Contemporary Authors: New Revision Series. Gale Research.
80: 358
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Features | Geraldine Jewsbury | In To-day, the first of these articles, she describes what she sees as a pervasive feeling of discontent in English society and argues that there is no room in the old faiths for the... |
Textual Features | Harriet Taylor | The book contains various drafts of her unpublished essays and a few of her poems, as well as letters exchanged with John Taylor
, John Stuart Mill
, Jane Welsh
and Thomas Carlyle
, and Helen Taylor
. |
Textual Features | Jane Welsh Carlyle | Jane then evaluates her current beaus by Rousseau's standards. Thomas Carlyle
, whom she has just recently met, is something liker to St Preux than George Craig is to Wolmar. He has his talents, his... |
Textual Production | Jane Welsh Carlyle | Thomas Carlyle
was the first to prepare a collection of JWC
's letters for publication. Shortly after her death in 1866—full of sorrow at her loss and regret at his neglect of her—he began assembling... |
Textual Production | Anne Ridler | She followed Shakespeare Criticism 1919-1935 with Shakespeare Criticism 1935-1960 in 1963. Contemporary Authors: New Revision Series. Gale Research. 80: 358 |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Barrett Browning | There followed, also in the Athenæum, a review of Wordsworth
's poems in August 1842. As well as these, EBB
provided both critical contributions on Carlyle
and Tennyson
, and material gleaned from her... |
Textual Production | Jane Welsh Carlyle | Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle, edited by J. A. Froude
and heavily annotated by Thomas Carlyle
, was published. Athenæum. J. Lection. 2893 (1883): 435 Carlyle, Jane Welsh. Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle. Editors Carlyle, Thomas and James Anthony Froude, Longmans, Green. |
Textual Production | Jane Welsh Carlyle | New Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle, annotated by Thomas Carlyle
and edited by Alexander Carlyle
, was published. TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive. 68 (1 May 1903): 133 Thesing, William B., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 55. Gale Research. 55: 41 Carlyle, Jane Welsh, and Sir James Crichton-Browne. New Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle. Editors Carlyle, Thomas and Alexander Carlyle, John Lane. title-page |
Textual Production | Georgiana Chatterton | In early 1859 GC
published a translation of the works of John Paul Friedrich Richter
, and two years after that she edited from family papers Memorials, Personal and Historical, of Admiral Lord Gambier... |
Textual Production | Jane Welsh Carlyle | The Love Letters of Thomas Carlyle
and Jane Welsh, edited by Alexander Carlyle
, appeared. Thesing, William B., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 55. Gale Research. 55: 41 |
Textual Production | Margaret Fuller | Supporting herself while in Europe by working as a foreign correspondent (the first woman to do so), Marshall, Megan. “Let Them Be Sea-Captains”. London Review of Books, Vol. 29 , No. 22, pp. 16-18. 16 |
Textual Production | Jane Welsh Carlyle | Charles Sanders
and Kenneth Fielding
published volume one of The Collected Letters of Thomas
and Jane Welsh Carlyle: publication is ongoing. It had reached 34 volumes by 2007. Carlyle, Thomas, and Jane Welsh Carlyle. The Collected Letters of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle. Editor Sanders, Charles Richard, Duke University Press. |
Textual Production | Jane Welsh Carlyle | Nearly twenty of JWC
's letters (primarily to Bess Stodart
) were published in Thomas
and Jane: Selected Letters from the Edinburgh University Library Collection, which was edited by Ian Campbell
. Carlyle, Thomas, and Jane Welsh Carlyle. Thomas and Jane: Selected Letters from the Edinburgh University Library Collection. Editor Campbell, Ian, Friends of Edinburgh University Library. |
Textual Production | Jane Welsh Carlyle | The Collected Poems of Thomas
and Jane Welsh Carlyle were published, edited by Rodger L. Tarr and Fleming McClelland. Bloom, Abigail Burnham, editor. Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers. Greenwood Press. 107 |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Gaskell | Her first epigraph, from Thomas Carlyle
's essay Biography, counters the view of novelists and their work as foolish. |
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