Staley, Thomas F., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 36. Gale Research, 1985.
209
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Residence | Margaret Fell | Thomas Fell's estate, Swarthmoor Hall in Lancashire, was MF
's home for most of her adult life, and has since become a shrine to the history of the Society of Friends
. |
Residence | Dorothy Richardson | DR
, after another illness, resigned from her job in London and lived quietly for these years with a Quaker
family on a Sussex fruit farm. Staley, Thomas F., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 36. Gale Research, 1985. 209 Fromm, Gloria G. Dorothy Richardson: A Biography. University of Illinois Press, 1977. 59-62 Richardson, Dorothy. “Chronology; Editorial Commentary”. Windows on Modernism: Selected Letters of Dorothy Richardson, edited by Gloria G. Fromm, University of Georgia Press, 1995, p. xxix - xxxiii; various pages. xxx |
Residence | Joan Vokins | Charney Manor, at Charney Bassett, the village where JV
grew up, is now (2016) a conference centre owned by the Society of Friends
, which especially welcomes delegates involved in conflict resolution and international... |
Residence | Hester Biddle | Late in life HB
lived in a room behind the Peel meeting house in London, a place set aside for poor widows, and received an allowance of five shillings a week from that congregation... |
Residence | Katharine Bruce Glasier | After her husband's death in 1921, KBG
and her son Glen moved to a former mill cottage just outside Earby in Yorkshire. The cottage was discovered for her by a member of the Society of Friends |
Residence | George Egerton | |
Textual Features | Margaret Forster | Carr's biscuits were a staple of British diet. The firm was started and run by one of the great Quaker
trading families, a centre of progressive employment practices and local civic responsibility. Both family and... |
Textual Features | Susanna Parr | To sum up, PS's text gives the impression that she had a difficult man to deal with, and one who was not slow to use her gender as a weapon against her when he saw... |
Textual Features | Hannah Griffitts | HG
admired the English religious writer Isaac Watts
. Much of her poetry and many of her prose essays have religious themes; several are commemorative in function. Her prose can be as imaginative as her... |
Textual Features | Anna Trapnel | |
Textual Features | Catherine Phillips | |
Textual Features | Susanna Wright | It argues (before such arguments had been put forward in America by Abigail Adams
, Judith Sargent Murray
, or Mercy Otis Warren
, but drawing on beliefs current among Quakers
since their mid-seventeenth-century origins)... |
Textual Features | Margaret Fell | |
Textual Features | Anne Audland | This increasingly popular Quaker
genre, an account of a precociously pious deathbed, was still regarded as fitting for a woman to write and publish, notwithstanding the general post-Restoration shift of opinion against women's raising their... |
Textual Features | Evelyn Sharp | The diaries cover holidays, travel, her famine relief work in Russia (briefly excerpted in a pamphlet printed by the Friends
Relief Committee), and in Britain the General Strike and civilian life during the Second World... |
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