The Lives Of Cleopatra And Octavia. (in Lcmarc) The lives of Cleopatra and Octavia. Title The lives of Cleopatra and Octavia.Author Fielding, Sarah, 17101768. Published New York, Garland Pub., 1974. http://lcmarc.dra.com/lcmarc/AEH-9431
Project Gutenberg Author Record Project Gutenberg Author record. Fielding, Sarah, 17101768. Titles.Governess, The; or, Little Female Academy. To the main listings page. http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/fielding__sarah__1710-176.html
Project Gutenberg Author Index Field, Ellen Robena. Field, Eugene, 18501895. Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754. Fielding,Sarah, 1710-1768. Filson, John, ca. 1747-1788. Fischer, Kuno, 1824-1907. http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/author_index_F.html
Sarah Fielding Sarah Fielding (17101768). online resources http//www.unm.edu/~woodward/Fielding.html.etext of The Governess, of Little Female Academy. http://www.let.leidenuniv.nl/English/staff/tieken/internet journal/sarah_fieldin
Extractions: Sarah Fielding (1710 online resources biography correspondence Sarah Fieldings language Barchas, Janine (1996), Sarah Fielding's dashing style and eighteenth-century print culture ELH Tieken-Boon van Ostade, Ingrid (1997), Negation in Sarah Fieldings letters. In: Udo Fries, Viviane Müller and Peter Schneider (eds.), From Ælfric to the New York Times. Studies in English corpus linguistics . Amsterdam/Atlanta, GA: Rodopi. 183195. Tieken-Boon van Ostade, Ingrid (2000), A little learning a dangerous thing? Learning and gender as expressed in Sarah Fieldings letters to James Harris. Language sciences 22, ed. by Susan Fitzmaurice, Rhetoric, language and literature: New perspectives on English in the eighteenth century
Sarah Fielding Sarah Fielding (17101768). online resources http//www.unm.edu/~woodward/Fielding.html.etext of The Governess, of Little Female Academy. http://www.let.leidenuniv.nl/hsl_shl/sarah_fielding.htm
Extractions: Up Sarah Fielding (1710 online resources biography correspondence Sarah Fieldings language Barchas, Janine (1996), Sarah Fielding's dashing style and eighteenth-century print culture ELH Tieken-Boon van Ostade, Ingrid (1997), Negation in Sarah Fieldings letters. In: Udo Fries, Viviane Müller and Peter Schneider (eds.), From Ælfric to the New York Times. Studies in English corpus linguistics . Amsterdam/Atlanta, GA: Rodopi. 183195. Tieken-Boon van Ostade, Ingrid (2000), A little learning a dangerous thing? Learning and gender as expressed in Sarah Fieldings letters to James Harris. Language sciences 22, ed. by Susan Fitzmaurice
Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > F Field, Edward Salisbury, 18781936; Field, Ellen Robena; Field, Eugene, 1850-1895;Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754. Fielding, Sarah, 1710-1768; Filson, John, Ca. http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au
LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Fielding, Sarah (17101768) Works by this author Governess, The; or, Little FemaleAcademy. Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. Admin Control Panel. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Fielding, Sarah
LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Governess, The; or, Little Female Academy by Fielding, Sarah (17101768).Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. Admin Control Panel. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeWork?work=2086
Sarah Fielding Sarah Fielding (17101768). Sarah Fielding Home Page, University of New Mexico. http://library.marist.edu/diglib/english/englishliterature/17th-18thc-authors/fi
University Press Of Kentucky Sarah Fielding (17101768) was the author of five novels, a children's story,an imaginative historical biography, a critical treatise on Clarissa, and a http://www.kentuckypress.com/viewbook.cfm?Group=11&ID=927
SABOR PETER (in MARION) CLEVELAND/Literature CALL NUMBER Fiction Book Available. CALLNUMBER Fiction Book Available. Fielding, Sarah, 17101768. http://js-catalog.cpl.org:60100/MARION?A=SABOR PETER
Untitled Sarah Fielding (17101768) Sarah was Henry's favorite sister, and livedwith him in his house in London following the death of his first wife. http://www.geocities.com/SunsetStrip/Mezzanine/8874/whoswho.html
Extractions: Friends and Other Strangers under construction Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (1547-1616): Spanish novelist and dramatist, author of the pastoral novel La Galatea (1585) and his masterpiece comic romance Don Quixote (1605 and 1615). Don Quixote , as Fielding tells us many times in the Preface to Joseph Andrews , was an immense influence on Fielding's prose style and his theories of the novel (aka "comic prose epic") Colley Cibber: Cibber, a famed playwright, actor, poet laureate, and theater manager, staged Fielding's first play, Love in Several Masques, in 1728 at his Drury Lane theater. After several years in a successful business relationship, Cibber and Fielding fell out, and eventually became bitter enemies. Cibber's overblown autobiography An Apology For The Life of Colley Cibber is a rich resource for information about early to mid-18th century English theater (plus a fair amount of juicy gossip). Sarah Fielding (1710-1768): Sarah was Henry's favorite sister, and lived with him in his house in London following the death of his first wife. She wrote the novels The Adventures of David Simple (1744) Familiar Letters Between the Principal Characters of David Simple The Governess: or, Little Female Academy
1700's 1759 Connecticut MAY DRUMMOND 17101772 (62) Scotland Sarah PIERREPONT EDWARDS1710-1758 (48) New Haven, Connecticut Sarah Fielding 1710-1768 (58) western http://www.geocities.com/Wellesley/Garden/3365/womwrite7.html
Bluestockings, Last Half Of The 18th Century Sarah Fielding (17101768) and Jane Collier (1710-1754/5),. Anna Seward (1747-1809)and Honora Sneyd,. Hanna More (1745-1833) and Eva Maria Violettti Garrick,. http://www.pinn.net/~sunshine/march99/blue.html
Extractions: The Bluestockings, a pejorative name for an informal woman's literary "club" that flourished in the second half of eighteenth century London, was named after Benjamin Stillingfleet's blue worsted stockings: he was too poor to afford the customary black silk stocking suitable for evening wear. Run by educated, intellectual, conservative women who tried to raise the moral, intellectual, and cultural standards of their time, this group of friends took turns hosting evening's entertainment where the literary figures of London took the spotlight. Women were often the majority of the guests, and the subject of the evening was often a learned women from the past or the present. Eventually similar ladies' groups who patterned themselves after the Bluestockings sprung up all over London then all over England. These upper-middle class women scorned female "accomplishments," card playing, and frivolous behavior, preferring instead a life of moral and intellectual rigor and philanthropic activities. These women did not pen great tracts railing about the failings of men. They did claim the right to act in the semi-public sphere and they urged women to become involved in philanthropic activities which benefited other women. Following their own advice, they created a number of philanthropic institutions whose aim was to help women, often poor widowed women with children, become economically self-sufficient.