Galchinsky, Michael. The Origin of the Modern Jewish Woman Writer. Wayne State University Press.
139
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Lady Louisa Stuart | LLS
expressed decorous dismay when her friend Sir Walter Scott
made public her authorship of the comic and outspoken ballad Ugly Meg. |
Textual Production | Grace Aguilar | GA
's early historical romance in the style of Scott
, The Days of Bruce, was published posthumously by her mother
. Galchinsky, Michael. The Origin of the Modern Jewish Woman Writer. Wayne State University Press. 139 Shattock, Joanne. The Oxford Guide to British Women Writers. Oxford University Press. |
Textual Production | Emily Gerard | At eleven or twelve EG
began to scribble in secret—poetry of course; for what youthful writer at that stage of his or her existence would stoop to prose! Most of her poems were elegies on... |
Textual Production | Vita Sackville-West | By the following year she was writing: not only a diary, and soon an extensive correspondence, but also poetry (not about adolescent feelings but about places and historical characters); long, romantic, historical novels in the... |
Textual Production | Mary Bryan | MB
sent Scott
, in a letter, a poem entitled The Village Maid. Ragaz, Sharon. “Writing to Sir Walter: The Letters of Mary Bryan Bedingfield”. Cardiff Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text, No. 7. |
Textual Production | Catherine Fanshawe | According to Sir Walter Scott
, CF
and her sisters were responsible for the first publication, in 1829, of the memoirs of their seventeenth-century ancestor Ann Fanshawe
. He described it as a new publishd... |
Textual Production | Christian Isobel Johnstone | CIJ
published The Cook and Housewife's Manual under the pseudonym Margaret Dods, in honour of Walter Scott
's character from the Cleikum Inn in St. Ronan's Well. Meg Dods from St. Ronan's Well... |
Textual Production | Amelia Opie | At about the same date she published several Recollections of an Authoress in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal. Each of these dealt with a particular author she had known, including Stéphanie-Félicité de Genlis
and Sir Walter Scott
. Opie, Amelia. “Introduction”. The Collected Poems of Amelia Alderson Opie, edited by Shelley King and John B. Pierce, Oxford University Press, p. xxxvii - lxx. lv |
Textual Production | Anne Marsh | Her prefatory praise of Sir Walter Scott
for having made the English understand Scotland, and of Charles Lever
for only now beginning to make the English understand Ireland, has led careless readers to suppose that... |
Textual Production | Mary Bryan | MB
(now Bedingfield) accompanied her last surviving letter to Scott
with a poem entitled Return my Muse, which laments her final decline into blindness. Ragaz, Sharon. “Writing to Sir Walter: The Letters of Mary Bryan Bedingfield”. Cardiff Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text, No. 7. |
Textual Production | Lady Eleanor Butler | Sarah Ponsonby bequeathed the journals to Caroline Hamilton
, and Harriet Pigott
therefore supposed that they were written by Ponsonby
. Butler, Lady Eleanor et al. “Foreword and Editorial Materials”. The Hamwood Papers of the Ladies of Llangollen and Caroline Hamilton, edited by Eva Mary Bell, Macmillan, p. vii - viii; various pages. vii |
Textual Production | Christian Isobel Johnstone | She published this anonymously. Another edition of the same year has the Edinburgh imprint only. She claims that the first half of the work was set up in print before she had seen Scott
's... |
Textual Production | Flora Thompson | The origin of the title has not been established: it may have come from Sir Walter Scott
's Peveril of the Peak, or from any one of the several place-names in which this element... |
Textual Production | Augusta Ada Byron | As an adolescent Ada composed an essay on Sir Walter Scott
's Heart of Midlothian, and a handful of creative tales. Woolley, Benjamin. The Bride of Science: Romance, Reason and Byron’s Daughter. Macmillan. 114 Woolley, Benjamin. The Bride of Science: Romance, Reason and Byron’s Daughter. Macmillan. 217 |
Textual Production | Anna Gordon | Walter Scott
invited Robert Jamieson
for a visit during which they exchanged copies of ballads derived from two separate manuscripts of AG
's collection of ballads, bringing their joint stores to about fifty of her... |
No bibliographical results available.