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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. Reference/Biography/L
9 Leadbetter, Huddy@ 9 Leadon, Bernie@ 2 Leaf, Ryan@ 1 Leakey, Louis@ 9Leakey, mary@ 9 Lean, David@ 5 Leandros, Vicky@ 3 leapor, mary@ 1 Lear
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62. Eighteenth-century Poetry - Book Information
On The Death Of Dr Robert Levet mary Jones (17071778) An Epistle To Lady BowyerOf Desire After The Small Pox mary leapor Dorinda At Her Glass An Epistle To A
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/book.asp?ref=1405113197&site=1

63. Pastoral Tradition And The Female Talent
Finch, Countess of Winchelsea, mary, Lady Chudleigh, and particularly the womenof more humble and obscure origins, Sarah Dixon and mary leapor make worthy
http://www.miscellanies.org/ams/pas.html
Pastoral Tradition and the Female Talent Studies in Augustan Poetry by Ann Messenger LC 99-40174 ISBN 0-404-63525-3 Cloth $ 74.50
AMS Studies in the Eighteenth Century, No. 25 Table of Contents Pastoral Tradition and the Female Talent presents a valuable survey of this singular and influential genre in eighteenth-century literature, highlighting feminist themes and invoking the implicit feminist ideology to find a female voice. I know of no other full-length study that covers this important material in relation to pastoral poetry. "The author's painstaking scholarship is impressive, with forays into unexplored territory: the compelling, often poignant work of women writers here revealed provides a sobering glimpse into the real, as opposed to the fancied, life of the Enlightenment. Such insights into personal experience, family life, sexual politics, etc., offer the kind of revisionism so welcome to social historians and literary critics nowadays. As Messenger repeatedly stresses, women "wrote from the heart," and she finds ample proof of this prevailing thesis in many interesting citations and interpretations from an evidently voluminous reading. Also outstanding is the breadth of knowledge of secondary sources - from genre and historical studies to feminist theorists. "The treatment of individual writers - Aphra Behn, Anne Finch, Countess of Winchelsea, Mary, Lady Chudleigh, and particularly the women of more humble and obscure origins, Sarah Dixon and Mary Leapor - make worthy contributions to the study of an eighteenth-century feminist

64. Stuff & Nonsense
september 2002 link. In 1746, at the age of 24, mary leapor died of measles.It was a common sickness back then, particularly among the working classes.
http://home.online.no/~shughes/stuff/older/septemberstuff.html
Archives
Current (On a don't-really-need-to-know basis.) Little Boxes on the Hillside
27. september 2002 [link] What are the differences between all of these?
  • booth bower cabin cot cottage dwelling habitation home house hovel hut residence shanty
Apart from the obvious fact that they are different words. When does a hut become a cottage? Does size matter, or is it location, location, location? Can a shanty be a home? Are cabins houses too? Inquisitive minds want to know Double points to anyone who notices the intertext from T. S. Eliot.
22. september 2002 [link] Literary value
22. september 2002 [link] Ever wondered where the expression broth of a boy came from? Then the troll said to her daughter, "You take Butterball and slay him and boil some broth with him until I return, for I am going to church now, with invitations to a feast."
I should tell you that Butterball is the name of the hero in the story; he's a small, "stout and fat" boy, who likes to eat, and whose mother has nicknamed him. (You are forgiven for thinking him a cow or a sheep.) Butterball kills the troll's daughter as soon as her mother has left. Then he boils a broth with her, which the parents come home and enjoy, before they too are slain.

65. Essays: 2nd Year Course
Mon 02/12 Tue 03/12. the essay in verse. Alexander Pope An Essay on Man (epistleI) (1733) mary leapor An Essay on Woman (1751 posth.) Pope, Alexander.
http://www.unibas.ch/shine/essays.html
The Essay a short cultural history based on one genre (1600 - 1850)
2nd Year Course - Winter Term 2002/3
Mon. 10 - 12 Markus Marti
Tue. 10 - 12 Ladina Bezzola
British history (context of our course)

course programme

Course programme
date contents texts discussed / recommended links Mon 21/10
Tue 22/10 creating a new genre: Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne, selected essays (1580)
of Friendship Of the Vanitie of Words Of Smels and Odors Montaigne's Essays (transl. Florio) Malaspina links to Montaigne. Montaigne: biography sonnetz The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude (in English) Mon 28/10 Tue 29/10 first English essays: Bacon Francis Bacon, selected essays (1597 - 1625) Of Truth Of Friendship Of Gardens Bacon, Francis.

66. Essays: 2nd Year Course
1722. mary leapor born. 1723 1725. Alexander Pope s The works of Shakespear. CharlesEdward, the Young Pretender, escapes to France. . mary leapor dies. 1747.
http://www.unibas.ch/shine/brithist/bhist18.html
William III and Mary II
"Seventeenth Century"
"Restoration"
The "Toleration Act" establishes permanent freedom of worship. The "Bill of Rights" summarizes the liberties established by the Glorious Revolution and asserts that no Catholic may become sovereign. James II lands in Ireland. Defeat of Jacobite Forces at the Battle of Boyne (Ireland). James II flees to France. (Whigs = supporters of William III, a standing army, weakening of State Church and long parliaments) John Locke's Of Human Understanding Colley Cibber's first performance as actor Campaign against France. Over 150 people accused of witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts.

67. HLSS - School Of English & Drama: Staff
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/hlss/englishdrama/staff_r_d'monté.shtml
School of English and Drama
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

68. English Poetry Second Edition, Table Of Contents
+ Leakey, Caroline W. (Caroline Woolmer), 18271881. + leapor, mary,1722-1746. + Lear, Edward, 1812-1888. + Ledwidge, Francis, 1887-1917.
http://collections.chadwyck.co.uk/ep2/htxview?template=toc_hdft.htx&content=toc_

69. Authors
Larkin, Philip@ (25); Lawrence, DH@ (27); Lawrence, Thomas Edward@(14); leapor, mary@ (1); Lear, Edward@ (16); Lennox, Charlotte@ (1
http://www.allegiancewars.com/Regional/Europe/UnitedKingdom/SocietyandCulture/Pe

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70. 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

71. List Of Women Poets
Enlightening the World); mary leapor; Denise Levertov; Amy Lowell;Mina Loy; Marie de France; Charlotte Mew; Máire Mhac an tSaoi; EdnaSt
http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/list_of_women_poets
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  • Jayne Fenton Keane Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea

72. 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'

73. Rogers And McCarthy, _Meridian Anthology Of Early Women Writers_ - Anthologies P
ELIZABETH CARTER. Written Extempore on the SeaShore mary leapor. The SacrificeUpon Her Play Being Returned HANNAH MORE. The Riot CHARLOTTE SMITH.
http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/anthologies/rogersmc.htm
T HE MERIDIAN ANTHOLOGY OF EARLY WOMEN WRITERS
BRITISH LITERARY WOMEN FROM APHRA BEHN TO MARIA EDGEWORTH 1660-1800
Edited by Katharine M. Rogers and William McCarthy
New York and Ontario: Meridian/Penguin, 1987
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements Editorial Note Introduction
APHRA BEHN
An Epistle to the Reader . . . The Golden Age Oroonoko
ANNE FINCH, COUNTESS OF WINCHILSEA
The Introduction Fragment On Myself A Letter to Daphnis To Mr. F[inch] Ardelia's Answer to Ephelia Friendship Between Ardelia and Ephelia The Bird and the Arras The Circuit of Apollo Clarinda's Indifference . . . The Unequal Fetters The Young Rat . . . The Spleen To the Nightingale A Nocturnal Reverie An Apology for My Fearful Temper . . . A Supplication for . . . Heaven
MARY ASTELL
from A Serious Proposal from Part II of A Serious Proposal from Some Reflections on Marriage
DELARIVIERE MANLEY
The Wife's Resentment
LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU
Selected Letters The Lover The Reasons that Induced . . . Number 6 of The Nonsense
HESTER THRALE PIOZZI
from Thraliana The Three Warnings On the Death of Elizabeth Carter
ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD
Washing-Day Address to the Opposers of the Repeal
FRANCES BURNEY D'ARBLAY
Selections from Journals
MARY HAYS
from Letters and Essays from An Appeal to the Men
MARIA EDGEWORTH
An Essay on . . . Self-Justification

74. Alexa Web Search - Subjects > Arts > Literature > Authors > L
Fayette, MarieMadeleine (1); Léautaud, Paul (1); López Velarde,Ramón (2); leapor, mary (1); Lear, Edward (16); Ledwidge, Francis(1
http://www.alexa.com/browse/categories?catid=41228

75. Richard Greene: New & Used Books: Find The Lowest Price
The Works of mary leapor Compare Prices, The Works of mary leapor By RichardGreene, Ann Messenger Hardcover / Oxford University Press / December 2003
http://www.fetchbook.co.uk/search_Richard_Greene/searchBy_Author.html

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76. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
14. mary leapor the problem of personal identity.(Critical Essay) EighteenthCentury Theory and Interpretation; September 22, 2001; Greene, Richard
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru

77. Model ResearchReport
mary leapor A Study in Eighteenth Century Womens Poetry. Greene tells most of thishistory through mary leapor (17221746), a poet of the mid-century (vii).
http://www.u.arizona.edu/ic/mcbride/ws200/ws200ex.htm
Mohammad Vaziri (Group 9)
Womens Studies 200
Dr. McBride
17 October 1997 Women Writers in Early Modern England: Group #9 Source:
Greene, Richard. Mary Leapor: A Study in Eighteenth Century
Womens Poetry. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993. Summary: Richard Greene's recounting of the life and times of English women writers in the eighteenth century is an unpleasant depiction of the way women's writings had gone unnoticed and unrecognized in that time. Greene tells most of this history through Mary Leapor (1722-1746), a poet of the mid-century (vii). She was the daughter of a gardener and herself a domestic
servant. Most of her life was spent in Brackley, Northamptonshire (vii). Unfortunately, as was the case with many of the female writers of that time, her works were not published until after her death. Once they were published, her works were well received and she became a popular poet (vii).
Unlike most poets of that time, Leapor seldom addressed abstractions and wrote few odes. Instead, she wrote about her experiences as a working woman in a society which discriminated deeply on the basis of gender (vii). Since Leapor remained firmly outside the social elite of her time, she has very strong comparisons with some other female poets whose works are now
being accepted and revealed as eighteenth century English verse. Many of these poets describe poverty or the injustices suffered by women of that time. The exclusion from legitimate publication was one of these injustices. These are the very things that shaped Mary Leapors own poetry (vii). Her experiences as an outsider, a woman, gave way to many compelling poems.

78. The Mean Unletter Dfemale Bard Of Aberdeen! The Complexities Of
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.

79. NodeWorks - Arts: Literature: Authors
Leacock, Stephen@ (17); leapor, mary (1); Lear, Edward (16); Leary,Timothy@ (12); Lee, Harper@ (13); Lee, Sharon@ (1); Lee, Tanith@ (8
http://dir.nodeworks.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/L/
in entire NodeWorks Directory in Arts in Literature in ++ Authors in L in L'Engle, Madeleine in Lafferty, R. A. in Lagerkvist, Pär in Lagerlöf, Selma in Lahiri, Jhumpa in Lamb, Charles in Lamb, Wally in Lamming, George in Lamott, Anne in Langland, William in Lanier, Sidney in Lanyer, Aemilia in Larkin, Philip in Lasker-Schüler, Else in Laumer, Keith in Laurino, Maria in Lautréamont, Comte de in Lavant, Christine in Lawrence, D. H. in Le Fanu, Joseph Sheridan in Le Hunt, Bem in Leapor, Mary in Lear, Edward in Lehman, David in Lem, Stanislaw in Leonard, Elmore in Leopardi, Giacomo in Lernet-Holenia, Alexander

80. Robert Southey, Specimens Of The Later English Poets (1807)
Keate, George Kelly, Hugh Kenrick, William Killigrew, Anne Killigrew, Sir WilliamKing, William Langhorne, John Langley, Robert leapor, mary Lee, Nathaniel
http://www.english.ucsb.edu/faculty/rraley/research/anthologies/Southey-1807.htm
Robert Southey, Specimens of the Later English Poets, with preliminary notices . 3 Volumes (London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme, 1807) Information about the collection: The poets included in the 3 volumes are arranged in the table of contents both in chronological (from year of death) and in alphabetical order. The titles of the poems themselves are not listed in either place; in the alphabetical list both the volume and page number where the author's works might be found are given. From the Preface: These volumes are intended to accompany Mr. Ellis's well known Specimens of the Early English Poets. That series concludes with the reign of Charles II, this begins with that of James his successor: the two together will exhibit the rise, progress, decline and revival of our Poetry, and the fluctuations of our poetical taste, from the first growth of the English language to the present times. A slight difference has been made in arrangement; instead of sorting the Poets, according to the reigns in which they flourished, I have noticed each under the year of his death, where that could be ascertained, otherwise according to the date of his chief publication. It was desirable that the series should be brought down to the end of the last century, and this order determined whom it should include. In consequence of this arrangement a few names will be found, which are included in the work of Mr. Ellis. Many worthless versifyers are admitted among the English Poets, by the courtesy of criticism, which seems to conceive that charity towards the dead may cover the multitude of its offences against the libing. There were other reasons for including here the reprobate, as well as the elect.

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