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Princess Charlotte Augusta
Standard Name: Charlotte Augusta, Princess
Used Form: Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales
Used Form: Princess Charlotte
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Mary Stockdale | MS
dated the advertisement to A Wreath for the Urn, An Elegy on Her Royal Highness Princess Charlotte of Wales
and Saxe Coburg (who had died on 6 November). Stockdale, Mary. A Wreath for the Urn. Mary Stockdale. |
Textual Production | Mary Stockdale | This was not MS
's only effusion for the princess
: she also published The Unexpected and Affecting Death of . . . Princess Charlotte, undated. Behrendt, Stephen C. Royal Mourning and Regency Culture: Elegies and Memorials of Princess Charlotte. Macmillan. 131n9 |
Textual Production | Margaret Croker | MC
published, with her name, A Monody on the Lamented Death of Her Royal Highness the Princess Charlotte
-Augusta of Wales and of Saxe Cobourg Saalfield. Croker, Margaret. A Monody on the Lamented Death of Her Royal Highness the Princess Charlotte-Augusta of Wales and of Saxe Cobourg Saalfield. Edmund Lloyd; J. Booth. title-page |
Textual Production | Agnes Strickland | AS
was writing poetry at the age of nine. She went on as an adult to publish several volumes of verse. Her first poem to appear on its own instead of in a magazine (in... |
Textual Production | L. E. L. | In the same year, 1833, LEL published in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book a poem entitled The Princess Charlotte. This sets its evocation of the terrible national blow of the princess's death, on 6... |
Textual Production | Hannah More | This was written, with a sense of urgency and importance, to benefit the young Princess Charlotte
, whose educational establishment was just being arranged. It rapidly went through six editions. Jones, Mary Gwladys. Hannah More. Cambridge University Press. 187, 190 |
Textual Production | Anna Jane Vardill | Vardill's next publication thanked Charlotte, Princess of Wales
, for the patronage of her first fruits. Vardill, Anna Jane. The Pleasures of Human Life. A Poem. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown. prelims |
Textual Production | Barbara Hofland | Among a number of other women, BH
mourned an unexpected royal death in verse in The Funeral. A Monody to the Memory of Princess Charlotte. Butts, Dennis. Mistress of our Tears, A Literary and Bibliographical Study of Barbara Hofland. Scolar Press. 68-9 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Mary Ann Kelty | Her first subject is Princess Charlotte
. After that MAK
includes Henrietta (Mrs James) Fordyce
, whose life had been written by Isabella Kelly
in 1823, and many writers (including Lady Jane Grey
, Lady Rachel Russell |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Elizabeth Beverley | She takes as text the very alarming words of Jeremiah v. 29, in which God declares vengeance on the Jewish nation. Beverley, Elizabeth. Modern Times. Printed for the author. |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Elizabeth Thomas | The title poem in The Confession retells a story from The Spectator no. 164, of parted lovers who meet again when she is a convent novice and he her confessor. Thomas
presents with imaginative sympathy... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Melesina Trench | In Laura's Dream, a little girl with a fever tells her mother how she has dreamed of a visit to the moon, where people—or what a recent critic calls lunar humanoids— Kittredge, Katharine. “Melesina Chenevix St. John Trench (1768-1827)”. The Female Spectator (1995-), Vol. 10 , No. 2, pp. 4-6. 6 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anne Grant | Leaving these images of militarism and turning back to Britain with Princess Charlotte
in mind, AGcast[s] a forward glance to hope again / Protracted blessings in a female reign, Grant, Anne. Eighteen Hundred and Thirteen. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown; J. Ballantyne. 48 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Melesina Trench | She expresses intimate feelings freely, not only in the Mourning Journal for her son. Weeks after her daughter's death she uses moving, traditionally gendered imagery to lament that a daughter is a benignant star... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Martha Hale | She writes on public themes with equal panache, attacking colonial appropriations and in another poem calling Warren Hastings
an oppressed hero. She addresses public men and women, and here too is attentive to women's issues... |
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