Boyle, Mary. Mary Boyle. Her Book. Editor Boyle, Sir Courtenay Edmund, E. P. Dutton; John Murray.
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Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Leisure and Society | Mary Boyle | MB
was an avid reader. Her favourite authors included Walter Landor
, with whom she exchanged frequent letters, the BrowningsRobert Browning
, and most especially, her literary godfather, G. P. R. James
. Boyle, Mary. Mary Boyle. Her Book. Editor Boyle, Sir Courtenay Edmund, E. P. Dutton; John Murray. x |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mary Boyle | Dedicated to Walter Savage Landor
from his friend and admirer, Boyle, Mary. My Portrait Gallery, and Other Poems. Privately printed by Bradbury and Evans. prelims |
Intertextuality and Influence | Penelope Lively | The title comes from Walter Savage Landor
's stately, self-dramatising credo: Nature I loved, and next to Nature, Art (in which Landor presents this line as part of his last words or self-chosen epitaph). The... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Caroline Chisholm | Walter Savage Landor
paid tribute in his ode To Caroline Chisholm, printed in The Examiner, to her arduous . . . heaven-guided enterprise. Kiddle, Margaret, and Sir Douglas Copland. Caroline Chisholm. Melbourne University Press. 164 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Edith Somerville | The diary (in the possession of ES
's Coghill relations) is a wonderfully vivid and engaging text, from youth to old age. It delights in anecdote and comicality, but touches the heart with its stark... |
Friends, Associates | Eliza Lynn Linton | Through the theological writer Dr Robert Herbert Brabant
(an early admirer of George Eliot), Lynn at this time met Walter Savage Landor
, whom she had long admired, and with whom she became close friends... |
Friends, Associates | Jessie White Mario | While visiting Italy, JWM
stayed with Robert
and Elizabeth Barrett Browning
at Casa Guidi. (Years later they had an unpleasant public debate over Italian politics.) She met Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon
in Rome, beginning... |
Friends, Associates | Georgiana Chatterton | In Italy GC
met one of her closest friends, Helen Selina Blackwood
, Caroline Norton
's elder sister. Dering, Edward Heneage, and Georgiana Chatterton. Memoirs of Georgiana, Lady Chatterton. Hurst and Blackett. 26 Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. Dering, Edward Heneage, and Georgiana Chatterton. Memoirs of Georgiana, Lady Chatterton. Hurst and Blackett. 37 |
Friends, Associates | Frances Power Cobbe | During her months in Florence, FPC
visited the Brownings, Thomas Adolphus Trollope
, and Walter Savage Landor
. While there she also became a close friend of Mary Somerville
. Cobbe, Frances Power. Life of Frances Power Cobbe. Houghton, Mifflin. 2: 346-9, 358 |
Friends, Associates | Margaret Holford | Holford seems to have cared about making influential friends, and succeeded in doing so although she lived in the provinces. She established a correspondence with Sir Walter Scott
, and although their relationship got off... |
Friends, Associates | Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington | Marguerite Blessington
met Alphonse de Lamartine
and Walter Savage Landor
in Florence. Molloy, Joseph Fitzgerald. The Most Gorgeous Lady Blessington. Downey. 133, 141 |
Friends, Associates | Mary Lamb | The Lambs also knew well members of related circles, Robert Southey
, William Hazlitt
, and Thomas De Quincey
. In the first year of her new life Mary met William Godwin
, Thomas Manning |
Family and Intimate relationships | Maria Riddell | Her daughter, Anna Maria
, married a naval officer, Charles Montagu Walker
, and had eight children. Most of her inheritance vanished in mortgages and contested ownership. One of MR
's grandsons took an interest... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Emily Spender | ES
's father, Doctor John Cottle Spender
, was a friend of Walter Savage Landor
. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. |
death | Jessie Ellen Cadell | She was buried, says Richard Garnett, in the cemetery
which holds the remains of Mrs. Browning
and Landor
and Theodore Parker
and so many other gifted men and women of English race. Garnett, Richard et al. “Introduction”. The Ruba’yat of Omar Khayam, edited by Richard Garnett, translated by. Jessie Ellen Cadell, John Lane, p. v - xxx. xii |
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