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         Inchbald Mrs:     more detail
  1. The West Indian : a comedy, in five acts by Richard Cumberland 1732-1811 Inchbald Mrs. 1753-1821, 1809-12-31
  2. Every one has his fault; a comedy, in five acts; by Mrs. Inchbald 1753-1821, 1809-12-31
  3. The wedding day, a comedy, in two acts by Mrs. Inchbald 1753-1821, 1819-12-31
  4. King Henry IV: A historical play, in five acts (Inchbald, Mrs., 1753-1821. British theatre) by William Shakespeare, 1808
  5. The modern theatre; a collection of successful modern plays, as acted at the Theatres Royal, London Volume 1 by Mrs., 1753-1821 Inchbald, 2009-10-26
  6. Such things are; a play in five acts. As performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden by Mrs., 1753-1821 Inchbald, 2009-10-26
  7. Inchbald, Hawthorne and the Romantic Moral Romance: Little Histories and Neutral Territories (Literary Migrations) by Ben P. Robertson, 2009-12-12
  8. Elizabeth Inchbald: England's Principal Woman Dramatist and Independent Woman of Letters in 18th Century London - A Biographical Study by Roger Manvell, 1988-05-31
  9. I'll Tell You What: The Life of Elizabeth Inchbald by Annibel Jenkins, 2003-04-11

21. Theatre Collections-Playbills-, Bridgenorth New Theatre
play 2. MIDNIGHT HOUR, THE author Inchbald, Mrs., 17531821 actor(s) Gregory,Mr. Hope, Mr. Stanton, H., Miss Rowlands, Mrs.
http://library.kent.ac.uk/library/special/icons/playbills/bridgnorthnewtheatre.h
TEMPLEMAN LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF KENT AT CANTERBURY
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS : PLAYBILLS
New Theatre, Bridgnorth
Back to Playbills Index UKC/POS/BDG N : 0593974 Playbill advertising THE FALL OF ALGIERS and THE DUEL, with a variety of singing, at the New Theatre, Bridgnorth, 17 March 1825.
New Theatre, Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England
manager : Stanton, Charles, Mr. play 1 FALL OF ALGIERS AND FREEDOM TO THE SLAVES, THE
author : Walker, Charles Edward, Mr.
actor(s) : Fawcett, Mr.
ditto : Gordon, Mr.
ditto : Stanton, Miss
ditto : Stanton, H., Miss
scene painter : Stanton, Mr., Jun. play 2 DUEL, THE MY TWO NEPHEWS
author : Peake, Richard Brinsley, Mr., 1792-1847
actor(s) : Fawcett, Mr.
ditto : Giles, Mr.
ditto : Ward, Mrs. ditto : Hallam, Mrs. performance of comic and favourite songs singer : Hallam, Mr. singer : Maitland, Mr. UKC/POS/BDG N : 0593975 Playbill advertising THE TOUCHSTONE and CATHERINE AND PETRUCHIO, with a variety of singing, at the New Theatre, Bridgnorth, on the second Race Night, 1 July 1825.
New Theatre, Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England

22. AUSTEN-L Archives -- November 1998, Week 1 (#25)
OSF1.GMU.EDU Subject Elizabeth Inchbald (17531821) Comments cc a portrait painter,one Joseph Inchbald, a man 17 they become friendly with Mrs Siddons and
http://lists.mcgill.ca/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind9811a&L=austen-l&F=&S=&P=2245

23. AUSTEN-L Archives -- November 1998, Week 1
SMITH Re Duckworth Chap 5 Mrs. Elizabeth Inchbald (17531821) ElizabethInchbald (1753-1821) (156 lines) From Ellen Moody emoody@OSF1.GMU.EDU .
http://lists.mcgill.ca/scripts/wa.exe?A1=ind9811a&L=austen-l

24. Chapter Inchbald to Irving Of I By Biographical Dictionary Of English Lit
Inchbald to Irving. Inchbald, Mrs. Elizabeth (Simpson) (17531821).—Novelistand dramatist, daughter of a Suffolk farmer. In a
http://www.bibliomania.com/2/3/259/1252/22987/1.html
Inchbald to Irving Inchbald, Mrs. Elizabeth (Simpson) Mogul Tale Appearance is against Them Such Things Are, The Married Man, The Wedding Day , and two novels, A Simple Story (1791), and Nature and Art (1796), which have been frequently reprinted. She also made a collection of plays, The Modern Theatre , in 10 vols. Her life was remarkable for its simplicity and frugality, and a large part of her earnings was applied in the maintenance of a delicate sister. Though of a somewhat sentimental and romantic nature, she preserved an unblemished reputation. Ingelow, Jean Off the Skelligs Fated to be Free (1875), and Sarah de Berenger (1879). She also wrote excellent stories for children, Mopsa the Fairy, Stories told to Children , etc. Her poems show a considerable lyric gift. Innes, Cosmo Scotland in the Middle Ages (1860), and Sketches of Early Scottish History (1861). He also edited many historical MSS. for the Bannatyne and other antiquarian clubs. Much learning is displayed in his works. Innes, Thomas Critical Essay on the Ancient Inhabitants of the Northern Parts of Britain (1729), and

25. Index
by White, Gilbert, 17201793 Naturalist On The River Amazons, The, by Bates, HenryWalter, 1825-1892 Nature And Art, by Inchbald, Mrs., 1753-1821 Nature Faker
http://www.elbooks.sk/angdieloN.html
VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNÍH - ANGLICKÉ TITULY - Dielo - pís. N NREN, by Polly, Jean Armour
Nabob, The, by Daudet, Alphonse, 1840-1897

Nada, The Lily, by Haggard, H. Rider (Henry Rider), 1856-1925

Name Of The Dead, The, by Abbott, David Phelps, 1863-1934
...
Number "e", The, by Unknown

26. Reading And Discussion Series
Cowley (17431809), Elizabeth Inchbald (1753-1821) and Joanna Richardson, Sophia Lee,Mrs. Burgess, Frances Homcastle Hook, Elizabeth Inchbald, Elizabeth Kemble
http://www.juggernaut-theatre.org/readings.html
The Professional
Female Playwright The Symposium
Saturday, October 26, 2002 Featured Playwrights
Juggernaut Home Page

The First 100 Years: The Professional Female Playwright
PART II. [check back to this site for calendar updates] The 2002-03 will look more closely at the work of 5 English Women Playwrights Aphra Behn Susanna Centlivre Hannah Cowley Elizabeth Inchbald (1753-1821) and Joanna Baillie (1762-1851).) Four of these five playwrights were guaranteed productions every time they wrote a new play. The group as a whole was selected because they represent a variety of distinct voices and styles that show the development of the female playwright over the century. Please bear in mind that our featured playwrights are just a handful of the dozens of female playwrights writing professionally during the period. The list of professional female playwrights produced between 1660-1800 includes:
Katherine Phillips, Aphra Behn , Frances Boothby, Elizabeth Polwhele, Ariadne, Delariviere Manley, Mary Pix, Catherine Trotter, Jane Wiseman, Susanna Centlivre , Mary Davys, Eliza Haywood, Penelope Aubin, Elizabeth Cooper, Charlotte Clark, Mrs. Hopper, Letitia Pilkington, Catherine Clive, Philippina Burton, Dorothea Celisia, Jael Henrietta Pye, Lady Dorothea Dubois, Hannah More, Charlotte Lennox

27. First 100 Years
16691723), Hannah Cowley (1743-1809), Elizabeth Inchbald (1753-1821) and Joanna EventREADING DISCUSSION of THE DISCOVERY by Mrs. Frances Sheridan
http://www.juggernaut-theatre.org/first100years.html
The Professional
Female Playwright The Symposium
Saturday, October 26, 2002 The Readings
Featured Playwrights

Juggernaut Home Page
The First 100 Years: The Professional Female Playwright
In 1660 the English civil war came to an end. With the monarchy restored, in the person of the continentally cultured Charles II, the twenty-year ban on English theaters was lifted. So were the prohibitions that had historically barred women from producing, acting or writing for the English stage. This period, a fresh start for the newly re-opened theaters, became a heyday for women playwrights. Even so, the works and the women who created them have not come down to us. This imbalance in theater history has not only deprived the contemporary stage of great material, it has also likely contributed to the minority status of women working in theater today. The First 100 Years I. The Symposium ("THE FIRST 100 YEARS: THE PROFESSIONAL FEMALE PLAYWRIGHT") wa s part of New York State October Humanities Month, and took place on Saturday October 26, 2002, 3 p.m. at the American Airlines Theater (Times Square, Penthouse Lobby). Free and open to the public, this event featured scholars from all over who have done groundbreaking work on these women and their plays, interspersed with a some scenes presented by actors to illustrate and further the conversation. Panelists II.

28. GUARDIAN AND WARD ENGLAND FICTION (in MARION)
Inchbald, Mrs., 17531821. A simple story / Elizabeth Inchbald ; edited withan introduction by Pamela Clemit. London ; New York Penguin Books, 1996.
http://js-catalog.cpl.org:60100/MARION?S=GUARDIAN AND WARD ENGLAND FICTION

29. ADS-L Archives -- May 2004, Week 1 (#108)
2. Inchbald, Mrs., 17531821 Author Page A Simple Story (1791) 682KbA Simple Story. In Four Volumes. By Mrs. Inchbald 681Kb URL
http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0405A&L=ads-l&F=&S=&P=11864

30. Detailed Record
Biography • Named Person Inchbald, Mrs.; Elizabeth Inchbald Britain, English literature,Inchbald, Elizabeth, 17531821 - Biographies • Contents
http://www.worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/60584d4a613e7946a19afeb4da09e526.html
About WorldCat Help For Librarians Elizabeth Inchbald : England's principal woman dramatist and independent woman of letters in 18th century London : a biographical study
Roger Manvell
Find libraries with the item Enter a postal code, state, province or country
WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries.

31. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
Results per Page 10. 1. What will Mrs. Grundy say? Women and Comedy. .. Inchbald,Elizabeth , 17531821 actor, Joseph Inchbald.
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru

32. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
Mr and Mrs Bennet, whose property is due to pass to a male cousin 13. Inchbald,Elizabeth (17531821)(born Simpson) The Hutchinson Dictionary of
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_dictiona

33. The Forster Collection
editions of dramatic works, many of which were produced in the eighteenth andnineteenth centuries by people such as Mrs. Elizabeth Inchbald (17531821).
http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/dickens/pva/pva36.html
The Forster Collection
Added by Philip V. Allingham , Faculty of Education, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ontario
Source : http://www.nal.vam.ac.uk/nalforst.html
Introduction
John Forster (1812-1876) was a noted biographer, critic, essayist and historian, probably best remembered for his biography of his close friend, the novelist Charles Dickens (1812- 1870). In the course of his life Forster collected a vast library, mainly, but not exclusively, of books and pamphlets. He bequeathed this collection to his wife until her death; whereupon it would pass to what was then the South Kensington Museum, so that it could be used by the nation. She generously waived her rights in order to fulfill his wishes more quickly. The Forster Collection is one of two very large and distinct collections within the National Art Library, the other being the Dyce Collection. With justice the two collections are often referred to collectively as the Dyce and Forster Collections. The respective donors were close friends and the transfer of the Dyce Collection to the Museum was overseen by Forster, who was Alexander Dyce's executor. The Forster Collection is the larger of the two, containing over eighteen thousand books, and took nearly a year and a half to be delivered to the Museum in its entirety. The following is only a brief summary of its contents.
English literature : from Augustan to Victorian

34. Victorian And Edwardian Collection,I
Launceston Reference Library. Victorian and Edwardian Collection Popular FictionI-. Inchbald, Mrs., 1753-1821. A simple story. London Richard Bentley, 1852.
http://www.statelibrary.tas.gov.au/vande/ivande.htm
Author
Catalogue
A
B

C

D
...
XYZ
Launceston Reference Library
Victorian and Edwardian Collection
Popular Fiction
-I-
TOP

35. New Acquistions - EJ Pratt Library
PR3518 .S5 1908 Virginal Woolf Collection. A simple story. Mrs.Inchbald (17531821)/withan introduction by GL Strachey.London H. Frowde, 1908.
http://library.vicu.utoronto.ca/new_acqu/woolf/simplestory.htm
Woolf Collection - New Acquisitions Virginal Woolf Collection
A simple story Mrs.Inchbald (1753-1821)/with an introduction by G.L. Strachey.London : H. Frowde, 1908.

36. BRIEF HISTORY DURING THE SNOW ERA
The square was named after Lord s Kensington s father, William Edwardes. In 1816,Mrs. Elizabeth Inchbald (17531821), the novelist and dramatist, lived at No.
http://www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow/1859map/edwardes_square_a2.html
BRIEF HISTORY DURING THE SNOW ERA (1813-58) A speculative builder, Louis Changeur, built Edwardes Square in 1811-19 on 11 acres leased from the 2nd Lord Kensington. The square was named after Lord's Kensington's father, William Edwardes. In 1816, Mrs. Elizabeth Inchbald (1753-1821), the novelist and dramatist, lived at No. 4 Earls Terrace (the short unlabeled street on the map above "Edwards," south of Kensington Road). Her romances, A simple Story (1791) and the Nature and Art (1796), written well before the birth of John Snow, were early examples of passion novels. A central garden was laid out in 1820 and the gardener's lodge was built in Greek revival style. LOCATION IN 1859 REYNOLDS MAP (Quarter Mile Section - P 2) Source : Weinreb B, Hibbert C (eds). The London Encyclopaedia Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2000. Old Ordnance Survey Map of 1871 Click here to see more details 12 years later

37. AAC Database - Full View Of Document
System No, 1144934. Author, Inchbald, Elizabeth, 17531821. Title, Comedies / Mrs.Elizabeth Inchbald. Location, Imprint, Frankfurt am Main Minerva, 1969. Year,1969.
http://valeph.tau.ac.il/ALEPH/ENG/TAU/AAC/AAC/FIND-ACC/0780829
Sourasky Central Library
Full View of Document
The catalog has moved to a new system, which is accessible at:
This version of the catalog is no longer updated.
To mail a Bibliographic record to your E-mail account.
System No Author Inchbald, Elizabeth, 1753-1821 Title Comedies / Mrs. Elizabeth Inchbald Location
Imprint
Frankfurt am Main : Minerva, 1969
Year
Pages
77, 88, 78, 72, 66, ix, 33, v, 20 p. : ill., ports., facsims.
Note Reprint of works published 1787-1805
Contents
Language
ENG Title-a Such things are Title-a Every one has his fault Title-a Wives as they were and Maides as they are Title-a Lovers' vows Title-a To marry or not to marry Title-a The midnight hour Title-a The wedding day
Library use only - Click the icon to prepare the document for download to the

38. Postings On The Board
Fanny Price. The Oxford Companion has only this to say about. Inchbald, Mrs.Elizabeth (17531821), nee Simpson, was a novelist, dramatist, and actress.
http://www.ashton-dennis.org/post1099d.html
Laurie - [l_mease@hotmail.com] Politics in the novels Dear ladies and gents, I am currently doing research about the rise of women in politics for a paper for my AP Government class and have come across a lot of books on the topic of politics in the novels of Jane Austen.  You'll have to excuse my relative ignorance of British politics during Austen's era, but where exactly do these politics crop up?  I obviously don't mean every instance, but a few examples would be helpful.  I would use this topic for my paper but my teacher says that our topics must be on American government.  (And by the way, this teacher does at times wear tweed). Where have I been?  A better question would be where haven't I been.  Fall of the senior year is a very busy time.  Between work, school, and filling out college applications, I've been lucky to sleep, much less have time to get on the Internet.  I'm still trying to catch up on some of the recent posts on the board but I haven't gotten too far yet.  I also haven't started rereading Mansfield Park yet.  I'm still halfway through the third Harry Potter.  I would strongly recommend the series, especially if you know kids around 9 or 10 years old.  They're cute.  I'll try to get back here more often - that is, if things ever slow down.

39. Women Writers And Other Influences In Jane Austen's Time
were Ann Radcliffe (17641823), Fanny Burney (1752-1840), Elizabeth Inchbald (1753-1821),Maria Edgeworth That would be Mrs. Selwyn whom I would describe as an
http://www.ashton-dennis.org/mary2.html
Women Writers and Other Influences
In Jane Austen's Time
A Male Voices Web Page April 21,1998
Revised : September 1, 2001 In this second page, we turn to the literature of Jane Austen's time. The emphasis is on those things that Jane Austen might have read - on possible Jane-Austen influences. We will discover that Jane Austen's time seems to have been a golden age for women writers. We also attempt to understand how the male voices of our Lady's time thought about women. - What were their attitudes? Here is a link to the Table of Contents
For This Page
Fashion in the
Regency Period The time of Jane Austen was an historical period in which English fashion moved away, for a time, from the more restrictive undergarments. Such things were worn before and after this period, but less so during.
A painting by Rolina Sharples This was the age of the "Regency" or "Empire" fashion , the fashion inspired by Napoleon's Josephine , we are told. The outer garments were the flowing styles they associated with classical times. Isn't it nice to think of Jane Austen's generation made more comfortable in this way! And isn't it wonderful to contemplate those high-waisted styles that so set off and so compliment the angelic female form? There was one amazing defection from this fashion trend

40. English Honors Tutorial Restoration And 18th Century Women Writers
4/20 Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (16891762) Epistle from Mrs. Yonge to Her Entranceinto the World 1778 5/18 Elizabeth Inchbald (1753-1821) Biographical notes
http://www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudies/Syllabi/Literature/writers-18th-century
English Honors Tutorial Restoration and 18th Century Women Writers Instructor: Linda Garber [LGLG@LELAND.STANFORD.EDU] Stanford University Spring 1988 Poetry Handouts include poems and biographical notes on poets 4/13 Aphra Behn (1640-1689) "The Willing Mistress" "The Disappointment" "To the Fair Clarinda, Imagined More than Woman" Anne Killigrew (1660-1685) "Upon the Saying that My Verses Were Written by Another" Lady Mary Chudleigh (1656-1710) "To the Ladies" Anne Finch, Countess of Winchelsea (1661-1720) "The Introduction" "The Answer" [to Pope] "Melinda on an Insippid Beauty" [after Sappho] 4/20 Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762) "Epistle from Mrs. Yonge to Her Husband" "Verses Addressed to the Imitator of the First Satire of the Second Book of Horace" [to Pope] Charlotte Smith (1749-1806) "Pressed by the Moon, Mute Abitress of Tides" "Thirty-Eight" Black American Women Poets Beginnings of a concurrent tradition 4/20 Lucy Terry (1730-1821) "Bars Fight, August 28, 1746" Phyllis Wheatley (c.1753-1784) "To S.M. a Young African Painter, on Seeing His Work" "On Being Brought From Africa" Introduction to Literary Criticism and Library Research 4/27 Meet at circulation desk in Green Library; bring topics for senior thesis to discuss research strategies and practice using sources. Required Reading: Margaret Ezell, "Women Writers: The Female Perspective," in The Patriarch's Wife (Chapel Hill and London: The University of North Carolina Press, 1987), pp.101-126 (handout) Novels 5/4 Aphra Behn (1640-1689) Biographical notes, from Janet Todd, A Dictionary of British and American Women Writers, 1660-1800 (Totowa, N.J.: Rowman and Allenheld, 1985) (handout) Oroonoko, The Royal Slave [1688] 5/11 Fanny Burney D'Arblay (1752-1840) Biographical notes, from Todd (handout) Evelina, or the History of a Young Lady's Entrance into the World [1778] 5/18 Elizabeth Inchbald (1753-1821) Biographical notes, from Todd (handout) A Simple Story [1791] 5/25 Literary Criticism II Terry Castle, "Masquerade and Utopia II: Inchbald's 'A SimpleStory'" in Masquerade and Civilization (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1986), pp.290-330 (handout) short excerpt (by way of contrast) from Eva Figes, "The Gothic Alternative," in Sex and Subterfuge: Women Writers to 1850 (London and Basingstoke: The MacMillan Press, 1982), pp.60-61 (handout) 6/1 Mary Wollestonecraft (1759-1797) Biographical notes, from Todd (handout) A Vindication of the Rights of Women, excerpts [1792] (handout) The Wrongs of Woman, or Maria [unfinished novel, 1798]

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