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         Wroth Mary:     more books (36)
  1. The Poems of Lady Mary Wroth by Lady Mary; Roberts, Josephine A. Wroth, 1983-01-01
  2. Pamphilia to Amphilanthus by Lady Mary Wroth, 2007
  3. The Sidney Family Romance: Mary Wroth, William Herbert, and the Early Modern Construction of Gender.: An article from: Renaissance Quarterly by Barbara K. Lewalski, 1996-09-22
  4. Changing the Subject: Mary Wroth and Figurations of Gender in Early Modern England.: An article from: Renaissance Quarterly by Bernadette Andrea, 1998-06-22
  5. The Early Modern Englishwoman: A Facsimile Library of Essential Works : Printed Writings, 1500-1640 : Mary Wroth (Early Modern Englishwoman Vol. 10)
  6. "Pamphilia to Amphilanthus" and "Salmacis and Hermaphroditus" by Lady Mary Wroth, Francis Beaumont, 2007
  7. Pamphilia to Amphilanthus by Lady Mary Wroth, 2007
  8. Lady Mary Wroth by Sue Taylor, 2005-11-25
  9. Love Sonnets of Lady Mary Wroth: A Critical Introduction by May Nelson Paulissen, 1983-04
  10. Lady Mary Wroth's Love's victory: The Penshurst manuscript by Mary Wroth, 1988
  11. Lady Mary Wroth's Urania (Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society : Literary and Historical Section ; v. 16, pt. 4) by Graham Parry, 1975
  12. Imaginary dialogue between Lady Elizabeth Carey and Lady Mary Wroth about the AAUW Fellow Ruth Hughey by Elizabeth Macintire, 1942
  13. THE POEMS OF LADY MARY WROTH. Ldited by Josephine A. Roberts by Mary. Wroth, 1996
  14. Petrarchan hagiography, gender, and subjectivity in Lady Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus by Gene C Fant, 1995

21. Sir Thomas WROTH/Mary RICH
Born ABT 1516 at Middlesex, England Married ABT 1540 at ? Died 9 OCT 1573 atEngland FatherRobert wroth MotherJane HAUTE Other Spouses Wife mary RICH
http://www.penjaccphoto.com/penleyged/fam00879.htm
These pages are sponsored entirely by:
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These Files are a result of 37 years of research into my family
and my wife's family trees.
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No part of these files may be used for commercial or profitable endeavors.
Husband: Sir Thomas WROTH Born: ABT 1516 at: Middlesex, England Married: ABT 1540 at: ? Died: 9 OCT 1573 at: England Father: Robert WROTH Mother: Jane HAUTE Other Spouses: Wife: Mary RICH Born: ABT 1524 at: Enfield, Middlesex, England Died: UNKNOWN at: Father: Richard RICH, SIR Mother: Elizabeth JENKES Other Spouses: CHILDREN Name: Mabel WROTH Born: ABT 1541 at: Middlesex, England Married: 10 JUN 1560 at: England Died: ABT 1597 at: England Spouses: Edward AUCHER HOME EMAIL SURNAMES
"How can a tangled web that appears so open be so impregnable as when we try to pierce it when we delve into genealogy!"
-Jerry A. Penley-

22. Gender Inn: Thematischer Suchindex
Translate this page Wurzel des Thesaurus Disziplin 115 Literaturwissenschaft AutorInnen und Werke710 wroth, mary 722 wroth, Pamphilia to Amphilanthus 723 wroth, Urania
http://db.genderinn.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/n/suchindex?w=1d&id=710

23. Gender Inn: Thematical Index
root of the thesaurus Discipline 115 Literary Criticism Authors and Their Works710 wroth, mary 722 wroth, Pamphilia to Amphilanthus 723 wroth, Urania
http://db.genderinn.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/n/suchindex?w=1e&id=710

24. Lady Mary Wroth, Biographical Introduction
Lady mary wroth. Biographical Introduction. Lady mary wroth was bornmary Sidney, on October 18, 1587, into a family connected to
http://www.usask.ca/english/phoenix/wrothbio.htm
Lady Mary Wroth
Biographical Introduction
Lady Mary Wroth was born Mary Sidney, on October 18, 1587, into a family connected to the royal courts of Elizabeth I and James I. She was the daughter of Sir Robert Sidney, later Earl of Leicester, and Lady Barbara Gamage. She is best known as the first English woman to write a full-length prose romance and a sonnet sequence, departing from traditional "women's" genres such as epitaph and translation. Her work helped to open up the English literary world to women, and allowed female writers to move beyond pious subject matter (Beilin 212). Like other girls of her day, Wroth did not attend school. But unlike most, she was taught at home by private tutors. Her mother was known as a patron of the arts, and in 1973 a previously unknown manuscript containing 66 poems written by her father was discovered. Wroth was also heavily influenced by her father's literary siblings. Her uncle, Sir Philip Sidney, was famous as a soldier, statesman and poet, and her aunt, Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke, both composed her own and revised and edited her brother's works. In contrast to Mary Wroth's literary family, her husband, Sir Robert Wroth, whom she married in 1604, had little to do with the arts. He preferred hunting and the life of the court. Husband and wife often clashed, though as much as Wroth grew to detest Sir Robert, his friendship with the King brought her into a close contact with Queen Anne (Roberts, Dictionary of Literary Biography 121: 297). She performed with the Queen in court masques early in James' reign, including Ben Jonson's Masque of Blackness, in January of 1605. Jonson even dedicated The Alchemist (1612) to Wroth.

25. Mary Wroth
Lady mary wroth (c.15861640). From Pamphilia to Amphilanthus (1621);see the entire sequence and a biography (University of Oregon).
http://www.sonnets.org/wroth.htm
Lady Mary Wroth (c.1586-1640)
From Pamphilia to Amphilanthus (1621); see the entire sequence and a biography (University of Oregon).
"When night's black mantle could most darkness prove"
When night's black mantle could most darkness prove,
And sleep (death's image) did my senses hire
From knowledge of myself, then thoughts did move
Swifter than those, most switness need require.
In sleep, a chariot drawn by wing'd Desire,
I saw, where sate bright Venus, Queen of love,
And at her feet her son, still adding fire
To burning hearts, which she did hold above.
But one heart flaming more than all the rest,
The goddess held, and put it to my breast.
Dear Son, now shoot, she said, this must we win.
He her obeyed, and martyr'd my poor heart.
I waking hop'd as dreams it would depart,
Yet since, O me, a lover have I been.
"Dear eyes how well (indeed) you do adorn"
Dear eyes how well (indeed) you do adorn
That blessed sphere, which gazing souls hold dear:

26. Lady Mary Wroth
Lady mary wroth. Main Sources Lady mary wroth by Pamphilia to Amphilanthus(1621) by Lady mary wroth. Come merry Spring delight us, For
http://www.compapp.dcu.ie/~humphrys/FamTree/Sidney/mary.wroth.html
Mark Humphrys Family History Sidney Contents - Lady Mary Wroth
Lady Mary Wroth
  • Main Sources:
    • "Lady Mary Wroth" by Josephine A. Roberts, in Seventeenth-Century British Poets , ed. M. Thomas Hester, Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol.121, Gale Research Inc, 1992.
  • Sources yet to be consulted: Lady Mary Wroth , the writer,
    born Lady Mary Sidney, 1586 or 1587, stayed often at her aunt's house Wilton,
    mar 1604 (her age 17 or 18) to Sir Robert Wroth and had issue:
  • child, died age c.2 yrs. it was an unhappy marriage, Sir Robert died 1614,
    as a widow she went to stay with and had an affair with her 1st cousin, William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke [the real love of her life] and had illegitimate issue, author of prose romance Urania , the first ever long fiction work by an English woman, pub 1621,
    the full title, The Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania (see title page ) refers to Susan de Vere , wife of her other 1st cousin (her lover's brother) the 1st Earl of Montgomery, future 4th Earl of Pembroke,
    the title is in the style of her uncle 's The countess of Pembroke's Arcadia her aunt , to whom the earlier book's title refers, had just died 1621, and she would hardly dedicate it to the current "countess of Pembroke" - since she was sleeping with her husband

27. Mary Wroth, Literature
mary wroth, Literature. Lady mary wroth By Arnie Sanders of GoucherCollege. Provides an overview of The Countess of Montgomery s
http://www.art-5.com/literature/authors/w/mary_wroth/
Mary Wroth, Literature
Art Literature Authors W ... Mary Wroth
Lady Mary Wroth

By Arnie Sanders of Goucher College. Provides an overview of "The Countess of Montgomery's Urania" and "Pamphilia to Amphialanthus," as well as a set of research questions. Bibliography: Lady Mary Wroth
Compiled by Ron Cooley of the University of Saskatchewan. Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
Renascence Editions text of the sonnet sequence from Lady Mary Wroth's "The Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania" (1621). Lady Mary Wroth (1587?-1651?)
"Biography, works, and web resources for the renowned lady poet." Webpages at luminarium.org.

28. Wauu.DE: Arts: Literature: Authors: W: Wroth, Mary
Categories Onlye. Links URL hinzufügen. Bibliography Lady mary WrothCompiled by Ron Cooley of the University of Saskatchewan. http
http://www.wauu.de/Arts/Literature/Authors/W/Wroth__Mary/
Home Arts Literature Authors ... W : Wroth, Mary Search DMOZ-Verzeichnis:
All Categories Categories Onlye
Links:
  • Bibliography: Lady Mary Wroth
    Compiled by Ron Cooley of the University of Saskatchewan.
    http://www.usask.ca/english/phoenix/wrothbib.htm
  • Lady Mary Wroth
    By Arnie Sanders of Goucher College. Provides an overview of "The Countess of Montgomery's Urania" and "Pamphilia to Amphialanthus," as well as a set of research questions.
    http://faculty.goucher.edu/eng211/lady_mary_wroth.htm
  • Lady Mary Wroth (1587?-1651?)
    "Biography, works, and web resources for the renowned lady poet." Webpages at luminarium.org.
    http://www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/wroth/
  • Norton Topics Online: Portrait of Lady Mary Wroth An image of Mary Wroth holding an archlute. http://www.wwnorton.com/nael/NTO/17thC/family/imwroth.htm
  • Pamphilia to Amphilanthus Renascence Editions text of the sonnet sequence from Lady Mary Wroth's "The Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania" (1621). http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~rbear/mary.html
© 1998- 2002 Ein Service von Wauu.de

29. WROTH, Lady Mary (Sidney) [~1586-~1653] – English Writer
wroth, Lady mary (Sidney) ~1586~1653 – English writer. IPL Online LiteraryCriticism Collection. The Works of Lady mary wroth; mary wroth;
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~dav4is/people/SIDN18.htm
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SIDNEY family ODT Contents: A niece of Sir Philip Sidney qv She was a noted patroness of the arts, with works dedicated to her by Ben Jonson, George Chapman, George Wither and William Gamage. Her first and only major work, a pastoral romance, was published in 1621, possibly as an attempt to support herself, since she had been left an impoverished widow. The Countesse of Montgomeries Urania is a long prose narrative with interpolated lyrics, written in imitation of her uncle's Arcadia University of Victoria
Selected Works
  • The Countess of Montgomery's Urania
  • Love's Victory (a play in 5 acts)
  • Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
    Bookmarks
  • 30. Mary Wroth Resources At Questia - The Online Library Of Books And
    mary wroth. Questia. The World s Largest Online Library. Questia SubscribersSay Primary Content. mary wroth. Welcome to Questia, the
    http://www.questia.com/popularSearches/mary_wroth.jsp

    31. Questia Online Library
    Wright, Frank Lloyd, Wright, Richard, Writing Across the Curriculum, wroth, mary.Wundt, Wilhelm, Wuthering Heights, Wycherley, William, Wyclif (Wycliffe), John.
    http://www.questia.com/popularSearches/popularSearchesW0.html
    Questia
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    32. [EMLS 3.1 (May 1997): 12.1-5] Review Of Lady Mary Wroth: Poems. A Modernized Edi
    RE Pritchard, ed. Lady mary wroth Poems. A Modernized Edition. StaffordshireKeele UP, 1996. Joyce Green MacDonald. Review of Lady mary wroth Poems.
    http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/03-1/rev_mac1.html
    R.E. Pritchard, ed. Lady Mary Wroth: Poems. A Modernized Edition. Staffordshire: Keele UP, 1996. xvii+222 pp. ISBN 1-85331-169-3 Cloth.
    Joyce Green MacDonald
    University of Kentucky
    joyce@ntr.net
    Joyce Green MacDonald. "Review of Lady Mary Wroth: Poems. A Modernized Edition. " Early Modern Literary Studies http://purl.oclc.org/emls/03-1/rev_mac1.html
  • That a modern-spelling edition of the poems of Lady Mary Wroth has appeared, 13 years after Josephine Roberts' first collected Poems , indicates the continuing vitality of contemporary teachers' interest in introducing Renaissance women writers to their undergraduates. That it should be Wroth whose poetry is the occasion of such a handsomely produced modernized edition perhaps suggests not only that women writers are finding steady places on 16th and 17th century curricula even outside specifically Renaissance classrooms, but thatin the wake of the 1995 appearance of Roberts' monumental edition of the first part of the Urania and of Naomi Miller's Changing the Subject (1990), the first book discussing Wroth's entire outputwe are in the middle of something like a Wroth boom.
  • 33. [EMLS 7.2 (September, 2001]: 12.1-4 Review Of Lady Mary Wroth, The Second Part O
    Lady mary wroth. The Second Part of the Countess of Montgomery s Urania. Ed.Josephine A. Roberts; completed by Suzanne Gossett and Janel Mueller.
    http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/07-2/andrearev.htm
    Lady Mary Wroth. The Second Part of the Countess of Montgomery's Urania . Ed. Josephine A. Roberts; completed by Suzanne Gossett and Janel Mueller. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 1999. ISBN 86698 253 1.
    Bernadette Andrea
    University of Texas at San Antonio
    bandrea@utsa.edu

    Andrea, Bernadette. "Review of Lady Mary Wroth, The Second Part of the Countess of Montgomery's Urania ." Early Modern Literary Studies http://purl.oclc.org/emls/07-2/andrearev.htm
  • Since the belated revival of Mary Wroth's early seventeenth century oeuvre during the late twentieth centurymarked especially by Roberts's pioneering effort in producing The First Part of the Countess of Montgomery's Urania (1995)students of Wroth have eagerly awaited the publication of the manuscript continuation of the Urania , which is housed as a unique holograph edition in the Newberry Library, Chicago. Roberts, whose brilliant career as a committed Wroth scholar was cut short by her untimely death in 1996, stood at the forefront of recovering a text obscured by Jacobean opposition to women's publication and subsequent scholarly inattention to publishing women in seventeenth-century England. Suzanne Gossett and Janel Mueller continued the work begun by Roberts to issue The Second Part of the Countess of Montgomery's Urania as an impressive scholarly edition sponsored by the Renaissance English Text Society in conjunction with the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. With this publication, Wroth's complete
  • 34. Notes For Lady Mary Wroth
    Lady mary wroth (15871651) Pamphilia to Amphilanthus. wroth was part of a literaryfamily. Her uncle was Sir Philip Sidney. She married Sir Robert wroth.
    http://www2.latech.edu/~bmagee/201/zwroth/wroth_notes.htm
    Lady Mary Wroth (1587-1651)
    Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
    Wroth was part of a literary family. Her uncle was Sir Philip Sidney. She married Sir Robert Wroth. After his death, she had a long-term affair with her cousin, William Herbert, having 2 children by him. (Does Jerry Springer know about this? She wrote a romance in prose, Urania , which also included a sonnet sequence, Pamphilia to Amphilanthus . These 103 sonnets are Elizabethan in tone, but they depart from tradition in that her series has the woman speaking to the man. Normally sonnets were written from the man to the woman. Pamphilia means "all-loving." She loves him wholeheartedly. We'll call her Pam for short.
    Amphilanthus means "loving 2." He runs around on her. We'll call him Phil.
    Sonnet 1
    2 "sleep, deathe's image" - Poets have a long tradition of comparing sleep to death. 2-3 "did my senses hire / From knowledge of myself" = sleep makes us lose consciousness. "one heart flaming more than all the rest
    The goddess held, and put it to my breast.
    "Dear son, now shut," said she: "thus must we win."

    35. Black Phoenix Alchemy Lab | Lady Mary Wroth
    - -. CAN PLEASING SIGHT MISFORTUNE EVER BRING Can pleasing sightmisfortune ever bring? Can firm desire a painful torment try?
    http://www.blackphoenixalchemylab.com/wroth.html
    L ADY M ARY W ROTH
    CAN PLEASING SIGHT MISFORTUNE EVER BRING
    ALL ALONE IN SILENCE UNSEEN, UNKNOWN
    WHEN NIGHT'S BLACK MANTLE COULD MOST DARKNESS PROVE
    CAN PLEASING SIGHT MISFORTUNE EVER BRING
    Can pleasing sight misfortune ever bring?
    Can firm desire a painful torment try?
    Can winning eyes prove to the heart a sting?
    Or can sweet lips in treason hidden lie?
    The Sun most pleasing blinds the strongest eye
    If too much look'd on, breaking the sight's string;
    Desires still crossed must unto mischief hye,
    And as despair, a luckless chance may fling. Eyes, having won, rejecting proves a sting Killing the bud before the tree doth spring; Sweet lips not loving do as poison prove: Desire, sight, Eyes, lips, seek, see, prove, and find You love may win, but curses if unkind; Then show you harm's dislike, and joy in Love. HERE ALL ALONE IN SILENCE Here all alone in silence might I mourn: But how can silence be where sorrows flow? Sighs with complaints have poorer pains out-worn; But broken hearts can only true grief show. Drops of my dearest blood shall let Love know Such tears for her I shed, yet still do burn

    36. SHAKSPER 1995: Re: Mary Wroth
    21 Sep 1995 184552 0400 (EDT) Subject Lady mary wroth s Love s victory Jan Stirmasks about finding a copy of the following AUTHOR wroth, mary, Lady, ca.
    http://www.shaksper.net/archives/1995/0708.html
    SHAKSPER 1995: Re: Mary Wroth
    From: Hardy M. Cook ( hmcook@boe00.minc.umd.edu
    Date:
    about SHAKSPER
    ... Hardy M. Cook , design by Eric Luhrs

    37. SHAKSPER 1997: Re: Mary Wroth's Urania
    people at the round earth s imagined corners) to search such catalogs is almost immediatelyto find, eg (from the RLIN database), AUTHOR wroth, mary, Lady, ca
    http://www.shaksper.net/archives/1997/1087.html
    SHAKSPER 1997: Re: Mary Wroth's Urania
    From: Hardy M. Cook ( editor@ws.bowiestate.edu
    Date:
    about SHAKSPER
    ... Hardy M. Cook , design by Eric Luhrs

    38. WWP Text List
    mary On Poetry, and Our Relish for the Beauties of Nature, 1798 $5.00 wroth, mary(Sidney) The Countess of Montgomeries Urania, 1621 $30.00 wroth, mary (Sidney
    http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/printlist_author.html
    WWP The Texts List of Print Texts
    List of printed texts available
    Below is a list of texts available from the Women Writers Project in print format. For various technical reasons (which we hope will be overcome soon), not all of the texts on this list are available online, and not all of the texts in Women Writers Online appear in this list, although the two collections do overlap. Printouts are on 8.5 x 11 paper, unbound, suitable for photocopying for classroom use. If you do make copies, or include the text in a course packet, we ask that you pay a $1.00 royalty per copy to the Women Writers Project.
    Aikin, Lucy
    Epistles on Women, 1810
    Anger, Jane
    Her Protection for Women, 1589
    Anonymous
    Advice to Virgins by a Lady, c. 1692
    Anonymous
    The Brideling, Sadling and Ryding..., 1595
    Anonymous
    England's Tears, a Poem, 1774
    Anonymous
    The Female Wits, 1704
    Anonymous
    Swetnam, the Woman-hater, 1620
    Astell, Mary
    "In Emulation of Cowley's Poem Call'd the Motto" and Other Poems, 1689?
    Aston, Katherine (Thimelby)
    "A Discourse of a Dreame", c. 1650
    Bannerman, Anne

    39. Women Writers In The English Renaissance
    Woolf, Virginia, A Room of One s Own (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich); wroth,mary, The Poems of Lady mary wroth, ed. Roberts (Louisiana);
    http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/syllabi/thickstun1999.html
    Margaret Thickstun
    English 425, Spring 1999
    Hamilton College
    mthickst@hamilton.edu
    Women Writers in the English Renaissance
    Required Texts
    • Ezell, Margaret, Writing Women's Literary History (Johns Hopkins)
    • Fitzmaurice, ed., Major Women Writers of Seventeenth-Century England (Michigan)
    • Hobby, Elaine, ed., Her Own Life: Autobiographical Writings by seventeenth-century Englishwomen (Routledge)
    • Lanier, Aemelia, The Poems of Aemilia Lanyer, ed. Woods (Oxford)
    • Spenser, Edmund, Edmund Spenser's Poetry, ed. McLean and Prescott (Norton)
    • Woolf, Virginia, A Room of One's Own (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich)
    • Wroth, Mary, The Poems of Lady Mary Wroth, ed. Roberts (Louisiana)
    • handouts from the NEH-Brown Women Writers Project
    Course Requirements and Procedures
    Participation: This class will be conducted as a seminar, which means that each person must not only have read the assigned material, but should have considered it carefully enough to raise questions, to point out interesting issues, to listen attentively, and to respond productively to others' observations. Absences should be reserved for true emergencies. To help facilitate preparedness, students will be expected to participate in a bulletin board forum, via our class website. I will suggest topics to address on a weekly basis, but I hope that we will not limit ourselves to my areas of interest. You should consider this discussion list a forum through which to raise questionsfrom the cosmic to the minuteas you are reading. If your question is factual, I will respond as promptly as possible.

    40. Poe's Poetry Corner - Classical Poetry - Lady Mary Wroth
    Lady mary wroth. (1586? 1652?). mary wroth Bio. Luminarium mary wroth.University of Cambridge mary wroth. As One Phoenix mary wroth.
    http://www.poeforward.com/poetrycorner/wroth/wroth.htm
    Lady Mary Wroth Mary Wroth Bio Luminarium: Mary Wroth University of Cambridge: Mary Wroth As One Phoenix: Mary Wroth ... Poetry Corner

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