David Hume

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Standard Name: Hume, David

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Elizabeth Jennings
She includes poems for poets, artists, and thinkers: George Herbert , Charles Causley , Philip Larkin , J. M. W. Turner , Caravaggio , Chardin , Goya , Hume , and Descartes . A sequence...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Hester Mulso Chapone
The first letter is entitled On the Principles of Religion; HMC assures her niece that she is one of your warmest friends.
Feminist Companion Archive.
She cautions about choice of friends and even more about choice of...
Textual Production Mary Ann Kelty
MAK says that her first publication, hastily written and apparently unidentified, consisted of two little tales, which fell dead-born from the press. Since this phrase is borrowed from David Hume , it sets herself in...
Textual Production Catharine Macaulay
By undertaking archival work in seventeenth-century pamphlets, CM set out to ensure that her history should surpass that of Hume (who was generally regarded as a Tory historian, though he was ambivalent about this label)...
Textual Features Lucy Aikin
She said she designed this genre as a new one: she planned to interlace her material about the manners of the age, the state of literature, arts, &c. with as slender a thread of political...
Textual Features Eliza Fenwick
For this anthology EF gathered mostly improving pedagogical material, drawing on revered literary names like Shakespeare and Milton , as well as more recent and controversial writers like Thomas Chatterton and Helen Maria Williams ...
Textual Features Amelia Beauclerc
This novel is heavy-handedly moralistic. The heroine, Miriam Harcott, is the child of an atheistical philosopher (converted in the end by a good—not Methodist—clergyman) and a careless mother who causes the deaths of three of...
Textual Features Frances Brooke
Brooke's advertisement to volume 3 says she gave up her plan for an essay on the writing of history, and settled instead on using notes to demonstrate how this work is, as all history ought...
Textual Features Catharine Macaulay
Her topics here, all relevant to the escalating American demands for independence, are the declining economy, rising prices, and an oppressive burden of taxes.
Copeland, Edward. Women Writing about Money: Women’s Fiction in England, 1790-1820. Cambridge University Press.
19
She was entering a debate previously carried on among such...
Textual Features Alison Cockburn
Her letters present a vivid account of Edinburgh life in the later eighteenth century, and go into detail on more personal topics like the way she used physical exertion to counter gloom and melancholy. Many...
Residence Jean-Jacques Rousseau
The exiled JJR travelled from Paris to London in company with the philosopher David Hume , who had invited him to Britain at the urging of some of Rousseau's supporters in France.
Buchan, James. “How Rousseau invented reality TV”. The Guardian, p. Review 10.
Review 10
Reception Jane Austen
In 1933 there was excitement in the book-collecting world when a small collection of books that Austen had owned (by writers like Ariosto , Goldsmith , Hume , and Thomson ) appeared in the catalogue...
Publishing Helena Wells
It was issued by Cadell and Davies , with title-page reference to The Step-Mother and a quotation from Akenside on virtue as a source of happiness. HW 's preface, composed while living in Westminster...
Publishing Jean Marishall
Marishall then turned to Edinburgh's Canongate Theatre , only to have Foote (who had become manager there in November 1770) waste a whole season promising to put it on soon. In the end, after...
politics Janet Schaw
Keith A. Sandiford connects her assumption of the inferiority of black people to the similar feelings of David Hume .
Sandiford, Keith A. The Cultural Politics of Sugar: Caribbean Slavery and Narratives of Colonialism. Cambridge University Press.
93
Some of her attitudes to class and race emerge clearly from the early pages...

Timeline

Last week in January 1739: David Hume published, anonymously, volumes...

Writing climate item

Last week in January 1739

David Hume published, anonymously, volumes one and two of A Treatise of Human Nature.

By November 1754: David Hume published at Edinburgh the first...

Writing climate item

By November 1754

David Hume published at Edinburgh the first volume of his History of Great Britain (called in most later editions The History of England).

9 March 1776: Adam Smith published An Inquiry into the...

Writing climate item

9 March 1776

Adam Smith published An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Sales were much higher than expected by the publisher, William Strahan , who had produced a print-run of 500...

1824: Mary, Lady Shepherd, published her first...

Building item

1824

Mary, Lady Shepherd , published her first major philosophical work, An Essay upon the Relation of Cause and Effect, a critique of the fourth of David Hume 's Philosophical Essays.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.