Houghton, Walter E., and Jean Harris Slingerland, editors. The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals 1824-1900. University of Toronto Press, 1966–1989, 5 vols.
1: 744
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Publishing | Elizabeth Rigby | ER
anonymously published The Late Prince Consort in the January 1862 Quarterly Review, only a month after Prince Albert
's death. Houghton, Walter E., and Jean Harris Slingerland, editors. The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals 1824-1900. University of Toronto Press, 1966–1989, 5 vols. 1: 744 |
Publishing | Caroline Norton | CN
published in Macmillan's Magazine an elegy on Prince Albert
, entitled Gone! Chedzoy, Alan. A Scandalous Woman: The Story of Caroline Norton. Allison and Busby, 1995. 272-3 |
Textual Features | Jane Porter | It takes the form of congratulations to the bridegroom
, beginning with Wake Albert wake! from dreams of hope arise. qtd. in Pope-Hennessy, Una. Agnes Strickland: Biographer of the Queens of England. Chatto and Windus, 1940. 80 |
Textual Features | Catherine Marsh | The book was inspired by the typhoid fever which Albert Edward, Prince of Wales
, suffered in December 1871. A service was held for him on the 14th, the anniversary of the death of his... |
Textual Features | Queen Victoria | It covers the state visit of Louis-Napoleon
and Eugénie
, and QV
's return visit to Paris with Albert
. Victoria, Queen, and Raymond Mortimer. Leaves from a Journal. Privately printed, 1888. |
Textual Features | Queen Victoria | Editor Roger Fulford
reproduces selections from the previously unpublished letters between Victoria and her eldest daughter. The first of six volumes of their letters, this spans from the time of the princess's marriage, when the... |
Textual Production | Dinah Mulock Craik | The essay compares the two queens, contrasting Elizabeth for her masculine intellect, and iron will . . . and the utter blank of her domestic life with Victoria, gifted only with moderate talent, who if... |
Textual Production | Jean Plaidy | The first volume seems almost to be marking time since the last in the previous series, Victoria in the Wings, which had appeared in March the same year: the future queen is still a... |
Textual Production | Charlotte Yonge | She had already written about More, twenty-six years earlier, in Biographies of Good Women, and she was to write on her again, for young people, in The Cunning Woman's Grandson, A Tale of Cheddar... |
Textual Production | Florence Nightingale | The Prince Consort
attended the reading. The piece was translated into French the same year. Bishop, William John, and Sue Goldie. A Bio-Bibliography of Florence Nightingale. Dawsons for the International Council of Nurses, 1962. 101 |
Textual Production | Henrietta Euphemia Tindal | An accident at Hartley Colliery in Northumberland provoked HET
to write a poem about it; this year she also wrote of Queen Victoria
's mourning for Prince Albert
. Tindal, Henrietta Euphemia. Rhymes and Legends. Richard Bentley and Son, 1879. ix Leighton, Angela, and Margaret Reynolds, editors. Victorian Women Poets: An Anthology. Blackwell, 1995. 214 |
Textual Production | Florence Nightingale | It was written in response to the Royal Commission on the Sanitary State of the Army in India
and provided a shortened, and more accessible, version of FN
's report on the commission's findings. Bishop, William John, and Sue Goldie. A Bio-Bibliography of Florence Nightingale. Dawsons for the International Council of Nurses, 1962. 57, 63 |
Textual Production | Harriet Smythies | HS
expressed her patriotism in The Prince
and the People. A Poem under the name Mrs. Yorick Smythies. Athenæum. J. Lection. 1393 (1854): 845 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Harriet Smythies | The first canto of the poem, in a mix of heroic couplets and quatrains in the same iambic pentameter line, expresses loyal indignation at the cowardly tumult raised against a prince who is defenceless as... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Ada Cambridge | The first section of Echoes, which comprises nearly ninety percent of the book, includes several poems that describe personal and historical events of importance to the author with fervently religious language. Five of these... |
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