Pulter, Lady Hester. “Introduction”. Poems, Emblems, and The Unfortunate Florinda, edited by Alice Eardley, Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, pp. 1-40.
27, 185
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Lady Hester Pulter | In the same manuscript album as her poems and romance, LHP
included a collection of emblem poems titled The Sighs of a Sad Soul Emblematically Breathed Forth by the Noble Hadassah. Pulter, Lady Hester. “Introduction”. Poems, Emblems, and The Unfortunate Florinda, edited by Alice Eardley, Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, pp. 1-40. 27, 185 |
Textual Production | Alice Sutcliffe | Only a handful of copies of this survive (four were known in 1996). OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999. Cullen, Patrick, and Alice Sutcliffe. “Introductory Note”. Alice Sutcliffe, Scolar Press, p. ix - xiii. xii |
Occupation | Elizabeth Isham | Her needlework included doing Irish stitch, tent stitch, and purse-work, making bone lace and bodices, and knitting stockings, and she often gathered flowers in order to copy them in stitching. Isham, Elizabeth. “Diary”. Constructing Elizabeth Isham. 1636 Isham, Elizabeth. “Booke of Rememberances”. Constructing Elizabeth Isham, edited by Elizabeth Clarke. 26r |
Literary responses | M. Marsin | Her writings do not appear to have reached a wide audience. Burns, William E. “’By Him the Women will be delivered from that Bondage, which some has found intolerable’: M. Marsin, English Millenarian Feminist”. Eighteenth-Century Women: Studies in their Lives, Work, and Culture, edited by Linda V. Troost, Vol. 1 , pp. 19-38. 33 |
Friends, Associates | Lady Mary Wroth | In 1613 LMW
was praised in verse by George Wither
and Joshua Sylvester
. Most of these poets chose to celebrate her mind, even more than her beauty. (So, besides those named, did William Drummond |
No bibliographical results available.