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         Leapor Mary:     more detail
  1. The Works of Mary Leapor (Oxford English Texts)
  2. Mary Leapor: A Study in Eighteenth-Century Women's Poetry (Oxford English Monographs) by Richard Greene, 1993-06-24
  3. Poems Upon Several Occasions V2: By Mrs. Leapor (1751) by Mary Leapor, 2010-03-19
  4. Poems Upon Several Occasions V2: By Mrs. Leapor (1751) by Mary Leapor, 2010-09-10
  5. The Poetry of Mary Leapor (Focus on) by Stephen Van-Hagen, 2009-10-01
  6. A Northamptonshire poetess: Mary Leapor by Edmund Blunden, 1936
  7. Poems Upon Several Occasions V2: By Mrs. Leapor (1751) by Mary Leapor, 2010-09-10
  8. Mary Leapor : A Study in Eighteenth-Century Women's Poetry (Oxford English Monographs) by Richard Greene, 1993
  9. Poems upon several occasions. Volume 1 by Mrs. (Mary), 1722-1746 Leapor, 2009-10-26
  10. Pastoral Tradition and the Female Talent: Studies in Augustan Poetry (Ams Studies in the Eighteenth Century) by Ann Messenger, 2001-06-15

61. L Website Results :: Linkspider UK
Hunt, Bem (1); Leacock, Stephen@ (12); leapor, mary (1); Lear, Edward(17); Leary, Timothy@ (6); Ledwidge, Francis (1); Lee, Harper@ (15
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L Websites from Linkspider UK Keyword: L Linkspider UK Directory
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Directory Tree: Top Arts Literature Authors : L (601) Add URL Advertise Here! Personalize Amazon ... Longstreet, Stephen - Author, screenwriter, playwright and artist. Includes examples of his earliest known works and photos. Luckett, Mitch - Pacific Northwest author and bluegrass musician/storyteller Mitch Luckett. Site includes bio and reviews of, and excerpts from, his novel "To Kill A Common Loon." List, Dennis - Widely published writer from New Zealand. Site contains his poetry and fiction. Lindsey, David - Author of suspense mystery novels. Details about his books, news, and forum. Long, Amelia Reynolds - (1904-1978), penned mystery novels, science fiction, and poetry. Site contains a bibliography of her work and information about her writing career.

62. L Website Results :: Linkspider UK
Leakey, Louis@ (5); Leakey, mary@ (5); Leandros, Vicky@ (3); leapor,mary@ (1); Lear, Edward@ (17); Leary, Denis@ (5); Lebling, Dave@ (4
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  • 64. Eighteenth-century Women Poets
    Collier. Selected Poems by Carter. Week 7 October 5 Lonsdale, 179239,especially mary leapor, Mulso (Chapone) See also Lennox. Week
    http://web.clas.ufl.edu/users/pcraddoc/fempoets.htm
    The Other Eighteenth Century:Women's Poetry and the Canon
    LIT 6855, Mondays 6-8 periods (approximately 12:50-3:30) PATRICIA CRADDOCK
    Required texts: (available at Goerings Bookstore, University and 13th Street)
    • Eighteenth-Century Women Poets: An Oxford Anthology , ed. Roger Lonsdale. Romantic Women Poets 1770-1835 , ed. Andrew Ashfield.
    NOTE: for links to materials on certain poets, see below. Three of the linked pages were created by students in the course. READING SCHEDULE: NOTE: Whenever a writer is represented in both Lonsdale and Ashfield, you are responsible also for the poems in Ashfield on the date when the poems in Lonsdale are assigned. From at least the eighth week of the course, this double representation will be routinely the case. Week 1 August 24 IntroductionFeatures and Genres of 18th Century Poetry. A reference "canon" Week 2 August 31 The Rediscovery of WomenDiscussion of Introductions to Lonsdale and Ashfield; poetry of Aphra Behn Week 3 September 7 LABOR DAY. NO CLASS MEETING. Week 4 September 14: Lonsdale, 1-53, especially Finch, Rowe.

    65. Séc. XVIII
    London, Oxford University Press, 1908. 09243/1. leapor. mary (17221746). Content.In MOOREHOUSE, Reed. With pipe and tabor; junior class-room plays.
    http://www.culting.com/crcthe/crcthe08.htm
    SÉC. XVIII ADDISON, Joseph (1672-1719) Cato. In: ADDISON, Joseph et alii. Eighteenth century plays. London; New York, Dent; Dutton, 1928. (Everyman's Library; 818) [11460/1] Cato. In: NICOLL, Allardyce, ed. Readings from British drama; extracts from British and Irish plays. London, George Harrap, 1928. [00690/1] Cato. In: In: D'AVENANT, William, Sir et alii. Plays of the restoration and eighteenth century as they were acted at the theatres-royal by Their Majesties' servants. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, [c1931] [00735/1] BAILLIE, Joanna (1762-1851) Ethwald. In: NICOLL, Allardyce, ed. Readings from British drama; extracts from British and Irish plays. London, George Harrap, 1928. [00690/1] BYRON, George Gordon, Lord (1788-1824) Poems and plays . London; New York, Dent; Dutton, 1910. 3 v. (Everyman's Library; 487) [00802/1;00803/1] Manfred . In:DRYDEN John et alii. Modern English drama. New York, Collier, [1909]. (The Harvard Classics; 18) [12196/1] Manfred. In: ELIOT, Charles William, ed. Modern English drama.

    66. Summer Abroad Programs
    His first book, mary leapor A Study in EighteenthCentury Women’sPoetry was published by the Oxford University Press in 1993.
    http://www.summerabroad.utoronto.ca/oxfCourses.html
    Oxford Courses
    Students are not permitted to register for more than one course (1.0 credit).
    All courses have limited enrolment. Course selection is on a first-come, first-served basis. All course offerings are contingent on adequate enrolment.
    Mandatory field trips are an integral part of each course and while classes are scheduled in the mornings from Monday to Thursday, field trips may occur on afternoons or Fridays.
    ENG201Y0 Reading Poetry: Famous Poets of Oxford
    This introductory course will make modern poetry come alive through an intensive reading of works by poets associated with Oxford University: Gerard Manley Hopkins, Oscar Wilde, Edith Sitwell, Sacheverell Sitwell, T. S. Eliot, Robert Graves, W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender, Louis Macneice, Elizabeth Jennings, Peter Levi, Geoffrey Hill, and Seamus Heaney.
    Field trips: This course will include trips in and around Oxford and to London. Students will be required to pay CAD $80 to the International Programs Office for a day trip to Weston Hall, one of the homes of the Sitwell family. Students should also budget approximately CAD$50 for day trips to London, the local Oxford area and entrance fees to be paid on-site.
    Prerequisite: any four full courses or one of ENG110Y/120Y/140Y/JEF100Y
    This is a Humanities course.

    67. Mongagubib
    daughter. mary leapor, Dorinda at her Glass (Fairer/Gerrard). Kate Daviesand Emma Major October 2002. back to eighteenth century page.
    http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/wazzdirectory/Mongagubib
    Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
    Photocopies of her letters will be provided for this session; they will be taken from Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Selected Letters, ed. Isobel Grundy (Penguin, 1997). We will also be looking at poetry by Montagu ? Saturday. The Small Pox. Flavia, The Lover: A Ballad, and Verses Addressíd to the Imitator of Horace ? and Popeís ëEpistle to a Lady: Of the Characters of Womení, using Eighteenth-Century Poetry: An Annotated Anthology, ed. David Fairer and Christine Gerrard (Blackwell, 1999).
    Other editions of her works:
    Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Complete Letters, ed. Robert Halsband, 3 vols. (Clarendon Press, 1965-7)
    Turkish Letters , ed. Malcolm Jack and introd. Anita Desai (Pickering and Chatto, 1993)
    Essays and Poems and Simplicity: A Comedy , ed. Robert Halsband and Isobel Grundy (Clarendon Press, 1977; rev. ed., 1993)
    Romance Writings, ed. Isobel Grundy (Clarendon Press, 1996). Selected Criticism Srinivas Aravamudan, ëLady Mary Wortley Montagu in the hammam: masquerade, womanliness, and Levantinizationí, English Literature in History
    Elizabeth A. Bohls, ëAesthetics and Orientalism in Lady Mary Wortley Montaguís Lettersí

    68. Pickering & Chatto Sample Proposal
    1990 or Moira Ferguson's EighteenthCentury Women Poets SUNY, 1995 as wellas several single author studies (Richard Greene's mary leapor A Study in
    http://www.pickeringchatto.com/HTML/proposal.htm

    Return to Publish With Us page
    Sample of a succesful proposal
    This proposal is a useful guide, and it is interesting to see how it developed after it was accepted. The final details of the edition can be viewed on www.pickeringchatto.com/labouringclasspoets
    English Labouring-Class Poets 1700-1900,
    two editions of three volumes each
    I: English Labouring-Class Poets 1700-1800 in three volumes
    II: English Labouring-Class Poets 1801-1900 in three volumes
    EDITORS
    John Goodridge,
    Senior Lecturer, Nottingham Trent University: General Editor and Editor. Goodridge is the author of Rural Life in Eighteenth-Century English Poetry (Cambridge, 1996) and has written numerous articles on self-taught authors including, notably, Thomas Chatterton and John Clare. He is the editor of the John Clare Society Journal , on the Editorial Board of the Trent Editions, and has edited, most recently, the works of Robert Bloomfield, John Dyer, and John Clare. In addition, Goodridge has served as editor to two scholarly collections, The Independent Spirit: John Clare and the Self-Taught Tradition (1994) and the forthcoming John Clare: New Approaches, New Voices

    69. Politics To Poetry A Brief Chronology Of The Eighteenth-Century
    1716. Lady mary Wortley Montagu, Town Eclogues. 1722. mary leapor born.1726. Jonathan Swift, Cadenus and Vanessa, Gulliver's Travels. 1727.
    http://www.stanford.edu/~rvalenza/P2P22.html
    Politics to Poetry: A Brief Chronology of the Eighteenth-Century Time Line Anne dies, succeeded by George I. Whigs back. Oxford committed to Tower until 1717. Bolingbroke accused of Jacobitism off to France, Secretary of State to the Jacobite court. Returns in 1723, but cannot reclaim Parliamentary seat. Pope, The Rape of the Lock (5 canto version) Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Town Eclogues Mary Leapor born. Jonathan Swift, Cadenus and Vanessa Gulliver's Travels George I dies, succeeded by George II John Gay, The Beggar's Opera Jonathan Swift, A Modest Proposal Pope begins publishing his Imitations of Horace Montagu's The Nonsense of Common-Sense , weekly newspaper. Cibber's autobiography Samuel Richardson, Pamela Henry Fielding, Shamela Henry Fielding, Joseph Andrews Pope dies. Swift dies. Second Jacobite Rebellion led by Charles Edward (the 'Young Pretender') Samuel Richardson, Clarissa Leapor dies 1746, her Poems upon Several Occasions published posthumously 1748, initially for subscribers. Fielding dies. Seven Years War begins Mary Wollstonecraft born.

    70. CLASSIFIEDS.TERADEX.COM - Entertainment/Literature/Authors/L
    Le Fanu, J. Sheridan, Long, Duncan, Le Hunt, Bem, Lord, Walter, leapor, mary,Lorrah, Jean, Lear, Edward, Lovelace, Richard, Ledwidge, Francis, Lowell, Amy,
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    71. ::: IFL - Start Of Your Research - Dept. Of English Language & Literature :::
    . The Poetry of mary leapor (172246) URL. URL http//www.orgs.muohio.edu/womenpoets/leapor/.
    http://www.ifl.or.kr/eng/eng_sub.asp?class=18

    72. ::: IFL - Start Of Your Research - Dept. Of English Language & Literature :::
    ?. The Poetry of mary leapor (172246) URL. URL http//www.orgs.muohio.edu/womenpoets/leapor/.
    http://www.ifl.or.kr/eng/eng_sub2.asp?class=28

    73. CPR - Christopher Ricks: How Ricks Redusts A Classic By James Rother
    Katherine Philips (16371674), mary leapor (1722-1746), and Jean Elliot (1727-1805),toseize upon three at random, are either the result of recondite barrel
    http://www.cprw.com/Rother/ricks.htm
    As Reviewed By:
    James Rother H ow R icks R edusts a C lassic The Oxford Book of English Verse
    edited by Christopher Ricks. Oxford University Press, 2000. 690 pp. $39.95 E-mail this site to a friend
    Though no longer the signal event it once was in the English-speaking world, the appearance of a new Oxford Book of English Verse still raises a certain frisson
    Oxford Book all
    the déclassé Strausses? Certainly the world typecast by Gutenberg has appeared of late less a living, breathing logos than a many-layered paperweight as proud of its density as it is heedless of a metastasizing moribundity that threatens to swallow it whole.
    English
    The purpose in issuing a new Oxford Book is to finetune the image of British poetic culture—insistently flickering since the last finetuning of the controls by Helen Gardner in the late ‘60s—and register a recalibrating sense of where that culture is likely to go on the basis of where, and by the efforts of whom, it has managed so far to get. One empowerment any anthologist reads into his or her job description is the shrinking or enlarging of the space allotted to this or that "classic" English poet. Ricks surely departs from established precedent in assigning Housman, Kipling and Yeats no more than 5 or 6 pages each
    more Oxford Book

    th year, limning a careering mortality that no doubt left little time to take stock of the sorts of things that gravitate toward memorialization in poems. "Mira’s Will," her single contribution to the

    74. English Poetry, Second Edition Bibliography: L
    leapor, mary, 17221746, Poems Upon Several Occasions. By the late Mrs. leapor London Printed And Sold by J. Roberts 1751 2 v. Only verse included.
    http://collections.chadwyck.com/html/ep2/bibliography/l.htm
    BACK TO A-Z LIST
    Hint: you can choose Find from the Edit menu of your web browser to look for a particular word on the current page.
    L
    Lamb, Caroline, Lady, 1785-1828 Fugitive pieces and Reminiscences of Lord Byron: containing an entire new edition of the Hebrew melodies, with the addition of several never before published; the whole illustrated with critical, historical, theatrical, political, and theological remarks, notes, anecdotes, interesting conversations, and observations, made by that illustrious poet: together with his Lordship's autograph; also some original poetry, letters and recollections of Lady Caroline Lamb. By I. Nathan
    London Whittaker, Treacher, and Co.
    xxxvi, 196 p. Only verse by Lamb included. Lamb, Caroline, Lady, 1785-1828 Glenarvon. In Three Volumes
    London Printed for Henry Colburn
    3 v. Preliminaries omitted; verse extracted from prose text Lamb, Caroline, Lady, 1785-1828 A new canto
    London Printed for William Wright [etc.]
    16 p. Preliminaries omitted. Lamb, Charles, 1775-1834 Beauty and the Beast; or, The Enchanted Rose: A poetical version of an ancient tale. Illustrated with a series of engravings, and Beauty's song at her spinning wheel, Set to Music by Mr. Whittaker. Second Edition

    75. Untitled
    However, the same observation might be made about the work of mary leapor. CambridgeCambridge UP, 1990. leapor, mary. Poems Upon Several Occasions.
    http://www.alexanderstreet2.com/SWRPLive/bios/S7037-D001.html
    Editor's Note: Working class poet. Went to school to learn writing in Audchentoul, and copied poetry secretly. Began to compose her own poems at 14 when she went to work. Family difficulties ensued, and she developed consumption at 18. Married a ship's carpenter in 1796. Simple Poems earned her 100 pounds, which she later invested in a share of a ship. She had 8 children. The mean Unletter'dfemale Bard of Aberdeen!: The Complexities of Christian Milne's Simple Poems on Simple Subjects By Bridget Keegan Introduction At the conclusion of her watershed study of eighteenth-century laboring-class women poets, The Muses of Resistance , Donna Landry asserts that: "By the end of the [eighteenth] century, the discourse of laboring-class women's verse seems to have played itself out, along with much of the radical democratic energy with which it may have often been allied" (273). It is certainly true that by 1805, when Christian Milne published Simple Poems on Simple Subjects , many of the conventions for plebeian poets who wished to be published were firmly established, and that these conventions were ideologically conservative. Expressions of patriotism, piety, and humility, all of which can be found in abundance in Simple Poems on Simple Subjects , were the guarantors of any favorable, although usually condescending notice. As such, Milne's work has been of little interest to the feminist or marxist critics engaged in recovering laboring-class and women's literature.

    76. English Staff Profile -- Rebecca D'Monté
    Elstob, The Female Quixote, The Female Wits, The Girlhood of Shakespeare's Heroines,Elizabeth Hamilton, mary Heron, Lady Caroline Lamb, mary leapor, The Lucky
    http://www.uwe.ac.uk/humanities/english/staffprofile_Rebecca D'Monté.shtml
    English Staff Profile BA, PhD (London). Lecturer
    Email: Rebecca.D'Monte@uwe.ac.uk Current Teaching:
    BA: Introduction to Theatre Studies; British Drama Since 1945; Women in the English Theatre; Literature and Renaissance. Publications:
    Books:
    Female Communities 1600-1800: Literary Visions and Cultural Realities , co-edited with Nicole Pohl (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2000) Short Works:
    ' "Making a Spectacle": Margaret Cavendish and the Staging of the Self', in A Princely Brave Woman: Collected Essays on Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle , edited by Stephen Clucas (Ashgate, 2002)
    'Mirroring Female Power: Separatist Spaces in the Plays of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle', in Female Communities 1600-1800: Literary Visions and Cultural Realities , co-edited with Nicole Pohl (Macmillan, 2000) Biographies entries on: Theodosia Alleine, 'Ariadne', Lady Grisell Baillie, Maria Barrell, Anne Bathurst, Adam Bede , Frances Boothby, Mary Brunton, Elizabeth Cellier, Sarah Churchill, Lady Mary Coke, The Convent of Pleasure , Elizabeth Elstob, The Female Quixote , The Female Wits, The Girlhood of Shakespeare's Heroines, Elizabeth Hamilton, Mary Heron, Lady Caroline Lamb, Mary Leapor, The Lucky Chance , Mary Mollineux, A Patchwork Screen for the Ladies , Hannah Penn, Mary Pix, Anne Plumptre, Elizabeth Polwhele, Jael Pye, Mary Scott, Eleanor Sleath, Joanna Southcott

    77. Message
    9 Leadbetter, Huddy@ 9 Leadon, Bernie@ 2 Leaf, Ryan@ 1 Leakey, Louis@ 7Leakey, mary@ 7 Lean, David@ 4 Leandros, Vicky@ 3 leapor, mary@ 1 Lear
    http://www.boop.ca/boop/cgi-bin/odp/index.cgi?base=/Reference/Biography/L/

    78. Pritchard, _Poetry By English Women: Elizabeth To Victorian_ - Anthologies Page
    far mary leapor (17221746). from Essay on Friendship from The Head-acheThe Sacrifice On Winter Mira's Will mary JONES (d.1778).
    http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/anthologies/pritchar.htm
    P OETRY BY ENGLISH WOMEN
    ELIZABETHAN TO VICTORIAN
    Edited with an Introduction and Notes by R. E. Pritchard
    New York: Continuum, 1993
    CONTENTS
    Acknowledgements Introduction Further Reading
    QUEEN ELIZABETH I (1533-1603)
    Written with a Diamond on her Window at Woodstock Written on a Wall at Woodstock Written in her French Psalter The Doubt of Future Foes On Monsieur's Departure
    ISABELLA WHITNEY (fl. 1567)
    from The Admonition by the Auctor Wyll and Testament
    LADY MARY HERBERT, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE (1561-1621)
    Psalm 57: Miserere Mei, Deus Psalm 58: Si Vere Utique Psalm 92: Bonum Est Confiteri Psalm 139: Domine, Probasti
    EMILIA LANYER (1569-1645)
    The Description of Cooke-ham
    LADY MARY WROTH (1587?-1652?)
    Sonnets from Pamphilia to Amphilanthus from The Countess of Montgomery's Urania
    ANNE BRADSTREET (1613?-1672)
    The Prologue To my Dear and loving Husband Before the Birth of one of her Children A letter to her Husband Upon the Burning of our House
    AN COLLINS (fl. 1653?)
    Song Another Song
    MARGARET CAVENDISH, DUCHESS OF NEWCASTLE (1624?-1674)
    An Excuse for so much writ upon my Verses A Poet I am neither born, nor bred'

    79. Miranda Burgess, On Laura Mandell, Misogynous Economies - Romantic Circles Revie
    Mandell's reading of mary leapor's poems in chapter four shows that female poetscan use misogynistic representations in satire just as male poets can.
    http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/mandell.html

    Laura Mandell
    Misogynous Economies: The Business of Literature in Eighteenth-Century Britain Lexington: University Press of Kentucky . x + 228pp. Illus.: 4 halftones. $42.00 (Hdbk; ISBN: 0-8131-2116-7). Bibliographic Citation: Burgess, Miranda. "On Laura Mandell, Misogynous Economies: The Business of Literature in Eighteenth-Century Britain ." [date of access]. Romantic Circles Reviews Table of Contents
    List of Figures
    Acknowledgments
    Introduction
    1. Misogyny and Literariness: Dryden, Pope, and Swift
    2. Capitalism and Rape: Thomas Otway's The Orphan
    3. Engendering Capitalist Desire: Filthy Bawds and Thoroughly Good Merchants in Mandeville and Lillo
    4. Misogyny and Feminism: Mary Leapor
    5. Misogyny and the Canon: The Character of Women in Anthologies of Poetry
    6. Transcending Misogyny: Anna Letitia Barbauld Writes Her Way Out Conclusion Notes Index Reviewed by Miranda J. Burgess University of British Columbia T Yet according to Mandell's analysis, the figure of gender and an accompanying misogyny are everywhere in eighteenth-century writing, from the individual poems, plays and economic texts discussed in the first four chapters to the anthologies and critical writings that processed such works later in the century, addressed in chapters five and six. The key to the simultaneous ubiquity and unnecessariness of this seemingly essential discourse is the way in which eighteenth-century poets and Romantic anthologists and critics used misogynist rhetorics and practices to manage the pleasures of their readers. It is eighteenth-century readers and their pleasures, and the social anxiety these pleasures produce in contemporaries, that are the major topic of Mandell's book.

    80. EmailPinoy Web Directory
    Leakey, Louis@ (7); Leakey, mary@ (7); Lean, David@ (4); Leandros,Vicky@ (3); leapor, mary@ (1); Lear, Edward@ (17); Leary, Denis@(5
    http://search.emailpinoy.com/cgi-bin/webpod.cgi/Reference/Biography/L/

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