Clarke, Mary Cowden. My Long Life. Dodd, Mead.
131-2
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Travel | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
made a first, month-long trip to Italy with her husband
and some of her family: they travelled out via Germany, the Rhine, and Switzerland. Clarke, Mary Cowden. My Long Life. Dodd, Mead. 131-2 |
Textual Production | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
and her husband
began work on a commission from Cassell and Co.
for an annotated edition of Shakespeare
. Clarke, Mary Cowden. My Long Life. Dodd, Mead. 160 |
Textual Production | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
published another collaboration with her husband
which was, as far as he was concerned, posthumous: The Shakespeare Key. 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. |
Textual Production | Mary Cowden Clarke | Mary Cowden Clarke
published in volume form Recollections of Writers, by herself and her husband
(who had died the previous year). Altick, Richard D. The Cowden Clarkes. Oxford University Press. 459n16 |
Textual Production | Mary Cowden Clarke | In the one-hundredth year since the birth of her husband, MCC
, amid the sublime scenery Clarke, Mary Cowden. My Long Life. Dodd, Mead. 243 Clarke, Mary Cowden. My Long Life. Dodd, Mead. 243 |
Textual Production | Mary Cowden Clarke | In 1848 MCC
may have contributed two pieces to A Book of Stories for Young People, along with Mary Howitt
and Anna Maria Hall
. But Richard D. Altick
believes the stories The Princess... |
Residence | Mary Cowden Clarke | |
Residence | Mary Cowden Clarke | For twenty years from the date of their marriage, MCC
and her husband
lived with her parents, the Novellos, in London. Charles Cowden Clarke was perfectly one of the family, and used to teach... |
Residence | Mary Cowden Clarke | |
Author summary | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
was a leading nineteenth-century Shakespearean scholar, who (in collaboration with her husband, Charles Cowden Clarke
) annotated editions, compiled a concordance, and wrote a key or encyclopaedia, and on her own account produced an... |
Occupation | Fanny Kemble | Despite her success, she remained sceptical about the value of theatre. She regarded it as an unworthy venture, a business which is incessant excitement and fictitious emotion . . . unworthy of a man; a... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
's parents frequently entertained eminent literary figures in a drawing-room where the paintings were all executed by distinguished friends. At an early age she became acquainted with Charles
and Mary Lamb
, Leigh Hunt |
Friends, Associates | John Keats | Keats was taught and was influenced as a young man by Charles Cowden Clarke
. Another important literary friendship was that with Leigh Hunt
, then Percy
and Mary Shelley
and William Hazlitt
. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. Mary... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Lamb | Friends were still being added to the Lambs' circle late in their lives, including literary friends like John Clare
and Thomas Hood
. Charles corresponded with Mary Shelley
; ML
corresponded with Mary Matilda Betham |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
's husband
died at Villa Novello in Genoa on 13 March 1877 at the age of eighty-nine. Clarke, Mary Cowden. My Long Life. Dodd, Mead. 166 |