Raitt, Suzanne. May Sinclair: A Modern Victorian. Clarendon Press.
45n7
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | May Sinclair | At this time MS
entertained many schemes which she did not carry through. She began a play, A Debt of Honour—A Tragedy in Three Acts. Raitt, Suzanne. May Sinclair: A Modern Victorian. Clarendon Press. 45n7 |
Publishing | Percy Bysshe Shelley | |
Textual Production | Evelyn Sharp | The piece was published the same year. ES
used stories by Richard Garnett
and Nathaniel Hawthorne
as sources. She had been working on her lyrics since June 1927, when she sent Vaughan Williams the fruits... |
Intertextuality and Influence | L. T. Meade | She received advice and encouragement with the actual writing, and help in choosing a title from Richard Garnett
(Keeper of Printed Books at the British Museum
). This time she knew that if a publisher... |
Publishing | Anne Manning | Later editions assert AM
's authorship in the form that now became standard for her, as by the author of Mary Powell. Like its predecessor, this book went through several editions, and appeared with... |
Travel | Vernon Lee | VL
was at this time a guest of Mary Robinson
and her family. She combined her connections with theirs in order to meet a number of major cultural figures: Sir Leslie Stephen
, Robert Browning |
Cultural formation | Isabella Neil Harwood | Not much is known about INH
's early life or her life beyond her writing, except that she was born to Scottish and English parents of the professional class, who were Unitarians
. As Richard Garnett |
Family and Intimate relationships | Constance Garnett | CG
's sister Clementina frequently studied at the British Museum
and there became acquainted with Richard Garnett
, superintendent of the Reading Room. She introduced Constance to Garnett's son Edward
, who was a reader... |
Leisure and Society | May Crommelin | MC
was a member of the Albemarle Club
. Who Was Who in Literature, 1906-1934. Gale Research. vol. 1 |
Textual Production | Ellen Mary Clerke | Thanks to her travels and studies, EMC
was fluent in several languages. Her translations, especially those from Italian, were frequently praised. In 1898 some of her translations were selected by Richard Garnett
to be included... |
Dedications | Ellen Mary Clerke | Some of this material had appeared previously in periodicals. Clerke, Ellen Mary. Fable and Song in Italy. Grant Richards. xi Clerke, Ellen Mary. Fable and Song in Italy. Grant Richards. prelims |
Family and Intimate relationships | Jessie Ellen Cadell | Jessie Ellen Nash
, not yet seventeen, was married at Ferozepore in Punjab, India, to Henry Moubray Cadell
, a Scottish captain in the Bengal artillery. Her husband's middle name is sometimes spelled Mowbray... |
Publishing | Jessie Ellen Cadell | JEC
published with her initials in Fraser's Magazine (partly through the good offices of Richard Garnett
) The True Omar Khayam, a scholarly article on the Persian poetry of Omar Khayyám
. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. Garnett, Richard et al. “Introduction”. The Ruba’yat of Omar Khayam, edited by Richard Garnett, translated by. Jessie Ellen Cadell, John Lane, p. v - xxx. vii |
Textual Production | Jessie Ellen Cadell | JEC
's verse translation from Persian of The Ruba'yat of Omar Khayam was posthumously published by her friend Richard Garnett
. A note on the verso of the title-page of the London edition says: composition... |
Friends, Associates | Jessie Ellen Cadell | JEC
's friends in London included the scholar Richard Garnett
(superintendent of the British Museum
reading room and future father-in-law of another translator, Constance Garnett
). They met in 1877 or 1878, and Richard Garnett... |
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