Nicholl, Charles. “On the Sixth Day”. London Review of Books, Vol.
41
, No. 3, pp. 23-6. 24
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Occupation | Lady Anne Clifford | |
Occupation | Petrarch | The acclaim that Petrarch won in his lifetime shifted smoothly into a high reputation after his death. The first English author to refer to him was Chaucer
. Nicholl, Charles. “On the Sixth Day”. London Review of Books, Vol. 41 , No. 3, pp. 23-6. 24 |
Occupation | Elizabeth Isham | Her needlework included doing Irish stitch, tent stitch, and purse-work, making bone lace and bodices, and knitting stockings, and she often gathered flowers in order to copy them in stitching. Isham, Elizabeth. “Diary”. Constructing Elizabeth Isham. 1636 Isham, Elizabeth. “Booke of Rememberances”. Constructing Elizabeth Isham, edited by Elizabeth Clarke. 26r |
Occupation | Giovanni Boccaccio | GB
's writings began with Filocolo, a retelling of the traditional Floris and Blanchefleur love-story written between 1338 and 1400. Other narratives were Ameto, a pastoral-allegorical novel, Teseida (which contains the story re-used... |
Occupation | William Morris | Between then and 1898 it produced fifty-three books. WM
's The Story of the Glittering Plain (April 1891) was the first. The fortieth was the famous Chaucer
(1896) containing eighty-seven wood-cuts by Edward Burne-Jones
... |
Literary responses | Dora Sigerson | The reviewer for the Times Literary Supplement found this method of compiling stories (the method of Boccaccio
, Marguerite de Navarre
, and Chaucer
) effective for stringing together a number of diverse tales told... |
Leisure and Society | Jeanette Winterson | Believing strongly that no writer in English can be ignorant of English literature, JW
told an interviewer that she reads or re-reads for about five hours a day, choosing sometiimes obscure authors from Chaucer
to... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Djuna Barnes | Phillip Herring
calls Ryderessentially an autobiographical family chronicle in experimental form. Herring, Phillip. Djuna: The Life and Work of Djuna Barnes. Penguin. 141 Broe, Mary Lynn. “Introduction”. Silence and Power: A Reevaluation of Djuna Barnes, Southern Illinois University Press, pp. 3-23. 12 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Evelyn Underhill | Many of these tales are unequivocally charming for a modern reader, but not so Gaude Maria, a version of the story which Chaucer
used for his Prioress's Tale, about a poor widow's pious... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Barbara Pym | The central characters here are Jane Cleveland, a kindly and somewhat fey Oxford
don, and Prudence Bates, Jane's former student and surrogate daughter. Jane's main preoccupation is matchmaking for Prudence: she likens herself not only... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jane Williams | The framework of a group of cultured people standing for different points of view and exchanging ideas owes something to Thomas Love Peacock
's Headlong Hall, 1816 (also set in Wales), but Williams is... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Margaret Roper | More is represented as addressing Margaret alternatively as daughter Marget and mother Eve, McCutcheon, Elizabeth. “Margaret More Roper: The Learned Woman in Tudor England”. Women Writers of the Renaissance and Reformation, edited by Katharina M. Wilson, University of Georgia Press, pp. 449-80. 473 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mary Lamb | M. B.'s purpose in story-telling is not moral improvement but making little girls feel better (the youngest is seven): cheering them up since, newly sent to boarding school, they are crying for home; alleviating their... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jo Shapcott | Epigraphs to particular poems quote Chaucer
, Swift
, Elizabeth Barrett
, Elizabeth Bishop
, Geoffrey Bateson
, and (most frequently) Elizabeth Hardwick
. The title-poem (called by a reviewer Kafka
esque) Wormald, Mark. “Making a virtue of double vision”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 4497, pp. 241-2. 642 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Philip Larkin | His youthful letters to Sutton are clotted with obscenities in a schoolboy manner, boring and embarrassing to a later generation: My tooth still aches. Balls & anus! I feel shat upon. Brennan, Maeve. The Philip Larkin I Knew. Manchester University Press. 5 |
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