Monthly Catalogue, 1714 - 1717. Bernard Lintot.
1 (no. 1): 4
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
politics | Elinor James | EJ
actively exerted an influence on the course of national affairs. She was a radical traditionalist, monarchist, and Jacobite who was critical of all the Stuart monarchs before Queen Anne
, and a high-flying Anglican... |
politics | Elizabeth Bury | James III had been recognised by Louis XIV
in 1701 (disregarding the claim of Queen Anne
) as king of England, Scotland, and Ireland. |
politics | Mary Caesar | From the time she began writing her Jacobite credo in 1724, MC
worked on constructing a domestic cult for the edification of family and friends in the Jacobite faith, in which archives, pictures and poetry... |
Author summary | Mary Masters | MM
was a self-taught poet, probably born at the end of the seventeenth century, who wrote from inclination and published because she needed the money. Her feminist opinions (expressed mainly in letters) are those current... |
Publishing | Susanna Centlivre | It was published the following month, ascribed to the Author of The Gamester, Monthly Catalogue, 1714 - 1717. Bernard Lintot. 1 (no. 1): 4 |
Residence | Elizabeth Tollet | They stayed at the Tower after his naval employment came to an end in late 1714, following Queen Anne
's death and the Hanoverian accession. They did not leave until some time in 1718. Londry, Michael, and Elizabeth Tollet. The Poems of Elizabeth Tollet. Oxford University. 13, 16 |
Residence | Jane Barker | Two years after Queen Anne
succeeded to the throne, JB
returned from France to England to live at Wilsthorpe. King, Kathryn R., and Jeslyn Medoff. “Jane Barker and Her Life (1652-1732): The Documentary Record”. Eighteenth-Century Life, Vol. 21 , No. 3, pp. 16-38. 22 Wilson, Carol Shiner, and Jane Barker. “Introduction”. The Galesia Trilogy and Selected Manuscript Poems of Jane Barker, Oxford University Press, p. xv - xliv. xxix |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Elstob | |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Elstob | EE
's dedication to Queen Anne
asserts her awareness of being a female pioneer. Another part of her paratext, the preface, defends women's learning and defies both those who set up for Censurers and those... |
Textual Features | Mary Astell | Astell expanded her Advertisement to mention with appreciation the reign of a female monarch, Anne
. Her preface challenges the opinions of John Locke
. It contains her famous question as to how women can... |
Textual Features | Delarivier Manley | |
Textual Features | Mary, Lady Chudleigh | MLC
's occasions include the public and private. She opens with an ode on the recent death of the queen's only surviving child
, in which the speaker, unconventionally, rejects the consolation duly offered by... |
Textual Features | Delarivier Manley | The New Atalantis is crammed with offensive personal attacks on individuals (women as well as men); most though not all of them pertain to the misuse of political or sexual power. Particularly notorious is the... |
Textual Features | Antonia Fraser | AF
says in her Author's Note that it occurred to her while she was working on Oliver Cromwell
that women during the English Civil War would make a more interesting subject. She divides her book... |
Textual Features | Sarah Fyge |
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