Pulter, Lady Hester. Poems, Emblems, and The Unfortunate Florinda. Editor Eardley, Alice, Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies .
48ff, 58ff
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Lady Hester Pulter | LHP
composed the earliest poems in her volume tied to a date more specific than a year: the imprisonment of Charles I
at Holmby House in Northamptonshire. Pulter, Lady Hester. Poems, Emblems, and The Unfortunate Florinda. Editor Eardley, Alice, Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies . 48ff, 58ff |
Family and Intimate relationships | Lady Hester Pulter | Hester's father, James Ley
, was a lawyer (in time a judge) who sat for many years as Member of Parliament for Westbury (under Queen Elizabeth, James I and Charles I). At the time of... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Lady Hester Pulter | As science, religion, and mythology meet in these poems, so do the public-political and the personal. Elegies lament both the violent deaths of royalist leaders Sir Charles Lucas
(elder brother of the poet Margaret Cavendish |
Textual Features | Diana Primrose | DP
's continuing admiration for and loyalty to Elizabeth (like that of Anne Bradstreet
a few years later) seems to reflect proto-feminist attitudes; but it may be angled chiefly at the current political situation: in... |
Textual Production | Jean Plaidy | In the last decade of her life, JP
published another twelve historical novels under this name: a thirteenth appeared in the year of her death, 1993. Some of these novels revisit ground or people covered... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Katherine Philips | KP
's poems range over every degree of a scale reaching from expressions of intense personal feeling to formal comment on public affairs. She wrote on the execution of Charles I
, the Restoration of... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Carola Oman | Oman relates her subject's public engagements as an infant (attending her mother's coronation, sprinkling holy water on her father's corpse); her departure from her native country, with absolutely no knowledge of the English language, to... |
Performance of text | Mary Russell Mitford | MRM
's Charles the First
, an Historical Tragedy, in five acts was performed at the Victoria Theatre
in south London, after running into censorship trouble. Mudge, Bradford Keyes, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 116. Gale Research. 116: 194 |
politics | John Milton | On the Restoration of Charles IIJM
(who had unmistakably written to blacken the reputation of Charles I
as a ruler, as well as against tyrants, that is unjust rulers, in general) felt himself quite... |
politics | Elizabeth Melvill | EM
evidently wielded some influence in the struggle between the monarchy and its Scottish subjects, which re-ignited in April 1637 with resistance to Charles I
's attempt to impose the Scottish Prayer Book on them... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Damaris Masham | Her mother, born Damaris Cradock, was a widow with several children from her first marriage (three sons and a daughter—who was also, confusingly, called Damaris) when she married DM
's father. From her second marriage... |
Occupation | Judith Man | It seems that she herself may have held some position as official attendant on the two daughters of Thomas Wentworth, Lord Strafford
, as well as doing lessons with them. Strafford, recently ennobled by his... |
Textual Production | Bathsua Makin | BM
wrote elegies on the deaths of two children of Lady Huntingdon
. Her Latin elegy for Henry, Lord Hastings
(grandson of Lady Eleanor Douglas
, who died on 24 June 1649), was never printed... |
Employer | Bathsua Makin | BM
was tutress (that is, a female tutor, not a mere governess) to Princess Elizabeth
, youngest daughter of Charles I
. Brink, Jeanie R. “Bathsua Reginald Makin: ’Most Learned Matron’”. Huntington Library Quarterly, Vol. 54 , pp. 313-26. 318 Teague, Frances. Bathsua Makin, Woman of Learning. Bucknell University Press. 58-9, 77 |
Literary Setting | Anna Maria Mackenzie | The title-page bears a quotation from Shakespeare
; the dedication argues that the rebel Monmouth was wrong but deserving of pity. The story traces the fate of a family named Bruce; it opens with a... |
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