Athenæum. J. Lection.
1215 (1851): 166
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Anne Marsh | Henry Fothergill Chorley
in the Athenæum noted some reservations about the character of Lisa, and about the caricaturing of Mrs Danby, the shrewish miserly mother-in-law. But he confessed to being bewitched by a literary power... |
Literary responses | Anne Marsh | Like most of her output around this time, it was extremely well reviewed for the Athenæum by Henry Fothergill Chorley
, and other journals were just as gratifying. |
Literary responses | Anne Marsh | Henry Fothergill Chorley
in the Athenæum, though as appreciative as ever of AM
's scene-setting and characterization, of her well-known power, and . . . her well-known style, had several grumbles. He complained that... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Manning | There was a precedent for this kind of faux-historical document (which the Athenæum reviewer, Henry Fothergill Chorley
, at once picked up on): Hannah Mary Rathbone
's The Diary of Lady Willoughby, 1844. Athenæum. J. Lection. 1215 (1851): 166 |
Literary responses | Anne Manning | This book brought AM
great success, and she continued throughout her career to identify herself as its author. Henry Fothergill Chorley
, reviewing it for the Athenæum two years after publication, said mutedly that it... |
Publishing | Jane Loudon | JL
's last number of The Ladies' Companion: At Home and Abroad appeared: the final issue before the publishers, Bradbury and Evans
, forcibly replaced her as editor against her will, with Henry F. Chorley
. Howe, Bea. Lady with Green Fingers. Country Life. 121 |
Publishing | Jane Loudon | She had not been in her position long, though, when Evans
made her two successive disturbing visits. On the first he told her that her journal's circulation figures were disappointing, and that she would be... |
Literary responses | Eliza Lynn Linton | This and her next novel received a moderately good press, including a review by H. F. Chorley
in the Athenæum. The Times review of Azeth, the Egyptian was particularly gratifying. Overall, however, its reception... |
Literary responses | Eliza Lynn Linton | Athenæum reviewer H. F. Chorley
felt that the author was now raving like a pagan Pythoness—the female oracle whose pronouncements were not expected to be comprehensible: There is a positive untruth to the very... |
Literary responses | Eliza Lynn Linton | Henry Chorley
, the reviewer on this occasion for the Athenæum, thought the stories ghastly in the extreme, admirably calculated to keep readers awake at night. Yet he felt the gathering of this terrible... |
Occupation | Adelaide Kemble | AK
undertook a singing tour of France and Germany with family and friends, including Fanny Kemble
, Mary Anne Thackeray
and Henry Chorley
. Liszt
joined them in Germany. Stephen, Sir Leslie, and Sidney Lee, editors. The Dictionary of National Biography. Smith, Elder. Ritchie, Anne Thackeray. From Friend to Friend. Editor Ritchie, Emily, John Murray. 54 |
Occupation | Adelaide Kemble | AK
's stature as a singer was evaluated shortly after her retirement by Anna Jameson
in her Memoirs and Essays, 1846, and twenty years after it by Henry Chorley
in his Thirty Years' Musical... |
Literary responses | Julia Kavanagh | Athenæum reviewer H. F. Chorley
found some fault with it, attributing it generally to JK
's somewhat stereotypical view of French character. He argues that the purity of mind and taste which we have observed... |
Literary responses | Julia Kavanagh | In an extremely lengthy and detailed Athenæum review, H. F. Chorley
notes that Miss Kavanagh is probably the only living Englishwoman [to have] waded through many of the more obscure works she discusses. He adds... |
Literary responses | Julia Kavanagh | H. F. Chorley
, the Athenæum reviewer, lauded it as an excellent story for young people, sound in morals and pleasant in incident,—with only one passing apparition of the Deus ex machina to disturb our... |
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