Cope, Esther S. Handmaid of the Holy Spirit: Dame Eleanor Davies, Never Soe Mad a Ladie. University of Michigan Press.
49-52
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Wealth and Poverty | Lady Eleanor Douglas | |
Travel | Agnes Strickland | They found plenty to criticise as well as to admire in France. On the track of three Stuart consorts, Henrietta Maria
, Catherine of Braganza
, and Mary of Modena
, they visited Paris and... |
Travel | Elizabeth Strickland | ES
had no reluctance, however, about accompanying Agnes on research trips. The two sisters set out on 3 April 1844, by way of Le Havre and Rouen to visit places around Paris associated with Henrietta Maria |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anne-Thérèse de Lambert | The Author's Preface to Réflexions begins disarmingly with the writer following her rambling thoughts, but shifts to a muted challenge when she declares herself offended to see Men so blind to their own interest, as... |
Textual Production | Eugenia | Scholar Maureen E. Mulvihill
, on her website, reproduces the elaborate title-page of Edward Reynolds
's 1642 address to Queen Henrietta Maria
by this name, Eugenia's Teares for great Brittaynes Distractions, and suggests a... |
Textual Production | Mary Fage | |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland | The title of the folio is The History of The Life, Reign, and Death of Edward II. King of England and Lord of Ireland. With The Rise and Fall of his great Favourites, Gaveston
and... |
Textual Production | Carola Oman | CO
published her historical biography Henrietta Maria: it opens dramatically, its first chapter relating the murder of the baby Henriette-Marie's father, Henri IV
, by François Ravaillac
. British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo. |
Textual Production | Jean Plaidy | In the last decade of her life, JP
published another twelve historical novels under this name: a thirteenth appeared in the year of her death, 1993. Some of these novels revisit ground or people covered... |
Textual Features | Roma White | RW
returns here to a period close to that of her first historical novel (published more than fifty years earlier) and to the actual Greenhalgh family. But whereas the earlier book began some years before... |
Textual Features | Ephelia | Among the poems of praise, To Madam Bhen [sic] (then a not uncommon rendering of Behn) adapts from Cowley
's famous praise of Philips
the idea of uniting the Strong and Sweet. Ephelia,. Female Poems on Several Occasions. James Courtney. 73 |
Residence | Ephelia | Mary, Duchess of Richmond, left England for France in October 1667, two years after her employer, Henrietta Maria
, and remained there until after the queen's death in August 1669, though she frequently visited London... |
Residence | Mary Ward | She had already sought the patronage of Henrietta Maria
, and on the whole she was remarkably little harrassed by government agents for Catholicism. Chambers, Mary Catharine Elizabeth. The Life of Mary Ward (1585-1645). Editor Coleridge, Henry James, Burns and Oates. 2: 452-3, 465-6 |
Residence | Margaret Cavendish | Following royalist defeats, Queen Mary (Henrietta Maria
) sailed from Falmouth, heading for exile in Paris. Among the courtiers attending her was Margaret Lucas (later Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle)
. Jones, Kathleen. A Glorious Fame: The Life of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, 1623-1673. Bloomsbury. 30 Strickland, Agnes, and Elizabeth Strickland. Lives of the Queens of England, from the Norman Conquest. G. Barrie. 9: 224-5 |
Publishing | Ephelia | The initial letter H (Hail Mighty Prince!) in the 1679 reprint is rendered by a woodcut ornament or factotum with portraits of two crowned figures, one of each sex, with the royal rose... |
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