Brontë, Anne, and Charles William Hatfield. The Complete Poems of Anne Brontë. Editor Shorter, Clement, Hodder and Stoughton, 1921.
128
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Brontë | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Gaskell | The idea of self-improvement through writing and reading correlates to the strong emphasis in EG
's fiction on education and the impact of environment. This was undoubtedly influenced by a Unitarian intellectual background indebted to... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Harriet Martineau | Just at the point when she become a published author, HM
's questioning of her Unitarian faith was troubled by a desire to reconcile herself to God's power and benevolence. Martineau, Harriet, and Gaby Weiner. Harriet Martineau’s Autobiography. Virago, 1983, 2 vols. 1: 108 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Harriet Martineau | In 1834 HM
published Letter to the Deaf in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine. Around 1837 she was asked to take charge of an Economical Magazine at a good salary, which she thought opened the prospect... |
Leisure and Society | Anna Swanwick | One of the activities she pursued while others slept was knitting: she knitted a scarf for James Martineau
which he called a genuine Kunst-work, or work of art. Bruce, Mary Louisa. Anna Swanwick, A Memoir and Recollections 1813-1899. T. F. Unwin, 1903. 92 |
Literary responses | Frances Power Cobbe | It was recommended to James Martineau
by Francis W. Newman
, brother of the famous tractarian
, as a revelation of a pure, tender, ardent spirit. qtd. in Mitchell, Sally. Frances Power Cobbe: Victorian Feminist, Journalist, Reformer. University of Virginia Press, 2004. 81 |
Literary responses | George Eliot | James Martineau
, however, writing in the Westminster Review, praised the work of the lady-translator but decried her decision to translate an atheist, and one of quite secondary philosophical repute. qtd. in Ashton, Rosemary. George Eliot: A Life. Hamish Hamilton, 1996. 125 |
Literary responses | Anna Letitia Waring | James Martineau
wrote to Waring on 4 April 1873, seeking permission to publish her works in his hymnbook: he said he was anxious to enrich it with some pieces . . . which have long... |
Literary responses | Harriet Martineau | James Martineau
published a scathing attack on the book in the Prospective Review under the title Mesmeric Atheism. He poured scorn on the authors for believing that one can legitimately reach the doctrines of... |
Occupation | Lucy Toulmin Smith | Manchester College (now Harris Manchester College
) had a long and distinguished history as a Dissenting institution (including spells at York and London) before it moved to Oxford in 1889 and into new buildings... |
Occupation | Fanny Kingsley | FK
took an active position as the wife of a Rector at Eversley. When the couple arrived, the seventeenth-century rectory was in disrepair, and flooded in heavy rain. Brenda Colloms notes that, nevertheless, there... |
Occupation | Mary Augusta Ward | In the wake of Robert Elsmere's success, MAW
sought to prove the feasibility of the New Brotherhood which she had described in her novel through the foundation of a similar philanthropic organisation. As she... |
politics | Emily Davies | ED
's petition was a request for funding to establish a College for women. It was signed by 521 teachers of girls and 175 others, including Robert Browning
, George Grote
, Thomas Huxley
,... |
Residence | Fanny Kingsley | |
Textual Production | Anna Swanwick | Meanwhile her former pastor James Martineau
had written to praise her poetry and to suggest that she should translate into English a young and little-known German poet, Ferdinand Freiligrath
, a Prussian political exile in... |
No timeline events available.
No bibliographical results available.