Piers, Sarah, Lady. George for Britain. A Poem. Bernard Lintott, 1714.
12
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Frances Power Cobbe | On the day that John Stuart Mill
presented to Parliament
the second suffrage petition of the week, FPC
placed a double-column letter in the high Tory
paper the Day supporting Female Franchise, and signed... |
Textual Production | Angela Thirkell | After The Duke's Daughter, AT
was delighted in Happy Returns, 1952 (Happy Return in the USA), to celebrate the Conservative
return to power at the general election of 26 October 1951. |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Elizabeth Burnet | |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Elizabeth Heyrick | She wrote on the important local stocking industry in A Letter of Remonstrance from an Impartial Public to the Hosiers of Leicester, 1825, which supports the workers in a strike. She addressed the topic... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | May Crommelin | After this, run-of-the-mill romance for a long time eclipses the potentially subversive hunting angle. Jack and Violet are of course attracted to each other; from the first he is curious to see . .... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Constance Smedley | The book charts the gradual, up-and-down, always painful but inexorable self-emancipation of these children. Even the naturally conformist Catharine, still living with her parents at the end of the book, is by then much involved... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Constance Smedley | Commoners' Rights is a record of the warfare that started up and raged about Minchinhampton Common, ending in its ultimate purchase by the Nation. The cause of the commoners, first taken up by the... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Sarah Lady Piers | But she moves on from celebration to warning: the human race is fallen, and a ruler needs to guard against ambition (This second Paradise, oh hazard not), Piers, Sarah, Lady. George for Britain. A Poem. Bernard Lintott, 1714. 12 |
Violence | Emmeline Pankhurst | EP
was violently attacked by a group of young Liberal
s after an Independent Labour Party
victory in Mid-Devon; she later learned that a local Conservative
had been killed in the mélee. Pankhurst, Sylvia. The Life of Emmeline Pankhurst. Kraus Reprint, 1969. 72-3 |
No bibliographical results available.