Bibliography

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Gutch, John Matthew. “Caraboo, 1817”. Caraboo. A Narrative of a Singular Imposition, Practised upon the Benevolence of a Lady Residing in the Vicinity of the City of Bristol, By a Young Woman of the name of Mary Willcocks, alias Baker, alias Bakerstendht, alias Caraboo, Princess of Javasu, Baldwin, Cradock and Joy.
Guthkelch, Adolph Charles, and Sir Thomas More. “Note; Introduction”. Utopia, edited by George Sampson and George Sampson, G. Bell and Sons, 1914, p. v - vii; xi-xxv.
Gutierrez, Nancy A. "Shall She Famish Then?". Ashgate, 2003.
Guttenplan, D. D. “Visa Requirement”. London Review of Books, 6 July 2000, pp. 28-9.
Guttmacher, Manfred S. “Note”. Johns Hopkins Alumni Magazine, Vol.
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Guttridge, Peter. “Gosh, this is posh. Even the cleaning lady’s called Tallulah”. The Observer, 29 June 2003.
Guttridge, Peter. “Obituary: Jennifer Dawson”. The Independent, 27 Oct. 2000.
Guttridge, Peter. “They’re still the deadlier species”. The Observer, 13 Nov. 2005, p. 16.
Guy, John. “The Tudor Age (1485-1603)”. Oxford Illustrated History of Britain, edited by Kenneth O. Morgan, Oxford University Press, 1984, pp. 223-85.
Guyatt, Nicholas. “Our Slaves Are Black”. London Review of Books, 4 Oct. 2007, pp. 19-22.
Guyer, Sara. “Poetry without End: Charlotte Smith’s Elegiac Sonnets”. American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS) Conference, Boston, MA.
Gwynn, Stephen Lucius, and Charlotte Grace O’Brien. “Introductory Memoir”. Charlotte Grace O’Brien, Maunsel, 1909, pp. 3-135.
Gwyntopher, Chris. “Imprisoned on a bus”. Making Waves, Vol.
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H. D.,. Bid Me to Live. Grove, 1960.
H. D.,. By Avon River. Macmillan, 1949.
H. D.,. Hedylus. Basil Blackwell, 1928.
H. D.,. Helen in Egypt. Grove, 1961.
H. D.,. Heliodora, and Other Poems. Jonathan Cape, 1924.
H. D.,. Hermetic Definition. New Directions, 1972.
H. D.,. HERmione. New Directions, 1981.
H. D.,. Hymen. Egoist, 1921.
H. D.,. Notes on Thought and Vision. City Lights Books, 1983.
H. D.,. Palimpsest. Contact Editions, 1926.
H. D.,. “Review of The Farmer’s Bride by Charlotte Mew”. The Egoist, Vol.
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H. D.,. Sea Garden. Constable, 1916.
H. D.,. Selected Poems. Grove, 1957.
H. D.,. The Flowering of the Rod. Oxford University Press, 1946.
H. D.,. The Gift. New Directions, 1982.
H. D.,. The Walls Do Not Fall. Oxford University Press, 1944.
H. D.,. Tribute To Freud. Pantheon, 1956.
H. D.,. Tribute to the Angels. Oxford University Press, 1945.
H. D.,. Paint It Today. Editor Laity, Cassandra, New York University Press, 1992.
H. D., and Ezra Pound. End to Torment. Editors Pearson, Norman Holmes and Michael King, New Directions, 1979.
H. D., and Norman Holmes Pearson. Trilogy. New Directions, 1973.
H. D.,. Asphodel. Editor Spoo, Robert, Duke University Press, 1992.
H. L’A. F.,. “5 February 1932. The prophecies of Aldous Huxley”. Guardian Weekly, 5 Feb. 2010, p. 22.
H. S.,. “A Week in Books”. The Guardian, 14 June 2008, p. Review 5.
H. W.,. “Review of Gorboduc; or, Ferrex and PorrexThe American Journal of Philology, Vol.
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Haas, Lidija. “The Origin of Others by Toni Morrison review—the language of race and racism”. theguardian.com, 18 Oct. 2017.
Haas, Lidija. “Wholly Allergic”. London Review of Books, Vol.
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Haas, Robert Bartlett, and Donald Clifford Gallup. A Catalogue of the Published and Unpublished Writings of Gertrude Stein. Yale University Library, 1941.
Habegger, Alfred. “From Painful Cult to Painful Realism: Annie Ogles A Love Lost and W. D. Howellss Ben Halleck and Penelope Lapham”. American Realism and the Canon, edited by Tom Quirk and Gary Scharnhorst, University of Delaware Press, 1994, pp. 170-89.
Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle, and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin. “Interview with Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin”. Irish University Review, Vol.
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Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle, editor. My Self, My Muse. Syracuse University Press, 2001.
Hacking, Ian. “Almost Zero”. London Review of Books, 10 May 2007, pp. 29-30.
Hacking, Ian. “Gabble, Twitter and Hoot”. London Review of Books, 1 July 1999, pp. 15-16.
Hackleman, Leah D. “Suppressed Speech: The Language of Emotion in Harriet Taylor’s ’The Enfranchisement of Women’”. Women’s Studies, Vol.
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Haddon, Celia. “Margaret Forster: ’I write by the clock’”. Times, 25 Aug. 1967, p. 7.
Hadfield, Charles. World Canals: Inland Navigation Past and Present. David and Charles, 1986.
Hadley, Tessa. “Antonia White’s Frost in May explores and invokes the rituals of power”. theguardian.com, 9 June 2018.