Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Publishing | Mary Lamb | In early 1805 it seems, after Charles Lamb
had already produced a children's book for the Godwins' new Juvenile Library
, Mary Jane Godwin
asked ML
(who was not known as an author, though she... |
Publishing | Charlotte Stopes | Although it was relatively unpopular with the critics, Shakespeare
's Environment was reprinted with additions in 1918. 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 | Alison Uttley | From the time she moved south, her output was staggering. Between 1942 and 1945, she published fifteen prose books and a play, as well as placing articles and making broadcasts. In autumn 1944, she began... |
Publishing | Ouida | Ouida was an indefatigable writer of letters to The Times, and the same paper occasionally printed her poetry. In September 1882 appeared a piece of imperialist blank verse which portrays Great England as an... |
Publishing | Mary Maria Colling | Some time after 17 March 1831 Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green
presented Colling with a copy of the plays of Shakespeare
(the Bard), having heard that she admired his poetry. Bray, Anna Eliza, and Mary Maria Colling. “Letters to Robert Southey”. Fables and Other Pieces in Verse by M.M. Colling, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, 1831, pp. 1-85. 16 |
Publishing | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
issued in eighteen monthly parts The Complete Concordance to Shakspere. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990. |
Publishing | Amelia Opie | Its full title was The Father and Daughter. A tale in prose; with an Epistle from the Maid of Corinth to her lover; and other poetical pieces. After a first print-run of 750 copies... |
Publishing | Caroline Blackwood | |
Publishing | Pamela Frankau | PF
's agent rejected the first novel she finished after Marriage of Harlequin, which dealt with a playwright she had imagined herself in love with, and which she called (again from Shakespeare
's Hamlet... |
Publishing | Maria Callcott | MC
contributed a six-page letter to a book entitled The Seven Ages of Shakspeare, which illustrates with engravings the famous seven ages passage of As You Like It. Callcott, Maria, and William Shakespeare. “Introduction”. The Seven Ages of Shakspeare, edited by J. Martin and J. Martin, J. Van Voorst, 1840. title-page |
Publishing | Mary Cowden Clarke | Once established as a scholar, MCC
staked out a territory as a critic in On Shakespeare
's Individuality in His Characters, a series of articles carried by Sharpe's London Magazine during 1848-51. Gross, George. “Mary Cowden Clarke, ’The Girlhood of Shakespeare’s Heroines’, and the Sex Education of Victorian Women”. Victorian Studies, Vol. 16 , No. 1, 1972, pp. 37-58. 38 |
Publishing | Jane Gardam | In Spring 2011 JG
published in The Author a funny and joyous little piece entitled and good in everything (words which in Shakespeare
's As You Like It follow the aspiration to find sermons in... |
Publishing | Angela Thirkell | In 1930, once she was back in England, she found she could earn her living by journalism for Punch and the Fortnightly Review. She was attuned to writing by women from an early stage... |
Publishing | Mary Cowden Clarke | At the request of James T. Fields
she wrote a piece for the Atlantic Monthly in 1866 about a curious Clarke, Mary Cowden. My Long Life. Dodd, Mead, 1896. 149 |
Publishing | L. M. Montgomery | At Prince of Wales College
in Charlottetown a few years after this, she wrote an essay on Shakepeare's
Portia which was read out at the graduation ceremonies and printed in the Charlottetown Guardian. In... |
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