Bell's The Arab War, Confidential Information for General Headquarters from Gertrude Bell
, Being Despatches Reprinted from the Secret Arab Bulletin was published.
Brothers, Barbara, and Julia Gergits, editors. Dictionary of Literary Biography 174. Gale Research, 1997.
Joanna Baillie
chose two of EOB
's poems for inclusion in her Collection of Poems, published in early 1823.
Baillie, Joanna, editor. A Collection of Poems, Chiefly Manuscript, and from Living Authors. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1823.
Lucy Aikin
's memoir of Benger (as published in one of its subject's works after her death) reprints three poems first published anonymously in the Monthly Magazine and the Athenæum.
CB
sent her first two unpublished stories to Walter Evans
, and they are now among his archive at the Metropolitan Museum
, New York. When she married Israel Citkowitz
he encouraged her writing of reviews.
Schoenberger, Nancy. Dangerous Muse, A Life of Caroline Blackwood. Phoenix, 2002.
133, 146-9
Her first, breakthrough essay in Encounter was the satirical Portrait of the Beatnik. After this she was able to place her work in many more widely-circulating journals both in Britain and the USA.
Schoenberger, Nancy. Dangerous Muse, A Life of Caroline Blackwood. Phoenix, 2002.
133, 146-9
Contemporary Authors: New Revision Series. Gale Research, 1981–2025, Numerous volumes.
During the Second World War, with Sydney Box
working for the Christian Herald, MB
sometimes helped him to fill his pages by contributing occasional verses of an uplifting tendency. These verses were printed like prose passages, running their long rhymed couplets on without line-breaks.
By 1877, AB
's writing also appeared in major periodicals including Fraser's Magazine, Macmillan's Magazine, and the Contemporary Review. In the latter, she published her diary from an 1885 voyage to Norway, on which Gladstone
was a companion.
Houghton, Walter E., and Jean Harris Slingerland, editors. The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals 1824-1900. University of Toronto Press, 1966–1989, 5 vols.
By the mid 1920s, VB
was an established journalist who published frequently in Time and Tide (she was their League of Nations
correspondent) as well as in the Yorkshire Post, Manchester Guardian, Foreign Affairs, and The Nation and Athenæum. By 1929, the peak of her journalistic career, she was also publishing in the Daily Mirror and Daily Telegraph. Most of her journalism addressed various aspects of women's lives: marriage, sexuality, and careers. The title of a piece which appeared in the Evening News on 4 May 1928, Semi-Detached Marriage, may possibly recall that of Margaret Legge
's novel A Semi-Detached Marriage, 1912.
AB
continued to write poetry after the unsuccessful publication of the collaborative volume, but with the exception of The Three Guides (which appeared in Fraser's Magazine in August 1848) does not seem to have published further.
Chitham, Edward. A Life of Anne Brontë. B. Blackwell, 1991.
172
Brontë, Anne, and Charles William Hatfield. The Complete Poems of Anne Brontë. Editor Shorter, Clement, Hodder and Stoughton, 1921.
xix
Seven of her previously unpublished poems were included by Charlotte in her edition, the year following Anne's death, of a volume containing Wuthering Heights and Agnes Grey. AB
's poetry was collected by Clement Shorter
in 1921.
Brontë, Anne, and Charles William Hatfield. The Complete Poems of Anne Brontë. Editor Shorter, Clement, Hodder and Stoughton, 1921.
ix
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
At this point Anne turned, with her sisters, to try her hand at fiction.
Between the first and second editions of CB
's Reliques of Irish Poetry, a Belfast journal called Bolg an Tsoháir; or, The Gaelic Magazine carried her translations of a collection of choice Irish songs.
qtd. in
Ashley, Leonard R. N. et al. “Introduction”. Reliques of Irish Poetry, Scholars’ Facsimiles and Reprints, 1970, p. v - xv.
More posthumous writing by RB
appeared: Letters from America (introduced by Henry James
), collecting articles mostly written for the Weekly Westminster Gazette, and the scholarly Webster and the Elizabethan Drama.
Parker, Peter, editor. A Reader’s Guide to Twentieth-Century Writers. Oxford University Press, 1996.
RB
's poem Porphyria, later retitled Porphyria's Lover, was published in the Monthly Repository under the initial Z.
Irvine, William, and Park Honan. The Book, the Ring, and the Poet: A Biography of Robert Browning. McGraw-Hill, 1974.
44-5
Browning, Robert. “Editorial Materials”. Robert Browning’s Poetry: Authoritative Texts, Criticism, edited by James F. Loucks, W. W. Norton, 1979, p. various pages.
JEC
published with her initials in Fraser's Magazine (partly through the good offices of Richard Garnett
) The True Omar Khayam, a scholarly article on the Persian poetry of Omar Khayyám
.
Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990.
Garnett, Richard et al. “Introduction”. The Ruba’yat of Omar Khayam, edited by Richard Garnett, translated by. Jessie Ellen Cadell, John Lane, 1899, p. v - xxx.