Gooch, Elizabeth Sarah. Fancied Events. George Cawthorn.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Francis | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Christina Rossetti | Her early work and the passages she copied into her mother's commonplace-book show the influence of Tennyson
and Wordsworth
; she also acknowledged the impact of Gray
and Crabbe
, and wrote several poems inspired... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Sarah Gooch | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Christina Rossetti | The most highly-regarded piece in this collection is Monna Innominata: A Sonnet of Sonnets (whose title means that it has as many poems as a sonnet has of lines). CR
's preface to this sequence... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Georgiana Chatterton | She headed her chapters with quotations which draw on European as well as English literature: Petrarch
, Byron
, Germaine de Staël
. In its early stages the book may read like a courtship novel... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Charlotte Smith | |
Intertextuality and Influence | L. E. L. | LEL recalled devising poetry during her early childhood in East Barnet, where she moved at the age of seven: I cannot remember the time when composition in some shape or other was not a... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Christopher St John | This thinly disguised autobiographical fiction (both roman à clef and bildungsroman) depicts a lesbian or invert relationship at a time when public attention to unorthodox sexual relationships (following such attention by sexologists), was on the... |
Literary responses | Anne Locke | Charles A. Huttar
has praised AL
's sermon translation as readable, clear, and energetic—qualities in her original which it would have been easy to lose in translating. Editor Kel Morin-Parsons
calls the sonnets her most... |
Literary responses | Mary Tighe | Their editor Harriet Kramer Linkin
calls these poems often unsettling and unsettled,pulsating with the frustrated energies of unfulfilled Petrarchan
desire voiced from a complex feminine position. Tighe, Mary. “Introduction”. Verses Transcribed for H. T., edited by Harriet Kramer Linkin. |
Literary responses | Lady Mary Wroth | Barbara Kiefer Lewalski
has summarised LMW
's achievement (her historical importance and the quality of her art) like this: Wroth reinvented the Petrarch
an lyric sequence, the romance, and the pastoral drama, claiming those genres... |
Literary responses | Ann Yearsley | Elizabeth Isabella Spence
, reporting on a visit to Bristol, mentions AY
as an example of an obscure woman writer of genius. Spence, Elizabeth Isabella. Summer Excursions. Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme. 71 |
Literary responses | Catherine Carswell | Some reviewers accused her of disparaging Petrarch
. The book did not sell well (which she blamed in part on her chosen publishers having a reputation for left-wing politics), but it was chosen Book of... |
Literary Setting | Lady Charlotte Bury | Opening in Lyons, the story moves through a whole list of places personally known to LCB
: England (where Bertha goes to be a governess after her husband deserts her), Scotland, Switzerland... |
Author summary | Anna Hume | AH
was a Scotswoman who during the earlier seventeenth century edited work by her father, David Hume of Godscroft
, for publication and herself translated Petrarch
into English verse. |
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