Roberts, Radagunda. Albert, Edward and Laura, and The Hermit of Priestland: Three Legendary Tales. J. Dodsley, 1783.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Dorothea Celesia | Her father, David Mallet
, was well-known as a poet and dramatist. During Dorothea's childhood his career prospered; he was a friend of Pope
and an active member of the political opposition centred on the... |
Friends, Associates | Eliza Haywood | At this point in her life EH
entered on literary relationships with Aaron Hill
(who, with some gallant condescension, was a good friend to women writers) and his circle. They included Richard Savage
(who has... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Boyd | Eugenia's next letter (planned to appear as the second monthly number, with its own title-page) focuses on the recent death of Lord Abergavenny
. Fifteen years earlier this man caught his wife
in adultery, threw... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Eleanor Sleath | The chapter headings quote a range of canonical or contemporary writers, including Shakespeare
, Milton
, Pope
, Thomson
, Goldsmith
, William Mason
, John Langhorne
, Burns
, Erasmus Darwin
, Edward Young |
Intertextuality and Influence | Radagunda Roberts | The Hermit of Priestland. A Legendary Tale was written for a friend whom RR
visited when he had just fitted up a hermitage on his Hampshire estate and installed a hermit. Roberts, Radagunda. Albert, Edward and Laura, and The Hermit of Priestland: Three Legendary Tales. J. Dodsley, 1783. 52 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Meeke | The Old Wife and Young Husband (with quotations from David Mallet
and Thomas Southerne
on its title-page) opens in medias res as Jane Hanham cries, Mercy upon me, brother!—good Heavens! Captain, how could you think... |
Literary responses | Eliza Haywood | The personal attacks in this work provoked backlash. Haywood was either reproved or attacked in her turn by Richard Savage
, Martha Fowke
, and David Mallet
, and their attacks established the convention that... |
Publishing | Elizabeth Gilding | Half a dozen more Eliza poems appeared there over the next few months. They include A New Version of the Old Ballad, usually called, William and Margaret (a re-working and expansion in blank verse of... |
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