Maitland, Edward. Anna Kingsford. George Redway, 1896, 2 vols.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Cultural formation | Anna Kingsford | According to Maitland, she began the process of conversion to Catholicism after three nocturnal visitations Maitland, Edward. Anna Kingsford. George Redway, 1896, 2 vols. 1: 15 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Christina Rossetti | Her early work and the passages she copied into her mother's commonplace-book show the influence of Tennyson
and Wordsworth
; she also acknowledged the impact of Gray
and Crabbe
, and wrote several poems inspired... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Christina Rossetti | In what some consider her most ambitious religious work, she continues here her meditations on the female characters of the Bible. The text envisions the moment at which Eve
, the Virgin Mary
... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Felicia Hemans | Scenes and Hymns of Life includes Prisoners' Evening Service, which imagines the last days of two prisoners awaiting execution during the French Revolution, and affectingly described by Helen Maria Williams
. qtd. in Duquette, Natasha Aleksiuk. Veiled Intent: Dissenting Women’s Approach to Biblical Interpretation. Pickwick Publications, 2016. 167n3 |
Textual Features | Helen Waddell | One poem written by HW
as an undergraduate and never published in her lifetime relates the events of the crucifixion and its immediate aftermath from the point of view of Mary Magdalen
: So Joseph... |
Textual Features | Michèle Roberts | This novel reflects both MR
's efforts to remove her own self from her writing, and the freedom and power she felt when she allowed herself, after all, to be present there again. Kenyon, Olga. Women Writers Talk. Interviews with 10 women writers. Lennard Publishing, 1989. 151-2 |
Textual Features | Michèle Roberts | As a child Mary Magdalene climbs trees and sometimes sings pagan songs. At fifteen, after her mother dies, she runs away from home with its prospect of betrothal and marriage, only to be raped on... |
Textual Features | H. D. | This is war poetry which looks at the home front, like T. S. Eliot
's Four Quartets and Ezra Pound
's Pisan Cantos. It has been classified as epic. Friedman, Susan Stanford. “’Remembering Shakespeare Always, But Remembering Him Differently’: H.D.’s By Avon River”. Sagetrieb, Vol. 2 , No. 2, 1 June–30 Nov. 1983, pp. 45-70. 45 |
Textual Features | Lady Charlotte Elliot | The title piece, in Spenserian stanzas with an ababccdcc rhyme scheme, depicts Mary Magdalene
being cajoled by Salome
to seize the day. Mary, the poem's major speaker, weep[s] and moan[s] For wantonness of feasts and... |
Textual Features | Anna Kingsford | The volume opens with the title piece, River Reeds, a simple poem about nature which compares the gifts of the poet to a river reed: however lowly and mean, both offer melodies tender and... |
Textual Features | Charlotte Mew | The collection consists of seventeen poems, the longest of which is the offending Madeleine in Church, a 200-line dramatic monologue spoken in confessional mode by a woman kneeling in a dark corner of a... |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Gaskell | This is the contentious core of the novel: that the seducer's sin of seduction is far graver than that of an innocent girl who lets herself be seduced. Ruth's faults are called venial errors... |
Textual Production | Michèle Roberts | MR
's third novel, The Wild Girl, concerns the biblical Mary Magdalene or Magdalen
, whose portrayal as religious and sexually active and unmarried Kenyon, Olga. Women Writers Talk. Interviews with 10 women writers. Lennard Publishing, 1989. 154 Whitaker’s Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons, 1988–2003. (1988) |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland | Elizabeth Cary Falkland
wrote verse lives of Mary Magdalen
, Saint Agnes
, and St Elizabeth of Portugal
, and many poems about the Virgin Mary
and various saints. Cary, Lucy, and Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland. “The Lady Falkland: Her Life by One of Her Daughters”. The Tragedy of Mariam, The Fair Queen of Jewry; with, The Lady Falkland: Her Life by One of Her Daughters, edited by Barry Weller et al., University of California Press, 1994, pp. 183-75. 213-14 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Katharine Tynan | In this first volume KT
establishes three themes that recur throughout her later poetry collections: religion, Ireland, and nature. The four monologues here are spoken by historical or legendary heroines: |
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