Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Education | Charlotte Brontë | Their education continued at home from a selection of standard texts including Oliver Goldsmith
's History of England, Hannah More
's Moral Sketches, John Bunyan
's Pilgrim's Progress, Isaac Watts
's Doctrine... |
Education | Catherine Cookson | The house had no books and when a lodger brought in Shakespeare, Milton
, and Donne
, they were pronounced unsuitable for a child. CC
did read a Shakespeare
sonnet at about this age and... |
Education | Ruth Fainlight | |
Education | Emily Brontë | Thereafter, Patrick Brontë
educated his remaining children at home, using standard educational texts including Thomas Salmon
's A New Geographical and Historical Grammar, a condensed version of Oliver Goldsmith
's History of England,... |
Education | Harriette Wilson | While she was still in her teens, although engaged in her second paid sexual relationship, her lover Frederic Lamb
set out to get her reading Milton
, Shakespeare
, Byron
, theRambler, Virgil |
Education | Rose Tremain | At this stage of her life, Rosie's great interest and talent was not writing but painting, like her sister. She set out to make a huge, hanging, illustrated copy of Keats
's Ode to Autumn... |
Education | Sarah Josepha Hale | |
Education | Brigid Brophy | BB
's education (disrupted by the second war) included attending a state school (coeducational) and private schools both boys', girls', and mixed-sex. She was intellectually precocious at every stage. As a little girl at the... |
Education | Zora Neale Hurston | She also worked at the beginnings of her education. When she happened upon Milton
's Paradise Lost she devoured it, and she learned Gray
's Elegy in a Country Churchyard by heart in the course... |
Education | Anne Ridler | She lived in a King's College hostel in Queensborough Terrace near Hyde Park,London. The course included lectures on history and literature. The distinguished scholar Jack Isaacs
lectured on Shakespeare
, Donne
, and Milton |
Education | Maria Riddell | The future MR
was in all probability privately educated. At sixteen she wrote a poem to commemorate the pleasure of reading with a friend the works of Milton
, Pope
, Spenser
, Shakespeare
... |
Education | Sheila Kaye-Smith | Sheila was educated at Hastings, at St Leonard's Ladies' College (almost next-door to her home), from 1896 to 1905. Like many large private schools of the time, this one educated its pupils to eighteen... |
Education | Tabitha Tenney | Whether or not TT
's education was Puritanical (most sources about her life have no higher status than gossip) she was well read in the emergent canon of English literature, from Shakespeare
and Milton
through... |
Education | Janet Hamilton | She attributed her power of language and ability for composition to reading the works of good authors, Hamilton, Janet. Poems, Essays, and Sketches. James Maclehose, 1870. viii |
Education | Florence Dixie | Lady Florence was at first educated at home in Scotland. After a first, unsuccessful attempt to place her in a convent she had, in France, an Irish Catholic governess whom she calls Miss O'Leary... |
Timeline
By 27 January 1732: The great classical scholar Richard Bentley...
Writing climate item
By 27 January 1732
The great classical scholar Richard Bentley
published his notorious edition of Milton
's Paradise Lost.
Gentleman’s Magazine. Various publishers.
2 (1732): 571
After 1 February 1785: M. Peddle (a gifted, little-known, Evangelical...
Women writers item
After 1 February 1785
M. Peddle
(a gifted, little-known, Evangelical woman of Yeovil in Somerset, who later issued a conduct book under the name of Cornelia) published a biblical paraphrase in novelistic style: The Life of Jacob.
Peddle, M. The Life of Jacob. R. Goadby and Co., 1785.
9 June 1792: Gillray published a remarkable political...
National or international item
9 June 1792
Gillray
published a remarkable political cartoon, Sin, Death, and the Devil: personified versions of Queen Charlotte
, William Pitt
, and Lord Thurlow
.
Hill, Draper. Mr. Gillray, the Caricaturist. Phaidon Press, 1965.
plate 44
March 1824-May 1829: Walter Savage Landor published Imaginary...
Writing climate item
March 1824-May 1829
Walter Savage Landor
published Imaginary Conversations of Literary Men and Statesmen.
Wheeler, Stephen, and Thomas J. Wise. A Bibliography of the Writings in Prose and Verse of Walter Savage Landor. Bibliographical Society, 1919.
57-69
Cox, Michael, editor. The Oxford Chronology of English Literature. Oxford University Press, 2002, 2 vols.
May 1842: Jane Johnston Schoolcraft, the first American...
Writing climate item
May 1842
Jane Johnston Schoolcraft
, the first American Indian poet known to have written in English as well as in her native Ojibwe or Ojibwa, died in her early forties at her sister's home in Canada.
Noori, Margaret. “Bicultural before There Was a Word for It”. Women’s Review of Books, Vol.
25
, No. 2, Mar.–Apr. 2008, pp. 7-9. 7
Noori, Margaret. “Bicultural before There Was a Word for It”. Women’s Review of Books, Vol.
25
, No. 2, Mar.–Apr. 2008, pp. 7-9. 7-9
1888: Mellin's Baby Foods offered a genuine silver...
Building item
1888
Mellin's Baby Foods
offered a genuine silver brooch to all applicants, stressing that this free gift was an absolute fact.
Hindley, Diana, and Geoffrey Hindley. Advertising in Victorian England 1837-1901. Wayland, 1972.
42-7
By late April 1943: C. S. Lewis published Perelandra, the second...
Writing climate item
By late April 1943
C. S. Lewis
published Perelandra, the second of his science fiction trilogy, in which the hero, Elwin Ransom, travels to the planet Venus and tries to intervene in that planet's history.
Bosky, Bernadette Lynn. “C. S. Lewis (29 November 1898-22 November 1963)”. Dictionary of Literary Biography, edited by Darren Harris-Fain, Gale Group, 2002, pp. 125-44.
133-135
TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive.
2151 (24 April 1943): 198
25 September 1968: The prospective new town of Milton Keynes...
Building item
25 September 1968
The prospective new town of Milton Keynes in North Buckinghamshire was advertised in the Times with a view to attracting interest, residents, and particularly industry and businesses.
“The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive.
(25 September 1968): iii
May 1969: The Open University based at the barely-begun...
Building item
May 1969
The Open University
based at the barely-begun new town of Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire (fruit of Jennie Lee
's University of the Air Advisory Committee) received its royal charter.
Bell, Robert, b. 1930, and Malcolm Tight. Open Universities: A British Tradition?. Open University Press, 1993.
134
The World of Learning. 45th ed., Allen and Unwin, 1995.
1626
Whitaker’s Almanack. 119th ed., J. Whitaker, 1987.
508
Texts
No bibliographical results available.