Monro, Alida, and Charlotte Mew. “Charlotte Mew—A Memoir”. Collected Poems of Charlotte Mew, Gerald Duckworth, 1953, p. vii - xx.
xv
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Charlotte Mew | They maintained a friendship until he died in January 1928. After his death, Hardy's executors gave CM
a British Museum
Reading Room slip on which he had copied her poem Fin de Fête. Monro, Alida, and Charlotte Mew. “Charlotte Mew—A Memoir”. Collected Poems of Charlotte Mew, Gerald Duckworth, 1953, p. vii - xx. xv |
Friends, Associates | Jessie Ellen Cadell | JEC
's friends in London included the scholar Richard Garnett
(superintendent of the British Museum
reading room and future father-in-law of another translator, Constance Garnett
). They met in 1877 or 1878, and Richard Garnett... |
Friends, Associates | Amy Levy | AL
became a member of a circle of reforming or socialist women who were mostly regulars in the ladies' lunch room at the British Museum
. Beckman, Linda Hunt. Amy Levy: Her Life and Letters. Ohio University Press, 2000. 79 |
Friends, Associates | Susan Ferrier | Though at least partly resident in Edinburgh, SF
did not mingle with the literary set known as the Edinburgh Bluestockings. Cullinan, Mary. Susan Ferrier. Twayne, 1984. 22 |
Friends, Associates | Margaret Harkness | Probably through sisters Kate Potter Courtney
(whose house Harkness often stayed at) and Beatrice Potter (later Webb)
, MH
began to associate with the intellectuals who frequented the Reading Room of the British Museum
... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Masters | Among the households where she lived were those of Elizabeth Carter
(who sometimes read her work and discussed it with her) and of Edward Cave
(the proprietor of the Gentleman's Magazine). It was Carter... |
Health | Anne Docwra | In her pamphlet dated 11 April 1699, AD
wrote that, through Mercy, I can walk the Streets to visit the Sick, and my Friends and Relations also, and can see without Spectacles still. Docwra, Anne. The Second Part of an Apostate-Conscience Exposed. 1700. 16 This... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Catharine Macaulay | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Eliza Meteyard | Dedicated by permission to William Gladstone
, The Life of Josiah Wedgwood provides a full history of pottery in Britain, beginning with the Celts and Romans. Lightbown, Ronald W., and Eliza Meteyard. “Introduction”. The Life of Josiah Wedgwood, Cornmarket Press, 1970. |
Leisure and Society | Lady Jane Cavendish | Someone addressed a poem of compliment to the child LJC
(now Harleian MS 4955, ff, 86-7 in the British Library
). Millman, Jill Seal, and Gillian Wright, editors. Early Modern Women’s Manuscript Poetry. Manchester University Press, 2005. 88 |
Leisure and Society | Charlotte Guest | Lady CG
enjoyed cultured activities like the theatre and the opera throughout her life. Reading Jane EyreCharlotte Brontë
in December 1850 she thought it singular . . . written with force but coarseness, and not of... |
Literary responses | Ann Hatton | In 1905 a writer in the South Wales Evening Post said he had survived reading all of AH
's novels in the British Library
. In The Herald of Wales in 1939 another said they... |
Literary responses | Mary Julia Young | An apparently contemporary hand wrote in the British Library
copy: Rubbish. |
Literary responses | Frances Isabella Duberly | Alan Palmer
, in his Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry on Duberly, remarks on her ready pen, eyes perceptive to detail, youthful self-confidence, and an incisive style softened by candid pathos.He finds her... |
Literary responses | Margaret Fell | This style (moderate as it is by the standards of MF
's own community) provoked tetchiness in a former owner of the copy now in the British Library
(G14297), who wrote a long and indignant... |
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