d Husband, or, The Mistaken Resentment; and, Lasselia, or, The Self-Abandon’d, edited by Jerry C. Beasley, University Press of Kentucky, 1999, p. ix - xlii. xxxix-xl Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Eliza Haywood | EH
may have married in Ireland, while she was there in 1715. She says in letters of the late 1720s that her marriage was unfortunate qtd. in Blouch, Christine. “Eliza Haywood and the Romance of Obscurity”. Studies in English Literature, Vol. 31 , 1 June 1991– 2024, pp. 535-52. 538 He was... |
Friends, Associates | Eliza Haywood | At this point in her life EH
entered on literary relationships with Aaron Hill
(who, with some gallant condescension, was a good friend to women writers) and his circle. They included Richard Savage
(who has... |
Friends, Associates | Elizabeth Carter | EC
associated on terms of warmth and equality with men of letters or culture such as Samuel Johnson
, Samuel Richardson
, Thomas Birch
, Moses Browne
, Richard Savage
, William
and John Duncombe |
Friends, Associates | Martha Fowke | She formed close links with a group of male poets who held opposition political views: James Thomson
, Aaron Hill
(who was corresponding with her by June 1721), Richard Savage
(with whom she was exchanging... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Frances Jacson | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Isabella Spence | The title-page quotes Richard Savage
on the feelings aroused by being an unguided orphan. The protagonist (on balance) of this story, Matilda Trevanion, is eight when it opens, and the people around her home in... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Plumptre | AP
quotes Pope
on her title-page (about indifference to fame) and Shakespeare
, Thomson
, Savage
, and others as chapter-headings. She sets her novel around the lakes of Killarney in Ireland. Antonia is... |
Literary responses | Eliza Haywood | This novel reaped warm praise, not only from Savage
(who hailed EH
's rising Name) Spedding, Patrick. A Bibliography of Eliza Haywood. Pickering and Chatto, 2003. 135 |
Literary responses | Eliza Haywood | This year EH
was praised by James Sterling
, but compared to her disadvantage with Martha Fowke
by Richard Savage
. |
Literary responses | Eliza Haywood | The personal attacks in this work provoked backlash. Haywood was either reproved or attacked in her turn by Richard Savage
, Martha Fowke
, and David Mallet
, and their attacks established the convention that... |
Literary responses | May Drummond | A scurrilous poem of 1735, The Female Speaker; or, The Priests in the Wrong, probably by Richard Savage
, linked MD
's name (lightly disguised by dashes) with that unruly Female Member the tongue... |
Literary responses | Martha Fowke | In the same volume Savage
salutes MF
as a better and more moving poet than Haywood. Christine Gerrard believes that the British Journal review of this volume, which celebrates the large Share of Merit in... |
Occupation | Frances Seymour Countess of Hertford | Among writers who received Lady Hertford's patronage were Elizabeth Singer Rowe
, Elizabeth Boyd
, Elizabeth Carter
, Mary Chandler
, Isaac Watts
, Laurence Eusden
(for whom she set topics of occasional poems), James Thomson |
No bibliographical results available.