Sutherland, John, b. 1938. Mrs. Humphry Ward. Clarendon Press, 1990.
59-60
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Education | Mary Augusta Ward | Following her marriage and during her child-bearing years, she also continued to pursue her intellectual career, reading at the Bodleian
, and devoting much of the 1870s to history and criticism. Sutherland, John, b. 1938. Mrs. Humphry Ward. Clarendon Press, 1990. 59-60 |
Education | Penelope Lively | Reading in the Bodleian
for her very first essay (on the topic Who were the Jutes?) conveyed to her that this was a question with no simple answer: people were still arguing about it... |
Education | Carola Oman | When CO
was eight her father took her on a first visit to the Bodleian Library
; she came home and asked for a bookcase for her next birthday. At this age she worshippedShelley |
Education | Mary Augusta Ward | She embarked on a course of independent study at the Bodleian Library
, concentrating on Spanish literature and history. Sutherland, John, b. 1938. Mrs. Humphry Ward. Clarendon Press, 1990. 35 Ward, Mary Augusta. A Writer’s Recollections. Harper and Brothers, 1918. 105 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Elinor James | He was about twenty-two, and had finished his apprenticeship to become a Freeman of the Stationers' Company
earlier this year. He was grandson of Thomas James
, first Keeper of the Bodleian Library
in Oxford... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Rose Macaulay | While there he did free-lance translations and edited school texts to support his family. Emery, Jane. Rose Macaulay: A Writer’s Life. John Murray, 1991. 23 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Aphra Behn | AB
's biographer Janet Todd identifies Amyntas, her London lover after her Antwerp period, as Jeffrey Boys
, a young lawyer. He called her Astrea. His diary for 1667, now in the Bodleian Library |
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 | Ruth Pitter | Despite her singularly unleisured lifestyle, RP
had a remarkable talent for friendship, which extended to people with whom she might be expected to have little in common. Her friendship with Lord David Cecil
brought her... |
Friends, Associates | Elizabeth Thomas | Mills, Rebecca. "Thanks for that Elegant Defense": Polemical Prose and Poetry by Women in the Early Eighteenth Century. Oxford University, 2000. 150n115 Mills, Rebecca. "Thanks for that Elegant Defense": Polemical Prose and Poetry by Women in the Early Eighteenth Century. Oxford University, 2000. 150 |
Friends, Associates | Elizabeth Thomas | Mills, Rebecca. "Thanks for that Elegant Defense": Polemical Prose and Poetry by Women in the Early Eighteenth Century. Oxford University, 2000. 152 |
Friends, Associates | Mary Augusta Ward | In 1868 Mary Augusta Arnold met Mark Pattison
, Rector of Lincoln College and a prominent Oxford scholar, and his wife, Emily Francis Pattison
, a former art student and connoisseur. Unconventional and bohemian, the... |
Literary responses | Catharine Trotter | Anne Kelley
traces in detail successive judgements passed on Trotter (later Cockburn) by her contemporaries and by the later eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries, Kelley, Anne. Catharine Trotter: An Early Modern Writer in the Vanguard of Feminism. Ashgate, 2002. 15-45 |
Literary responses | Anne Killigrew | |
Literary responses | Jane Johnson | Barbara
and George Johnson took Vast Delight in hearing [this story] told over & over. qtd. in C., M. “Notable Accessions. Western MSS”. Bodleian Library Record, Vol. 16 , No. 2, Oct. 1997, pp. 165-8. 166 C., M. “Notable Accessions. Western MSS”. Bodleian Library Record, Vol. 16 , No. 2, Oct. 1997, pp. 165-8. 165 |