Bamford, Samuel. Poems. Self-Published, 1843.
Samuel Bamford
Standard Name: Bamford, Samuel
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Cultural formation | Ann Hawkshaw | As the daughter of a dissenting clergyman, AH
was born into an English, middle-class, and presumably white family. Her father's parents were described in one source as of respectable character and station, engaged in agricultural... |
Friends, Associates | Ann Hawkshaw | Sir John Hawkshaw was known to Elizabeth Gaskell
's circle. Samuel Bamford
, the working-class Manchester radical and poet, mentions AH
and praises her poetry in the preface to his Poems (self-published at Manchester in... |
Friends, Associates | Geraldine Jewsbury | She and her brother
entertained such visitors as George Henry Lewes
, dramatist Westland Marston
, Italian exile and journalist Antonio Gallenga
, manufacturer William Edward Forster
, mechanical engineer Joseph Whitworth
, poet and... |
Literary responses | Ann Hawkshaw | Later critical readings of Dionysius the Areopagite are rare. In Victorian Poetry: Poetry, Poetics and Politics, Isobel Armstrong
describes the title poem's ostensible story of Christian conversion as featuring a vision of an egalitarian... |
Textual Features | Geraldine Jewsbury | The novel begins with two orphans, John and Alice Withers, who spend their childhood in a workhouse. John grows up to work in the Lancashire cotton mills and takes an interest in factory machinery and... |
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