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         Philips Katherine:     more books (100)
  1. The Collected Works of Katherine Philips: The Matchless Orinda/Volume III - The Translations by Katherine Philips, 1993
  2. Poems by the most deservedly admired Mrs. Katherine Philips, the matchless Orinda. To which is added Monsieur Corneille's tragedies of Pompey and Horace, with several other translations out of French. by Katherine Philips, 2010-05-28
  3. Minor Poets of the Caroline Period ...: General Introduction. William Chamberlayne: Pharonnida; England's Jubilee. Edward Benlowes: Theophila; the Summary ... Katherine Philips: Poems. Patrick Hannay: by Anonymous, 2010-03-04
  4. Concept of Platonic Love in the Coterie of Mrs. Katherine Philips, "The Matchless Orinda" by Jewel Price Ross, 1954-01-01
  5. Sir Philip Sidney Selected Poems by Sir Philip Sidney (Edited By Katherine Duncan-Jones), 1982-01-01
  6. Without Love with Katherine Hepburn: Souvenir book by Katherine; Play by Philip Barry; Directed by Robert B. Sinclair Hepburn, 1943
  7. Letters from Orinda to Poliarchus. by Katherine Philips, 2010-05-29
  8. Social Backgrounds of American Literature by Ralph Philip & Katherine Burton Boas, 1933-01-01
  9. "Vogue" Beauty by Katherine Philips, Vogue, 2002-03-04
  10. Minor Poets of the Caroline Period, Volumes I, II, and III; with Chamberlayne's Pharonnida & England's Jubilee, Benlowes's Theophila, Marmion's Cupid and Psyche, Kynaston's Leoline & Sydanis and Cynthiades, Chalkhill's Thealma and Clearchus, Bosworth by William Chamberlayne, Edward Benlowes, et all 1905
  11. Letters from Orinda to Poliarchus. The second edition, with additions. by Katherine Philips, 2010-06-10
  12. Orinda Booklets. Extra series, I - VI (Complete) ... by Katherine and Tutin, J. R. (John Ramsden) (Publish.) Philips, 1905
  13. Orinda Booklets. Extra series, I - VI (Complete) ... by Katherine and Tutin, J. R. (John Ramsden) (Publish.) Philips, 1905-01-01
  14. The Orinda Booklets, Numbers 1 to 6 by Katherine Philips, 1905

21. Zeal.com - United States - New - Lifestyle - Books - Poetry - Poets A-Z - Poets
A great resource for United States New - Lifestyle - Books - Poetry - PoetsAZ - Poets PQ - philips, katherine. philips, katherine Preview Category,
http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=929760

22. Words Of Women
Click here to return to main page, katherine philips. (16311664).lilip's photography Post to the messageboard Elizabeth Akers Allen
http://www.photoaspects.com/lilip/philips.shtml
Katherine Philips
lilip's photography
Post to the messageboard

Elizabeth Akers Allen

Jane Austen
...
Page One

Against Love
Arion to a Dolphin
To my sister on her nuptials
Orinda upon little Hector Philips

23. Words Of Women - WOW Katherine Philips
Click here to return to main page, katherine philips. (16311664). Against Love Arionto a Dolphin To my sister on her nuptials Orinda upon little Hector philips
http://www.photoaspects.com/lilip/poets/philips.html
Katherine Philips
Against Love
Arion to a Dolphin

To my sister on her nuptials

Orinda upon little Hector Philips
Against Love
Hence Cupid! with your cheating toys,
Your real griefs, and painted joys,
Your pleasure which itself destroys.
Lovers like men in fevers burn and rave,
And only what will injure them do crave.
Men's weakness makes love so severe,
They give him power by their fear,
And make the shackles which they wear. Who to another does his heart submit, Makes his own idol, and then worships it. Him whose heart is all his own, Peace and liberty does crown, He apprehends no killing frown. He feels no raptures which are joys diseased, And is not much transported, but still pleased.
Arion to a Dolphin, On His Majesty's passage into England.
Whom does this stately Navy bring? O! ‘tis Great Britain's Glorious King, Convey him then, ye Winds and Seas, Swift as Desire and calm as Peace. In your Respect let him survey What all his other Subjects pay; And prophesie to them again The splendid smoothness of his Reign.

24. Katherine Philips (1632-1664)
katherine philips (16321664). Use this information responsibly. To citethis page, be sure to substitute today's date philips, katherine.
http://www.hn.psu.edu/Faculty/KKemmerer/18thc/women/Philips/weather.htm

25. Plagiarist.com Poetry » A Place For The Genuine.
Text size A A A A Poets (View All) A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T UV W X Y Z Select a poem by katherine philips Poems by katherine philips
http://plagiarist.com/poetry/?aid=136

26. Plagiarist.com Poetry » A Place For The Genuine.
Comments Help with site features.Help Browse Authors.Browse Authors Browse Titles.BrowseTitles More poems by katherine philips.katherine philips (5 poems
http://plagiarist.com/poetry/?wid=3212

27. The Poetry Of Katherine Fowler Philips, Once Known As "The Matchless Orinda"
Orinda, Rosania, Lucasia et aliae Towards a New Edition of the Works ofkatherine philips. By Ellen Moody. katherine philips was apolitical.
http://www.jimandellen.org/orinda.ordering.poems.html
This essay was written in 1985; it was published in Philological Quarterly , 66 (1987), as "Orinda, Rosania, Lucasia et aliae : Towards a New Edition of the Works of Katherine Philips," pp. 325-54. It is the earliest published result of my research and study of Renaissance women poets, that I devoted to Englishwomen of the 16th through later 18th century. Most of the research for this was done in the Library of Congress and the Folger Shakespeare Library. The version of my essay here differs from the original one Philological Quarterly printed. I have updated the texts by comparing the edition I used with the texts from the recent edition of Katherine Philips's works by Patrick Thomas, which is based on manuscripts, but follows the same politicized arrangement favored by Cotterell; whenever I quote any of Philips's lines I cite Thomas's pagination; when there was a discrepancy between the orthography or wording of Saintsbury and Thomas's texts , I have preferred Thomas's. I have added the poems he found to my listing. I have also updated the endnotes and bibliography. I realise my arrangement of this and proposal for an ordering of Anne Finch as well as Vittoria Colonna and Veronica Gambara's poems could be subjected to adverse criticism on the grounds I take a belletristic and autobiographical approach by insisting on the importance of quality and where the poem comes in a writer's life. My view is this evaluative and common sense attitude towards the provenance and understandability of poems is one the academy would do well to condescend to not simply it wants the poetry it studies to be of interest to anyone outside a very small circle of people, but the very few individuals who become experts on any particular woman's life and poetry want anyone beyond them to read it for real.

28. Katherine Philips's Poems: Solitude
history of the publication of this translation insofar is it was known up to thepublication of Thomas's Collected Works of katherine philips, see William
http://www.jimandellen.org/womenspoetry/solitude.html
I reprint this poem as the mood and type are central to a certain vein of women's poetry which may be called "visions of nature", which includes, among others, poems as varied yet coterminus as Veronica Gàmbara's Quando miro la terra ornata e bella , and Con quel caldo desio che nascer suole . The tradition is varied and begins in the Renaissance, but takes a peculiarly women-centered intonation, attitude, imagery, and rhythm of line in the later 17th century in France. Katherine's translation is not a great poem; it is however appealing to those who are alive to this tradition, and Katherine's translation was continually reprinted in all sorts of collections throughout the eighteenth century, most of the time anonymously until the romantic movement displaced this kind of formalized or disguised and distanced cri de coeur La Solitude de St. Amant La Solitude A Alcidon
O! Solitude, my sweetest choice
Places devoted to the night,
Remote from tumult, and from noise,
How you my restless thoughts delight!
O Heavens! what content is mine

29. Katherine Philips
Translate this page katherine Fowler philips (1631-1664) est née à Londres dans une famillede la bourgeoisie marchande. Mariée adolescente à James
http://herodote2.tripod.com/philips.html
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K atherine Fowler Philips (1631-1664) est née à Londres dans une famille de la bourgeoisie marchande. Mariée adolescente à James Philips de beaucoup son aîné, elle fut incitée par son époux à développer des intérêts littéraires et culturels. Elle a animé, vers 1652, plusieurs salons littéraires londoniens. Katherine a créé une organisation de femmes qu’elle a baptisé " La Société de l’Amitié " dont chaque membre portait un sobriquet classique. Celui de la fondatrice était " l’Inimitable Orinda ". En outre, taquinant la muse, elle a publié plusieurs recueils de poèmes et traduit divers textes latins.
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30. Edson, Katherine Philips
Edson, katherine philips. (18701933), reformer and public official katherinephilips was born on January 12, 1870, in Kenton, Ohio.
http://search.eb.com/women/articles/Edson_Katherine_Philips.html
Edson, Katherine Philips
(1870-1933), reformer and public official Katherine Philips was born on January 12, 1870, in Kenton, Ohio. While studying music at a Chicago conservatory she met and married Charles F. Edson in 1890. They settled in Antelope Valley, California, where Katherine Edson soon became active in organizing support for woman suffrage. In 1900 they moved to Los Angeles, and she joined the Friday Morning Club, a pioneering women's club (founded nine years earlier by Caroline M. Severance ) and the original inspiration for her work in Antelope Valley. Through the Friday Morning Club's various public reform and health campaigns, Edson became involved in public affairs. In 1910 she was chosen a member of the board of the California Federation of Women's Clubs, a post she held for six years. She played a significant part in the campaign that secured a woman suffrage amendment to the state constitution in 1911. In 1912 she was elected to the Los Angeles Charter Revision Commission and became the first woman to be named to the executive committee of the National Municipal League. She also became a member of the Progressive Party's state central committee. In 1912 Edson was appointed a special agent of the California Bureau of Labor Statistics. In that post she carried out investigations of violations of or shortcomings in state labor law. Her investigation and lobbying eventually closed a loophole by which student nurses had escaped the protection of the eight-hour law for women, and she drew up a comprehensive wages and hours law that was enacted by the legislature in 1913. She was then appointed to the five-member Industrial Welfare Commission created under the law to set standards of hours, wages, and working conditions; she became executive commissioner in 1916.

31. Katherine Philips - Orinda - Poetry
Poetry by women index for katherine philips Orinda - part of a larger collectionof poetry written by women, much of it before the twentieth century.
http://womenshistory.about.com/library/etext/pindx/blp_aindex_philips_orinda.htm
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Katherine Philips - Orinda - Poetry Poems by Women - Author Index
Browse through authors: Back Next This collection assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis. Jone Johnson Lewis Citing poems from these pages: Author. "Poem Title." Women's History: Poems by Women. Jone Johnson Lewis, editor. URL: (date of logon) Email this page! Sponsored Links Search Census Records - Free with Registration Genealogy.com provides beginners and experts with a wealth of tools, information, and advice to get you started or get past the stumbling blocks in your family search. http://www.genealogy.com/

32. The Poetry Of Katherine Philips
The Poetry of katherine philips. 6th April 1651 L'Amitie To Mrs.M. Awbrey. 39. Soule of my soule! my Joy, my crown, my friend!
http://www.umich.edu/~ece/student_projects/female_friendship/philips2.html
The Poetry of Katherine Philips 6th April 1651 L'Amitie: To Mrs. M. Awbrey. Soule of my soule! my Joy, my crown, my friend!
A name which all the rest doth comprehend;
How happy are we now, whose sols are grown,
By an incomparable mixture, One:
Whose well acquainted minds are not as neare
As Love, or vows, or secrets can endeare.
I have no thought but what's to thee reveal'd,
Nor thou desire that is from me conceal'd.
Thy heart locks up my secrets richly set,
And my breast is thy private cabinet.
Thou shedst no teare but what but what my moisture lent, And if I sigh, it is thy breath is spent. United thus, what horrour can appeare Worthy our sorrow, anger, or our feare? Let the dull world alone to talk and fight And with their vast ambitions nature fright; Let them despise so innocent a flame, While Envy, pride, and faction play their game: But we by Love sublim'd so high shall rise, To pitty Kings, and Conquerours despise, Since we that sacred union have engrost

33. Isle Of Lesbos: Poetry Of Katherine Fowler Philip
Isle of Lesbos Poetry Historical katherine Fowler philips. katherine Fowlerphilips 16311664. katherine philips, a web page including selected works.
http://www.sappho.com/poetry/k_philip.html
Lesbian Poetry Historical Poetry Contemporary Poetry Resources for Poets and Readers Lesbian Poetry FAQ ... Historical : Katherine Fowler Philips
Katherine Fowler Philips
Katherine Fowler was born in London to a merchant class family. She was educated in boarding school and was married at age 16 to James Philip, a man of 54. Katherine's husband encouraged her literary interests and, in general, left her to her own affairs. She spent her time in London, while he stayed primarily on the coast of Wales. Katherine had two children, one who died in infancy. Katherine developed an organization of women that she called "The Society of Friendship," within which the members each assumed classical pseudonyms. Katherine was known as Orinda. In her poetry, she referred to herself and her friends using their pseudonyms. Her poetry was greatly admired in her time, and she was often referred to as "The Matchless Orinda." While most of her poetry was about her women lovers and was sensual in nature, the poems were viewed as expressions of platonic love, rather than sexual love. Because women did not possess the body parts to complete a heterosexual sex act, their love was seen as puresomething which Katherine remarks upon herself in her poem "To My Excellent Lucasia, On Our Friendship." Katherine's three most significant relationships were with Mary Awbrey (Rosania), Anne Owen (Lucasia), and Elizabeth Boyle (Celimena). She was involved with Lucasia for ten years and wrote over half her poems to this lover. Celimena was her most brief relationshipKatherine fell in love with her in 1664, the year of Katherine's death from smallpox. She was 33.

34. Orinda: The Literary Manuscripts Of Katherine Philips
4 Microfilm +Time period 16321664. Subject(s) philips, katherine, 1631-1664....... Marlborough, England Adam Matthew, 1995
http://www.lib.monash.edu.au/microform/5895.html
Library home Microform
Microform Collection
Title: Orinda: the literary manuscripts of Katherine Philips
Call Number:
MICROFILM 5895
Publisher:
Marlborough, England: Adam Matthew, [1995]
Description: 4 Microfilm +
Time period:
Subject(s):
Philips, Katherine, 1631-1664.
Notes: Orinda or Katherine Philips ranks as one of the most important early modern women writers and one who was to leave a substantial body of manuscript evidence behind. This project brings together some 27 manuscripts and three printed volumes from nine libraries in Britain and America and includes ten key sources for her poetry, three for her drama and both of her posthumous printed works. Themes of marriage, relationships, happiness and loss were to dominate her poetry and as a writer she is much revered by modern feminists for her praise of platonic friendship between women.
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35. English Literatuere To 1800
(London Printed for Peter Parker , 1676). back to catalogue. Item32. philips, katherine, 16311664. Poems by the most deservedly
http://www.lib.monash.edu.au/exhibitions/literature/xlit.html
Item 3. Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400.
The works of Geoffrey Chaucer : compared with the former editions, and many valuable MSS ... / by John Urry. (London : printed for Bernard Lintot, 1721)
Item 24. Suckling, John, 1609-1642.
Fragmenta aurea : a collection of all the incomparable peeces written by Sir John Suckling, and published by a friend to perpetuate his memory, printed by his owne copies . (London : Printed for Humphrey Moseley ..., 1648) Item 101. Blake, William, 1757-1827.
Songs of innocence and of experience
Item 9. Spenser, Edmund, 1552?-1599.
The Faerie queene / by Edmund Spenser ; with an exact collation of the two original editions published by himself at London in quarto, the former containing the first three books printed in 1590, and the latter the six books in 1596 ; to which are now added a new life of the author and also a glossary adorn'd with thiry-two copper-plates from the original drawings of the late W. Kent. (London : Printed for J. Brindley in New Bond-Street and S. Wright, Clerk of his Majesty's works, at Hampton-Court, 1751) 3 v.
Item 14. Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616.

36. Katherine Philips Edson
katherine philips Edson. One of the most energetic reformers in southernCalifornia during the early twentieth century was a remarkable
http://www.californiahistory.net/8_pages/reform_edson.htm
Katherine Philips Edson One of the most energetic reformers in southern California during the early twentieth century was a remarkable woman named Katherine Philips Edson. Edson began her fight for reform by demanding the passage of pure milk laws in Los Angeles. She had learned that babies were dying from drinking contaminated milk. In a letter to a friend, she wrote: "If the milk supply is in the hands of politicians, how can a woman who wants to do the right thing by her babies stay at home and keep quiet while they drink impure milk?" Edson pressured the city government to hire more inspectors to make sure that all milk sold in the city was pure. Edson later became a leader in the fight for woman suffrage. California in 1911 became the sixth state in the nation to grant women the right to vote. Women and children in the early twentieth century often worked ten or twelve hours a day in unhealthy and unsanitary conditions. Cannery workers, for instance, stood knee-deep in dirty water, breathed foul air, and received less than 15 cents an hour. Edson led the fight for the passage in 1913 of a minimum wage law for women and children. Governor Hiram Johnson appointed Edson to be the executive director of a state commission to enforce the new law. "California women suffrage parade," photographic post card, 1908. California Historical Society, Photography collection, FN-19319.

37. Index Of Authors - P
George Petty, William Sir Phelan, Jim Phelan, Tom Phelan, William Rev. Phibbs,Geoffrey Philibin, An philips, George philips, katherine philips, William
http://www.pgil-eirdata.org/html/pgil_datasets/authors/p/
Paisley, Ian
Pakenham, Christine

Pakenham, Edward

Pakenham, Elizabeth
...
Purser, Sarah
Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco): 2002

38. Arts/Literature/Authors/P/Philips,_Katherine
Arts / Literature / Authors / P / philips, katherine. To my ExcellentLucasia on our Friendship. katherine philips. Bartleby etext.
http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/P/Philips,_
Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Literature Authors P Philips, Katherine To my Excellent Lucasia on our Friendship. Katherine Philips.
Bartleby etext.
URL: http://www.bartleby.com/105/67.html
To my Lucasia in defence of declared Friendship. Katherine Philips.

Bartleby etext.
URL: http://www.bartleby.com/105/68.html

39. Katherine Philips, "Orinda To Lucasia Parting"
Text of a poem transcribed from the 1667 edition of the book Poems.Category Arts Literature Authors P philips, katherine......Orinda to Lucasia Parting October 1661 at London. By katherine philips( Orinda ). Edited by Jack Lynch. Note on the text The text
http://newark.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/lucasia.html
Orinda to Lucasia
Parting October 1661 at London
By Katherine Philips ("Orinda")
Edited by Jack Lynch
Note on the text: The text is transcribed from the 1667 edition of Philips's Poems ADIEU dear object of my Love's excess,
And with thee all my hopes of happiness,
With the same fervent and unchanged heart
Which did it's whole self once to thee impart,
(And which though fortune has so sorely bruis'd, [5]
Would suffer more, to be from this excus'd)
I to resign thy dear Converse submit,
Since I can neither keep, nor merit it.
Thou hast too long to me confined been,
Who ruine am without, passion within. [10] My mind is sunk below thy tenderness, And my condition does deserve it less; I'm so entangl'd and so lost a thing By all the shocks my daily sorrow bring, That would'st thou for thy old Orinda call [15] Thou hardly could'st unravel her at all. And should I thy clear fortunes interline With the incessant miseries of mine? No, no, I never lov'd at such a rate To tye thee to the rigours of my fate, [20] As from my obligations thou art free

40. Katherine Philips, "Friendship's Mystery"
Friendship's Mystery, To my dearest Lucasia. By katherine philips ( Orinda ).Edited by Jack Lynch. Note on the text The text is transcribed
http://newark.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/friendship.html
Friendship's Mystery,
To my dearest Lucasia
By Katherine Philips ("Orinda")
Edited by Jack Lynch
Note on the text: The text is transcribed from the 1667 edition of Philips's Poems
COME, my Lucasia , since we see
By wonder and by prodigy
For though we were design'd t'agree,
But our Election is as free
Our hearts are doubled by the loss,
We both diffuse, and both ingross:
We court our own Captivity
'Twere banishment to be set free,
Divided joyes are tedious found,
We are our selves but by rebound,
Our Hearts are mutual Victims laid,
Are Altars, Priests, and Off'rings made:

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