Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | George Eliot | In December 1870 she began writing Miss Brooke, a narrative which became part of Middlemarch as the history of its heroine. Not long after this she thought of combining this story of a daughter... |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Justice | Again the print-run was 600 copies. At the end of this year, in December, Henry Fielding
published his final novel, also titled Amelia. The continuing advertisements of Justice's Amelia up to this date are... |
Textual Production | Sarah Fielding | She described herself as the Author of David Simple on the title-page of this and of all her subsequent fictional works. She did not put her name on a title-page until her last book. This... |
Textual Production | Anna Maria Mackenzie | The first volume has a frontispiece (two women meeting a man in armour) and the title-page quotes some lines about the insecurity of a throne won through ambition. These are ascribed to Fielding
's Merope... |
Textual Production | Julia Frankau | In JF
's Joseph in Jeopardy (whose hero's first name, mentioned in the title, seems to allude both to the Bible and to Henry Fielding
's Joseph Andrews) the hero resists seduction by a... |
Textual Production | Evelyn Sharp | ES
wrote by hand a long letter from Bow Street Police Court to C. P. Scott
, editor of the Manchester Guardian and thus her employer, in the light of her probably fast-approaching incarceration. The... |
Textual Production | Annie Keary | She had worked on this novel both at Pégomas near Cannes in the South of France and at her home in Kensington. For some reason she found none of her usual pleasure in composition... |
Textual Production | Sarah Scudgell Wilkinson | She also adapted works by Henry Fielding
and George Lillo
, and a version of the Inkle and Yarico story originated by Richard Steele
and versified by Frances, Lady Hertford
. National Union Catalog. Roman and Littlefield, 1956. |
Textual Production | Lady Mary Wortley Montagu | Before she did so in public, LMWM
replied in private to Pope's attacks, in responses to and imitations of his Dunciad: mock-epic fantasies in which Pope and his confederates appear somewhat awkwardly as allies... |
Textual Production | Lady Margaret Sackville | LMS
's earliest works, which emerged from a romantic sense of beauty, defined her for decades of readers. In the first phase of her writing career, from 1900 to about 1915, she sought the delicate... |
Textual Production | Sarah Fielding | Henry Fielding
's novel Joseph Andrews was published: its inset tale of Leonora and Horatio was probably written by SF
. Sabor, Peter, and Sarah Fielding. “Introduction”. The Adventures of David Simple and Volume the Last, University Press of Kentucky, 1998, p. vii - xli. xxxviii |
Textual Production | Sarah Fielding | Henry Fielding
published a fantasy-fiction, A Journey from This World to the Next, whose last chapter, Anne Boleyn
's account of her life, is probably by SF
. Sabor, Peter, and Sarah Fielding. “Introduction”. The Adventures of David Simple and Volume the Last, University Press of Kentucky, 1998, p. vii - xli. xxxvix |
Textual Production | Patricia Beer | PB
published Driving West: Poems, whose contents balance the urban and rural; its title suggests Donne
's Good Friday, 1613. Riding Westward, but the name this poem invokes is Henry Fielding
, the lawyer on circuit. British Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons, 1874–1987. 1976 Sherry, Vincent B., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 40. Gale Research, 1985. 26 |
Textual Production | Sarah Fielding | SF
worked with James Harris
on a memoir, An Essay on the Life and Genius of Henry Fielding, for a projected edition of his works; but it never appeared. Sabor, Peter, and Sarah Fielding. “Introduction”. The Adventures of David Simple and Volume the Last, University Press of Kentucky, 1998, p. vii - xli. xl |
Textual Production | Anna Maria Bennett | AMB
published Juvenile Indiscretions, A Novel, written in the style of Henry Fielding
. Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press, 2000, 2 vols. 1: 375 |
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