qtd. in
Knights, Elspeth. “A Licensuous Daughter: Mehetabel Wesley, 1697-1750”. Women’s Writing, Vol.
4
, No. 1, 1997, pp. 15-38. 15, 30
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Eliza Fenwick | EF
's father, Peter Jaco
, born in 1721, was a Cornishman, who early in life worked for his father in the pilchard fishery; ships owned by the family sailed in the Mediterranean. EF
said... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mehetabel Wright | Samuel Wesley
apostrophised his daughter Hetty
(writing to his son John
), Gangrene farewell! And mayst thou never cause me any pain hereafter. qtd. in Knights, Elspeth. “A Licensuous Daughter: Mehetabel Wesley, 1697-1750”. Women’s Writing, Vol. 4 , No. 1, 1997, pp. 15-38. 15, 30 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mehetabel Wright | MW
's brother John
offended their father by alluding in a sermon preached at Wroot to the harshness meted out to Hetty. Lonsdale, Roger, editor. Eighteenth-Century Women Poets. Oxford University Press, 1990. 110 |
Friends, Associates | Sarah Chapone | SC
's friendship with John Wesley
continued after her marriage, and included Wesley's brother Charles
, Mary Pendarves (later Delany)
, and Mary's sister Anne Granville
, who stayed at her house for a week... |
Friends, Associates | Judith Cowper Madan | About three years after this JCM
invited John Wesley
to stay with her family overnight, apparently hoping that serious conversation between him and her husband (who was gravely ill at the time) might persuade Martin... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Bosanquet Fletcher | Crosby and Ryan, born in 1729 and 1724 respectively, were both remarkable women. Crosby at her death left three or four volumes of manuscript journals (300-400 packed pages each), intended by her for print and... |
Friends, Associates | Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger | Having already praised many contemporary women writers in print, EOB
was now able to meet them. The move to London was accomplished principally through the zealous friendship of Miss Sarah Wesley
, who had already... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Delany | In Gloucestershire Mary Pendarves found herself the neighbour of Sarah Kirkham (later Sarah Chapone)
. They became close friends. Other members of their circle (besides Mary's sister Anne
) were Charles
and especially John Wesley |
Friends, Associates | Jane Cave | After her marriage she met John Wesley
when he visited Winchester, and he wrote her a letter advising her (in a kindly tone) to remain tolerant in face of her father-in-law's disapproval, and to try... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Deverell | The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography notes both that MD
received patronage from Bristol heiress Ann Lovell Gwatkin
, and that Hannah More
emphatically did not take to her, though their paths must repeatedly have... |
Friends, Associates | Elizabeth Isabella Spence | During the 1820s Spence and Benger, then past their youth and each living on a pittance, were associated in running a salon on the model of those of the rich (like Lady Holland) or the... |
Friends, Associates | Sarah Chapone | John
and Charles Wesley
, walking across the country to visit their mother
and the rest of their family at Epworth, stopped both going and coming to visit SC
at Stanton. Wesley, John. The Works of John Wesley. Clarendon; Oxford University Press, 1975–1983. 25: 278n1 |
Friends, Associates | Sarah Chapone | Sarah met John Wesley
when he visited Mary's brother Robert (a friend from university) in April 1725. She became and remained a friend of John and his brother Charles
, though she did not share... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Bosanquet Fletcher | John Wesley
made one of his visits to Mary Bosanquet
's settlement at Cross Hall, which he called a pattern, and a general blessing to the country. Fletcher, Mary Bosanquet. The Life of Mrs. Mary Fletcher. Editor Moore, Henry, 1751 - 1844, T. Mason and G. Lane, 1837. 77n |
Health | Sarah Chapone | In 1731 John Wesley
expressed his admiration for SC
's courage under the sharpest pain an embodied spirit can know, that of childbirth. What he chiefly admired, however, was her remark that if her strength... |
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