qtd. in
Hume, Sophia. An Exhortation to the Inhabitants of the Province of South-Carolina. William Bradford, 1747.
44
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Teresia Constantia Phillips | The niece, it seems, has given her the opportunity to play the role of pious mentor. TCP
teaches her to love and fear God, to remember that virtue must go beyond mere chastity but must... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Sophia Hume | Satires on women, she says, are enough, one would imagine, to make the hardest Forehead blush. qtd. in Hume, Sophia. An Exhortation to the Inhabitants of the Province of South-Carolina. William Bradford, 1747. 44 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jane Marcet | JM
's preface notes the novelty of her enterprise: in writing on political economy she will have to contend against the novelty of the pursuit with young persons of either sex. She includes no young... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Lady Mary Wortley Montagu | Her choice of genres came from her reading in French, not English, fiction, though Louisa (one of two survivors from a cycle of tales set at the court of Louis XIV
of France) also... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Hannah More | The tradition of such pedagogic books for young royals included Fénelon
's Télémaque Jones, Mary Gwladys. Hannah More. Cambridge University Press, 1952. 187 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jane Barker | |
Literary responses | Anne-Thérèse de Lambert | |
Textual Features | Clara Reeve | This time she gives her story a contemporary setting. She aims to promote the social virtues, sensibility, and the virtues of the middle class (aristocrats in this tale are evil). The young male protagonist, Edward... |
Textual Features | Alethea Lewis | She heads her novel with a prefatory letter to the Rev. William Johnstone
, who, she says, has asked why she chooses to write fiction and not moral essays. She answers that novels offer opportunities... |
Textual Production | Anna Seward | AS
drafted the first three books of an epic poem entitled Telemachus, adapted from François Fénelon
's Télémaque, 1699. (She also wrote a defence of Pope
's Homer
translations against the strictures of Joseph Spence
.) Lucas, Edward Verrall. A Swan and Her Friends. Methuen, 1907. 315-16 |
Textual Production | A. Mary F. Robinson | Two years later she followed this book with a collection of short pieces on the same topic, The French Ideal: Pascal
, Fénelon
and other Essays, published as by Madame Duclaux . “Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC. 240 |
Textual Production | Mary Ann Kelty | She followed this in 1841 with another devotional text including biography: Facts and Feelings, illustrative of interior religion; accompanied by memorials of Madame Guyon
, Fénelon
, and other spiritual persons. “Newton Library Catalogue”. University of Cambridge: Cambridge University Library and Dependent Libraries. |
Textual Production | Jane Barker | The Christian Pilgrimage was advertised as published: Lenten devotional meditations, presented as a translation by JB
from some unspecified work by Fénelon
. King, Kathryn R. Jane Barker, Exile: A Political Career 1675-1725. Clarendon Press, 2000. 154 King, Kathryn R., and Jeslyn Medoff. “Jane Barker and Her Life (1652-1732): The Documentary Record”. Eighteenth-Century Life, Vol. 21 , No. 3, Nov. 1997, pp. 16-38. 25, 36n82 Wilson, Carol Shiner, and Jane Barker. “Introduction”. The Galesia Trilogy and Selected Manuscript Poems of Jane Barker, Oxford University Press, 1997, p. xv - xliv. xxx |
Textual Production | Jane Barker | The title-page (followed by Carol Shiner Wilson
's editiion) says 1715. Such post-dating, says Kathryn King
, is typical of Curll
's publishing practices. Wilson, Carol Shiner, and Jane Barker. “Introduction”. The Galesia Trilogy and Selected Manuscript Poems of Jane Barker, Oxford University Press, 1997, p. xv - xliv. xxiv, 177n1 King, Kathryn R. Jane Barker, Exile: A Political Career 1675-1725. Clarendon Press, 2000. 150 |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Graeme Ferguson | Elizabeth Graeme also wrote an English translation in heroic couplets, Telemachus, from the well-known heroic-didactic work by François Fénelon
. She treated her own work with the kind of serious care in presentation that... |
No bibliographical results available.