Treglown, Jeremy. “Make use of me”. London Review of Books, 9 Feb. 2006, pp. 21-2.
22
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
politics | Frances Power Cobbe | FPC
was a fervent anti-vivisectionist. She followed the issue of experiments on animals closely from early in her career. By 1874 she was petitioning the RSPCA
to pursue legislation restricting vivisection: Robert Browning
, Thomas Carlyle |
Author summary | Julia Wedgwood | JW
began by publishing novels, but her father opposed it. She turned to writing about social, cultural, and intellectual issues of the day. Her private letters to Robert Browning
are notable for their literary and... |
Publishing | Olivia Manning | Abroad during the second world war, OM
continued to write and place stories, and also essays. She was for a while employed on the literary pages of the Jerusalem Post. Treglown, Jeremy. “Make use of me”. London Review of Books, 9 Feb. 2006, pp. 21-2. 22 |
Publishing | Margaret Kennedy | She dedicated this novel to her husband
. Like its predecessor, The Fool of the Family went through stage and screen adaptations. It was first performed in 1933 with the new title: Escape Me Never... |
Publishing | Isa Blagden | A letter from Browning
intimates that Frederic Chapman
paid her £170 for the novel as a bribe to him rather than as what it was worth. qtd. in Browning, Robert, and Isa Blagden. Dearest Isa: Robert Browning’s Letters to Isabella Blagden. Editor McAleer, Edward C., Greenwood Press. 288 |
Publishing | Laurence Alma-Tadema | LAT
's One Way of Love, A Play (its title borrowed from that of a poem by Robert Browning
) was privately printed at Edinburgh. British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo. |
Publishing | Isa Blagden | After IB
's death, Linda Mazini (later Villari)
collected her poems and Alfred Austin, a friend of Isa's and later Poet Laureate, agreed to edit a selection, write a short memoir, and prepare the edition... |
Publishing | L. S. Bevington | She apparently sent a copy to Robert Browning
. Domingue, Jackie Dees. “An Unpublished Browning Letter to Louisa Sarah Bevington”. ANQ, Vol. 13 , No. 3, 2000, pp. 37-41. 38, 40n4 |
Publishing | Mollie Panter-Downes | MPD
began submitting material to the New Yorker in or before 1937, against the judgement of her agent, Nancy Pearn
of Curtis Brown
, who is said to have exclaimed: Oh no dear, no, no... |
Reception | Augusta Webster | Portraits, a sustained feminist engagement with the form of the dramatic monologue, remains AW
's most studied work. While clearly influenced by male practitioners, Browning
in particular, her poems operate quite differently from many... |
Reception | Vernon Lee | One of the first and most appreciative readers of VL
's work was John Addington Symonds
, a leading cultural historian of the time. Her book also brought her the notice and friendship of other... |
Reception | Michael Field | Edith sent Browning
a copy of this book, calling it the first fruits of thought spent by a new labourer on the vine-yard of human life. If you will taste the fruit, it will not... |
Reception | Adelaide Procter | Critic Gill Gregory
argues that this poem is part of a series, with A Woman's Answer (a title Procter adopted from Robert Browning
) and A Woman's Last Word, in which she responds to... |
Reception | Lucy Walford | After the publication of Recollections of a Scottish NovelistLW
decided that there were still stories in her mind that rank among the great days of my life, yet which did not fit in with... |
Reception | Queen Victoria | Leaves from the Journal of Our Life in the Highlands outsold many books that appeared in 1868, including Wilkie Collins
's The Moonstone, Robert Browning
's Ring and the Book, and Louisa May Alcott |
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