English Short Title Catalogue. http://estc.bl.uk/.
Connections
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Camilla Crosland | Since she was well-connected in London literary circles, she was able to include in her memoir recollections of time spent working with the annuals and of literary figures such as Grace Aguilar
, Lady Blessington |
Textual Production | Constantia Grierson | |
Textual Production | Anna Jane Vardill | The full title was Poems and Translations from the Minor Greek Poets and Others: written chiefly between the ages of ten and sixteen. The volume was supplied with two title-pages, one conventionally printed and... |
Textual Production | Mary Shelley | MS
engaged in June 1827 to help Thomas Moore
as a silent but major contributor Shelley, Mary. “Introduction”. Lodore, edited by Lisa Vargo, Broadview, pp. 9-45. 16 Shelley, Mary. “Introduction”. Lodore, edited by Lisa Vargo, Broadview, pp. 9-45. 44-5 |
Textual Production | Mary Shelley | She also reviewed works by Caroline Norton
, Thomas Moore
, and James Fenimore Cooper
. Shelley, Mary. “Introduction”. Lodore, edited by Lisa Vargo, Broadview, pp. 9-45. 13 |
Textual Production | Barbara Pym | After years of rejections, BP
succeeded in publishing her first novel, Some Tame Gazelle, with Jonathan Cape
. The title has been said to be borrowed from Victorian author Thomas Haynes Bayly
, who... |
Textual Production | Henrietta Battier | This addresses, says its title, the Illustrious Stephen III, King of Dalkey, Emperor of the Mugglins, Grand Master of the Noble, Illustrious and Ancient Orders of the Lobster, Crab, Scollop . . . . Battier, Henrietta. An Address on the Projected Union. Printed for the author. title-page |
Textual Production | Henrietta Battier | Not all HB
's satires and lampoons reached print. Thomas Moore
, who records that she published for the sake of much-needed cash, also mentions some impromptu lines on his own performance in a university... |
Textual Production | Sarah Stickney Ellis | In her preface to the poem she outlines theories of poetry, taking much the same approach towards it that she had towards fiction: that verse, like prose, would benefit from attention to simple, everyday life... |
Textual Production | Mary Tighe | MT
set her face against open publication, partly because of the reviewers' ostentatious moral panic over mildly erotic poems by Thomas Moore
, and over ladies associated with him (as she was by virtue of... |
Textual Production | Eleanor Farjeon | |
Textual Production | Mary Ann Browne | She quotes L. E. L.
on her title page, and dedicates her work (these early efforts of my timid Muse) Browne, Mary Ann. Mont Blanc. Hatchard and Son. v |
Textual Production | Mary Tighe | Henry Moore copied poems into a manuscript album which he titled Poems HM 1811 (now at Chawton House Library
). The first 66 pages are occupied by MT
's work, at the end of which... |
Textual Features | Susanna Watts | The title-page quotes Pope
, who also (with his Messiah) stands first among the contents. Some pieces are unascribed; others are by Byron
(The Isles of Greece), Jane Taylor
(The Squire's... |
Textual Features | Caroline Norton | The Rebel, spoken by an imprisoned Irish harper who weep[s,] to think upon my country's chain, suggests both a sympathy with the cause of Ireland and the influence of CN
's friend Thomas Moore |
Timeline
1801: Thomas Moore pseudonymously published his...
Writing climate item
1801
Thomas Moore
pseudonymously published his mildly erotic Poetical Works of the Late Thomas Little Esq.
23 July 1803: Irish nationalist Robert Emmet mounted a...
National or international item
23 July 1803
Irish nationalist Robert Emmet
mounted a rising which was designed to seize Dublin Castle and take the Viceroy hostage.
1808-1834: Thomas Moore issued Irish Melodies (full...
Writing climate item
1808-1834
Thomas Moore
issued Irish Melodies (full title A Selection of Irish Melodies, with symphonies and accompaniments by Sir John Stevenson) in a series of ten numbers.
9 September 1811: Thomas Moore's comic opera M. P., or The...
Writing climate item
9 September 1811
Thomas Moore
's comic operaM. P., or The Blue-Stocking premiered at The Theatre Royal, English Opera House
.
By May 1816: William Hazlitt edited, completed, expanded,...
Writing climate item
By May 1816
William Hazlitt
edited, completed, expanded, and published The Life of Thomas Holcroft, which had been left unfinished when the radical Thomas Holcroft
died.
By June 1817: Thomas Moore published his hugely successful...
Writing climate item
By June 1817
Thomas Moore
published his hugely successful poemLalla Rookh, An Oriental Romance.
1824: Irish poet Thomas Moore published a piece...
Writing climate item
1824
Irish poet Thomas Moore
published a piece of political fiction: Memoirs of Captain Rock, The Celebrated Irish Chieftain, With Some Account of His Ancestors.
1825: Thomas Moore published Memoirs of the Life...
Writing climate item
1825
Thomas Moore
published Memoirs of the Life of the Right Honourable Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
1828: Thomas Moore published his satirical and...
Writing climate item
1828
Thomas Moore
published his satirical and (Irish) nationalist Odes upon Cash, Corn, Catholics, and Other Matters.
1833: Thomas Moore published his prose piece Travels...
Writing climate item
1833
Thomas Moore
published his prose pieceTravels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion, in two volumes.
Texts
Moore, Thomas. Memoirs, Journal and Correspondence of Thomas Moore. Editor John, first Earl Russell, Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1853.