egXML (anchored) indicates whether the copy text shows the exact place of reference for the note. (target end) points to the end of the span to which the note is attached, if the note is not embedded in the text at that point. \S+ indicates the person, or group of people, to whom the element content is ascribed. \S+ indicates the person, or group of people, to whom a speech act or action is directed. \S+ provides an externally-defined means of identifying the entity (or entities) being named, using a coded value of some kind. (reference) provides an explicit means of locating a full definition or identity for the entity being named by means of one or more URIs. \S+ gives a minimum estimated value for the approximate measurement. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) gives a maximum estimated value for the approximate measurement. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) where the measurement summarizes more than one observation or a range, supplies the minimum value observed. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) where the measurement summarizes more than one observation or a range, supplies the maximum value observed. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) specifies the degree of statistical confidence (between zero and one) that a value falls within the range specified by @min and @max, or the proportion of observed values that fall within that range. names the unit used for the measurement Suggested values include: 1] cm (centimetres); 2] mm (millimetres); 3] in (inches); 4] line; 5] char (characters) cm (centimetres) mm (millimetres) in (inches) line lines of text char (characters) characters of text [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the length in the units specified (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) indicates the size of the object concerned using a project-specific vocabulary combining quantity and units in a single string of words. characterizes the precision of the values specified by the other attributes. high medium low unknown where the measurement summarizes more than one observation, specifies the applicability of this measurement. Sample values include: 1] all; 2] most; 3] range [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ points to a <handNote> element describing the hand considered responsible for the content of the element concerned. \S+ categorizes the cause of the damage, if it can be identified. Sample values include: 1] rubbing; 2] mildew; 3] smoke [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ provides a coded representation of the degree of damage, either as a number between 0 (undamaged) and 1 (very extensively damaged), or as one of the codes high, medium, low, or unknown. The <damage> element with the @degree attribute should only be used where the text may be read with some confidence; text supplied from other sources should be tagged as <supplied>. high medium low unknown assigns an arbitrary number to each stretch of damage regarded as forming part of the same physical phenomenon. indicates whether or not the element bearing this attribute should be considered to mark the end of an orthographic token in the same way as whitespace. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (canonical reference) specifies the destination of the pointer by supplying a canonical reference expressed using the scheme defined in a <refsDecl> element in the TEI header supplies the value of the date or time in a standard form, e.g. yyyy-mm-dd. specifies the earliest possible date for the event in standard form, e.g. yyyy-mm-dd. specifies the latest possible date for the event in standard form, e.g. yyyy-mm-dd. indicates the starting point of the period in standard form, e.g. yyyy-mm-dd. indicates the ending point of the period in standard form, e.g. yyyy-mm-dd. The @when attribute cannot be used with any other att.datable.w3c attributes. The @from and @notBefore attributes cannot be used together. The @to and @notAfter attributes cannot be used together. supplies pointers to one or more definitions of named periods of time (typically <category>s, <date>s or <event>s) within which the datable item is understood to have occurred. \S+ provides a pointer to a definition of, and/or general information about, (a) an information container (element or attribute) or (b) a value of an information container (element content or attribute value), by referencing an external taxonomy or ontology. If @valueDatcat is present in the immediate context, this attribute takes on role (a), while @valueDatcat performs role (b). \S+ provides a definition of, and/or general information about a value of an information container (element content or attribute value), by reference to an external taxonomy or ontology. Used especially where a contrast with @datcat is needed. \S+ provides a definition of, and/or general information about, information structure of an object referenced or modeled by the containing element, by reference to an external taxonomy or ontology. This attribute has the characteristics of the @datcat attribute, except that it addresses not its containing element, but an object that is being referenced or modeled by its containing element. \S+ indicates whether or not this element is selected by default when its parent is selected. true This element is selected if its parent is selected false This element can only be selected explicitly, unless it is the only one of its kind, in which case it is selected if its parent is selected. (declarations) identifies one or more declarable elements within the header, which are understood to apply to the element bearing this attribute and its content. \S+ specifies whether or not its parent element is fragmented in some way, typically by some other overlapping structure: for example a speech which is divided between two or more verse stanzas, a paragraph which is split across a page division, a verse line which is divided between two speakers. Y (yes) the element is fragmented in some (unspecified) respect N (no) the element is not fragmented, or no claim is made as to its completeness I (initial) this is the initial part of a fragmented element M (medial) this is a medial part of a fragmented element F (final) this is the final part of a fragmented element (organization) specifies how the content of the division is organized. composite no claim is made about the sequence in which the immediate contents of this division are to be processed, or their inter-relationships. uniform the immediate contents of this element are regarded as forming a logical unit, to be processed in sequence. indicates whether this division is a sample of the original source and if so, from which part. initial division lacks material present at end in source. medial division lacks material at start and end. final division lacks material at start. unknown position of sampled material within original unknown. complete division is not a sample. describes the status of a document either currently or, when associated with a dated element, at the time indicated. Sample values include: 1] approved; 2] candidate; 3] cleared; 4] deprecated; 5] draft; 6] embargoed; 7] expired; 8] frozen; 9] galley; 10] proposed; 11] published; 12] recommendation; 13] submitted; 14] unfinished; 15] withdrawn [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (duration) indicates the length of this element in time. (certainty) signifies the degree of certainty associated with the intervention or interpretation. high medium low unknown (responsible party) indicates the agency responsible for the intervention or interpretation, for example an editor or transcriber. \S+ indicates the nature of the evidence supporting the reliability or accuracy of the intervention or interpretation. Suggested values include: 1] internal; 2] external; 3] conjecture internal there is internal evidence to support the intervention. external there is external evidence to support the intervention. conjecture the intervention or interpretation has been made by the editor, cataloguer, or scholar on the basis of their expertise. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates whether this is an instant revision or not. unknown inapplicable (rendition) indicates how the element in question was rendered or presented in the source text. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ contains an expression in some formal style definition language which defines the rendering or presentation used for this element in the source text points to a description of the rendering or presentation used for this element in the source text. \S+ specifies the source from which some aspect of this element is drawn. \S+ When used on a schema description element (like ), the @source attribute should have only 1 value. (This one has .) (identifier) provides a unique identifier for the element bearing the attribute. (number) gives a number (or other label) for an element, which is not necessarily unique within the document. (language) indicates the language of the element content using a tag generated according to BCP 47. provides a base URI reference with which applications can resolve relative URI references into absolute URI references. \S+ signals an intention about how white space should be managed by applications. default signals that the application's default white-space processing modes are acceptable preserve indicates the intent that applications preserve all white space gives a name or other identifier for the scribe believed to be responsible for this hand. points to a full description of the scribe concerned, typically supplied by a <person> element elsewhere in the description. \S+ characterizes the particular script or writing style used by this hand, for example secretary, copperplate, Chancery, Italian, etc. points to a full description of the script or writing style used by this hand, typically supplied by a <scriptNote> element elsewhere in the description. \S+ describes the tint or type of ink, e.g. brown, or other writing medium, e.g. pencil [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies how widely this hand is used in the manuscript. sole only this hand is used throughout the manuscript major this hand is used through most of the manuscript minor this hand is used occasionally in the manuscript (MIME media type) specifies the applicable multimedia internet mail extension (MIME) media type [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ Where the media are displayed, indicates the display width [\-+]?\d+(\.\d+)?(%|cm|mm|in|pt|pc|px|em|ex|ch|rem|vw|vh|vmin|vmax) Where the media are displayed, indicates the display height [\-+]?\d+(\.\d+)?(%|cm|mm|in|pt|pc|px|em|ex|ch|rem|vw|vh|vmin|vmax) Where the media are displayed, indicates a scale factor to be applied when generating the desired display size (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) (uniform resource locator) specifies the URL from which the media concerned may be obtained. \S+ indicates what kind of phenomenon is being noted in the passage. Sample values include: 1] image; 2] character; 3] theme; 4] allusion [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (subtype) provides a sub-categorization of the phenomenon is being noted in the passage, if needed [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (instances) points to instances of the analysis or interpretation represented by the current element. \S+ (unit) indicates the units used for the measurement, usually using the standard symbol for the desired units. Suggested values include: 1] m (metre); 2] kg (kilogram); 3] s (second); 4] Hz (hertz); 5] Pa (pascal); 6] Ω (ohm); 7] L (litre); 8] t (tonne); 9] ha (hectare); 10] Å (ångström); 11] mL (millilitre); 12] cm (centimetre); 13] dB (decibel); 14] kbit (kilobit); 15] Kibit (kibibit); 16] kB (kilobyte); 17] KiB (kibibyte); 18] MB (megabyte); 19] MiB (mebibyte) m (metre) SI base unit of length kg (kilogram) SI base unit of mass s (second) SI base unit of time Hz (hertz) SI unit of frequency Pa (pascal) SI unit of pressure or stress Ω (ohm) SI unit of electric resistance L (litre) 1 dm³ t (tonne) 10³ kg ha (hectare) 1 hm² Å (ångström) 10⁻¹⁰ m mL (millilitre) cm (centimetre) dB (decibel) see remarks, below kbit (kilobit) 10³ or 1000 bits Kibit (kibibit) 2¹⁰ or 1024 bits kB (kilobyte) 10³ or 1000 bytes KiB (kibibyte) 2¹⁰ or 1024 bytes MB (megabyte) 10⁶ or 1 000 000 bytes MiB (mebibyte) 2²⁰ or 1 048 576 bytes [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ points to a unique identifier stored in the @xml:id of a <unitDef> element that defines a unit of measure. \S+ (quantity) specifies the number of the specified units that comprise the measurement (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) (commodity) indicates the substance that is being measured [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ The @unit attribute may be unnecessary when @unitRef is present. may be used to specify further information about the entity referenced by this name in the form of a set of whitespace-separated values, for example the occupation of a person, or the status of a place. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (reference to the canonical name) provides a means of locating the canonical form (nym) of the names associated with the object named by the element bearing it. \S+ names the notation used for the content of the element. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies where this item is placed. Suggested values include: 1] top; 2] bottom; 3] margin; 4] opposite; 5] overleaf; 6] above; 7] right; 8] below; 9] left; 10] end; 11] inline; 12] inspace top at the top of the page bottom at the foot of the page margin in the margin (left, right, or both) opposite on the opposite, i.e. facing, page overleaf on the other side of the leaf above above the line right to the right, e.g. to the right of a vertical line of text, or to the right of a figure below below the line left to the left, e.g. to the left of a vertical line of text, or to the left of a figure end at the end of e.g. chapter or volume. inline within the body of the text. inspace in a predefined space, for example left by an earlier scribe. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (subtype) provides a sub-categorization of the element, if needed [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ The element should not be categorized in detail with @subtype unless also categorized in general with @type specifies the language of the content to be found at the destination referenced by @target, using a language tag generated according to BCP 47. @targetLang should only be used on if @target is specified. specifies the destination of the reference by supplying one or more URI References \S+ (evaluate) specifies the intended meaning when the target of a pointer is itself a pointer. all if the element pointed to is itself a pointer, then the target of that pointer will be taken, and so on, until an element is found which is not a pointer. one if the element pointed to is itself a pointer, then its target (whether a pointer or not) is taken as the target of this pointer. none no further evaluation of targets is carried out beyond that needed to find the element specified in the pointer's target. optionally specifies the identifiers of the elements within which all elements indicated by the contents of this element lie. \S+ \S+ \S+ (target function) describes the function of each of the values of the @target attribute of the enclosed <link>, <join>, or <alt> tags. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (function) characterizes the function of the segment. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ supplies the sort key for this element in an index, list or group which contains it. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (edition) supplies a sigil or other arbitrary identifier for the source edition in which the associated feature (for example, a page, column, or line break) occurs at this point in the text. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (edition reference) provides a pointer to the source edition in which the associated feature (for example, a page, column, or line break) occurs at this point in the text. \S+ indicates the end of a span initiated by the element bearing this attribute. \S+ The element indicated by @spanTo () must follow the current element identifies the language used to describe the rendition. css Cascading Stylesheet Language xslfo Extensible Stylesheet Language Formatting Objects free Informal free text description other A user-defined rendition description language supplies a version number for the style language provided in @scheme. [\d]+[a-z]*[\d]*(\.[\d]+[a-z]*[\d]*){0,3} @schemeVersion can only be used if @scheme is specified. indicates the location within a temporal alignment at which this element begins. \S+ indicates the location within a temporal alignment at which this element ends. \S+ indicates the effect of the intervention, for example in the case of a deletion, strikeouts which include too much or too little text, or in the case of an addition, an insertion which duplicates some of the text already present. Sample values include: 1] duplicate; 2] duplicate-partial; 3] excessStart; 4] excessEnd; 5] shortStart; 6] shortEnd; 7] partial; 8] unremarkable [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ documents the presumed cause for the intervention. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (sequence) assigns a sequence number related to the order in which the encoded features carrying this attribute are believed to have occurred. identifies the unit of information conveyed by the element, e.g. columns, pages, volume, entry. Suggested values include: 1] volume (volume); 2] issue; 3] page (page); 4] line; 5] chapter (chapter); 6] part; 7] column; 8] entry volume (volume) the element contains a volume number. issue the element contains an issue number, or volume and issue numbers. page (page) the element contains a page number or page range. line the element contains a line number or line range. chapter (chapter) the element contains a chapter indication (number and/or title) part the element identifies a part of a book or collection. column the element identifies a column. entry the element identifies an entry number or label in a list of entries. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the starting point of the range of units indicated by the @unit attribute. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the end-point of the range of units indicated by the @unit attribute. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ A @formula is provided to describe a mathematical calculation such as a conversion between measurement systems. indicates one or more locations by pointing to a <place> element or other canonical description. \S+ indicates whether the name component is given in full, as an abbreviation or simply as an initial. yes (yes) the name component is spelled out in full. abb (abbreviated) the name component is given in an abbreviated form. init (initial letter) the name component is indicated only by one initial. (sort) specifies the sort order of the name component in relation to others within the name. indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (duration) indicates the length of this element in time. [0-9.,DHMPRSTWYZ/:+\-]+ provides a conventional name for the kind of section changing at this milestone. Suggested values include: 1] page; 2] column; 3] line; 4] book; 5] poem; 6] canto; 7] speaker; 8] stanza; 9] act; 10] scene; 11] section; 12] absent; 13] unnumbered page physical page breaks (synonymous with the <pb> element). column column breaks. line line breaks (synonymous with the <lb> element). book any units termed book, liber, etc. poem individual poems in a collection. canto cantos or other major sections of a poem. speaker changes of speaker or narrator. stanza stanzas within a poem, book, or canto. act acts within a play. scene scenes within a play or act. section sections of any kind. absent passages not present in the reference edition. unnumbered passages present in the text, but not to be included as part of the reference. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (paragraph) marks paragraphs in prose. [3.1. Paragraphs 7.2.5. Speech Contents] Abstract model violation: Paragraphs may not occur inside other paragraphs or ab elements. Abstract model violation: Lines may not contain higher-level structural elements such as div, p, or ab, unless p is a child of figure or note, or is a descendant of floatingText. (foreign) identifies a word or phrase as belonging to some language other than that of the surrounding text. [3.3.2.1. Foreign Words or Expressions] (emphasized) marks words or phrases which are stressed or emphasized for linguistic or rhetorical effect. [3.3.2.2. Emphatic Words and Phrases 3.3.2. Emphasis, Foreign Words, and Unusual Language] (highlighted) marks a word or phrase as graphically distinct from the surrounding text, for reasons concerning which no claim is made. [3.3.2.2. Emphatic Words and Phrases 3.3.2. Emphasis, Foreign Words, and Unusual Language] identifies any word or phrase which is regarded as linguistically distinct, for example as archaic, technical, dialectal, non-preferred, etc., or as forming part of a sublanguage. [3.3.2.3. Other Linguistically Distinct Material] specifies the sublanguage or register to which the word or phrase is being assigned [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies how the phrase is distinct diachronically specifies how the phrase is distinct diatopically specifies how the phrase is distinct diastratically (speech or thought) indicates passages thought or spoken aloud, whether explicitly indicated in the source or not, whether directly or indirectly reported, whether by real people or fictional characters. [3.3.3. Quotation] may be used to indicate whether the quoted matter is regarded as having been vocalized or signed. unknown inapplicable may be used to indicate whether the quoted matter is regarded as direct or indirect speech. unknown inapplicable (quotation) contains a phrase or passage attributed by the narrator or author to some agency external to the text. [3.3.3. Quotation 4.3.1. Grouped Texts] (quoted) contains material which is distinguished from the surrounding text using quotation marks or a similar method, for any one of a variety of reasons including, but not limited to: direct speech or thought, technical terms or jargon, authorial distance, quotations from elsewhere, and passages that are mentioned but not used. [3.3.3. Quotation] (type) may be used to indicate whether the offset passage is spoken or thought, or to characterize it more finely. Suggested values include: 1] spoken (spoken); 2] thought (thought); 3] written (written); 4] soCalled (so called); 5] foreign (foreign); 6] distinct (distinct); 7] term; 8] emph (emph); 9] mentioned (mentioned) spoken (spoken) representation of speech thought (thought) representation of thought, e.g. internal monologue written (written) quotation from a written source soCalled (so called) authorial distance foreign (foreign) foreign words distinct (distinct) linguistically distinct term technical term emph (emph) rhetorically emphasized mentioned (mentioned) refering to itself, not its normal referent [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (cited quotation) contains a quotation from some other document, together with a bibliographic reference to its source. In a dictionary it may contain an example text with at least one occurrence of the word form, used in the sense being described, or a translation of the headword, or an example. [3.3.3. Quotation 4.3.1. Grouped Texts 9.3.5.1. Examples] marks words or phrases mentioned, not used. [3.3.3. Quotation] (so called) contains a word or phrase for which the author or narrator indicates a disclaiming of responsibility, for example by the use of scare quotes or italics. [3.3.3. Quotation] (description) contains a short description of the purpose, function, or use of its parent element, or when the parent is a documentation element, describes or defines the object being documented. [22.4.1. Description of Components] Information about a deprecation should only be present in a specification element that is being deprecated: that is, only an element that has a @validUntil attribute should have a child <desc type="deprecationInfo">. characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Suggested values include: 1] deprecationInfo (deprecation information) deprecationInfo (deprecation information) This element describes why or how its parent element is being deprecated, typically including recommendations for alternate encoding. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (gloss) identifies a phrase or word used to provide a gloss or definition for some other word or phrase. [3.4.1. Terms and Glosses 22.4.1. Description of Components] (term) contains a single-word, multi-word, or symbolic designation which is regarded as a technical term. [3.4.1. Terms and Glosses] (ruby container) contains a passage of base text along with its associated ruby gloss(es). [3.4.2. Ruby Annotations] (ruby base) contains the base text annotated by a ruby gloss. [3.4.2. Ruby Annotations] (ruby text) contains a ruby text, an annotation closely associated with a passage of the main text. [3.4.2. Ruby Annotations] supplies a pointer to the base being glossed by this ruby text. \S+ When target= is present, neither from= nor to= should be. points to the starting point of the span of text being glossed by this ruby text. \S+ When from= is present, the to= attribute of is required. points to the ending point of the span of text being glossed. \S+ When to= is present, the from= attribute of is required. (Latin for thus or so) contains text reproduced although apparently incorrect or inaccurate. [3.5.1. Apparent Errors] (correction) contains the correct form of a passage apparently erroneous in the copy text. [3.5.1. Apparent Errors] (choice) groups a number of alternative encodings for the same point in a text. [3.5. Simple Editorial Changes] (regularization) contains a reading which has been regularized or normalized in some sense. [3.5.2. Regularization and Normalization 12. Critical Apparatus] (original form) contains a reading which is marked as following the original, rather than being normalized or corrected. [3.5.2. Regularization and Normalization 12. Critical Apparatus] (gap) indicates a point where material has been omitted in a transcription, whether for editorial reasons described in the TEI header, as part of sampling practice, or because the material is illegible, invisible, or inaudible. [3.5.3. Additions, Deletions, and Omissions] (reason) gives the reason for omission Suggested values include: 1] cancelled (cancelled); 2] deleted (deleted); 3] editorial (editorial); 4] illegible (illegible); 5] inaudible (inaudible); 6] irrelevant (irrelevant); 7] sampling (sampling) cancelled (cancelled) deleted (deleted) editorial (editorial) for features omitted from transcription due to editorial policy illegible (illegible) inaudible (inaudible) irrelevant (irrelevant) sampling (sampling) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (agent) in the case of text omitted because of damage, categorizes the cause of the damage, if it can be identified. Sample values include: 1] rubbing (rubbing); 2] mildew (mildew); 3] smoke (smoke) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (deliberately marked omission) indicates a purposeful marking in the source document signalling that content has been omitted, and may also supply or describe the omitted content. [3.5.3. Additions, Deletions, and Omissions] (addition) contains letters, words, or phrases inserted in the source text by an author, scribe, or a previous annotator or corrector. [3.5.3. Additions, Deletions, and Omissions] (deletion) contains a letter, word, or passage deleted, marked as deleted, or otherwise indicated as superfluous or spurious in the copy text by an author, scribe, or a previous annotator or corrector. [3.5.3. Additions, Deletions, and Omissions] (unclear) contains a word, phrase, or passage which cannot be transcribed with certainty because it is illegible or inaudible in the source. [11.3.3.1. Damage, Illegibility, and Supplied Text 3.5.3. Additions, Deletions, and Omissions] indicates why the material is hard to transcribe. Suggested values include: 1] illegible (illegible); 2] inaudible (inaudible); 3] faded (faded); 4] background_noise (background noise); 5] eccentric_ductus (eccentric ductus) illegible (illegible) inaudible (inaudible) faded (faded) background_noise (background noise) eccentric_ductus (eccentric ductus) indicates illegibility due to an unusual, awkward, or incompetent execution of a glyph or glyphs [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ Where the difficulty in transcription arises from damage, categorizes the cause of the damage, if it can be identified. Sample values include: 1] rubbing; 2] mildew; 3] smoke [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (name, proper noun) contains a proper noun or noun phrase. [3.6.1. Referring Strings] @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. Suggested values include: 1] #Act_of_Union (The Act of Union | The unification of Ireland with Great Britain (England and Scotland), to form th); 2] #American_Revol (The American Revolutionary War | War in which Great Britain under King George III lost its North American colonie); 3] #ChasI_trial (Trial of Charles I | Charles I was tried before the Commissioners of the High Court of Justice, appoi); 4] #Commonwealth (Commonwealth of England | The Commonwealth refers to the period of time when England was governed as a rep); 5] #EngCivilWar (English Civil Wars | A series of conflicts between British Parliamentarian, supporters of Oliver Crom); 6] #French_Revol (The French Revolution | Period of conflict and crisis in France, at first characterized by peaceful effo); 7] #Glorious_Revol (Glorious Revolution of 1688 | Parliamentary alliance with the Dutch William of Orange to oust King James II fr); 8] #halleys_comet (Appearance of Halley's Comet | A short-period comet visible to the naked eye from earth, it appears every 74 to); 9] #HaydonHymanWed (Haydon-Hyman wedding); 10] #MexIndependence (Mexican War of Independence); 11] #Milan_Wars (Milan Wars | A series of conflicts, also known as the Wars in Lombardy, between the Republic ); 12] #Newport_Tr (Treaty of Newport | Ultimately unsuccessful treaty negotiations conducted in fall 1648 between Charl); 13] #Peterloo (The Peterloo Massacre | The British cavalry charged into a crowd of by some estimates 60,000 to 80,000, ); 14] #Protectorate (Commonwealth of England | The Protectorate refers to the period of time when England and Wales, Scotland a); 15] #Qu_Caroline_Affair (The Queen Caroline Affair | King George IV’s struggles with Parliament to divorce his estranged wife, Caroli); 16] #QuarterSessions_Berks (Berkshire Courts of Quarter Sessions | Until 1972, the U.K. courts of quarter sessions, commonly called the quarter ses); 17] #Regency (the Regency | The period between 1811 and 1820 when George, Prince of Wales, governed the king); 18] #regicide (the execution of King Charles I at Whitehall Palace, London); 19] #Restoration (the Restoration | The period following the restoration of Stuart King Charles II to the English th); 20] #riot1795 (Food Riots in 1795); 21] #ScottChristie_Duel (Duel of John Scott and Jonathan Christie | The duel which led to John Scott’s death, brought on by escalating conflicts bet); 22] #Waterloo (Battle of Waterloo | The battle fought at Waterloo, Belgium on Sunday, 18 June 1815 that decisively d); 23] #adder (common European adder | Venomous snake widespread throughout Eurasia and the UK. They are not particular); 24] #ant (ant | Small, mostly wingless social insect. Symbolic of hard work, prudence, and fores); 25] #Arabian_horse (Arabian horse | A breed known for its stamina and athleticism, as well as its fine bone structur); 26] #bee (bee | Social insect collecting nectar to produce wax and honey. Both honeybees and bum); 27] #blackbird (common blackbird | Medium-sized black member of the thrush family, with a yellow-orange bill and di); 28] #butterfly (butterfly | Mitford mentions seeing a most beautiful butterfly in the grounds near her home ); 29] #cat (cat | Now, as in Mitford's time, cats may be classed as domestic (kept as companion an); 30] #chicken (chicken | Domesticated birds kept as livestock and used for meat, eggs, and feathers. Desc); 31] #cow (cow | Large domesticated grazing animal raised as livestock for meat, milk, or hides. ); 32] #cricket (cricket | A dark-colored flightless cricket found in dry grasslands and heathlands. In Mit); 33] #cuckoo (common cuckoo | Migratory medium-sized blue-gray bird with long tail and wings that arrives in t); 34] #deer (deer | Medium-sized hoofed mammals. Scottish red and roe deer are native to the UK, and); 35] #deer_fallow (fallow deer | A medium-sized animal with light red-brown fur, paler rump and tail, and branchi); 36] #deer_red (red deer | Large deer with dark, red-brown fur, paler rump and tail, and branching antlers.); 37] #deer_roe (roe deer | The most common deer in the UK, a medium-sized animal with light red-brown fur, ); 38] #dog (dog | First animal species to be domesticated, before the developmment of farming, by ); 39] #donkey (donkey | Domestic animal descended from the African wild ass, mostly used as draught or p); 40] #dove (dove | During the 19th century, four types of doves and pigeons were found in Britain: ); 41] #dragonfly (dragonfly | Predatory flying insect common to wetlands in temperate climates such as the UK.); 42] #duck_wild (wild duck | Large dabbling duck with yellow-orange bill and dark blue and white wing tips, n); 43] #earwig (earwig | Dark brown crawling insect with back pincers and lighter brown legs and folded l); 44] #ferret (European ferret | Carnivorous mammal native to Eurasia, North Africa, and the UK. Shorter and stou); 45] #flea (flea | A type of insect that typically bites animals and humans.); 46] #glow_worm (glow-worm | A nocturnal beetle found throughout Europe and Asia, a member of the bioluminesc); 47] #goat (goat | Domestic grazing animals kept for their milk, meat, and skins. One of the earlie); 48] #golden_beetle (golden beetle | Despite the common name, likely the common red ladybird.); 49] #goose (goose | Large domestic waterfowl raised as poultry. Kept for their eggs, meat, and feath); 50] #grasshopper (grasshopper | Insect of the order of Orthoptera with large head, chewing mouthparts, and large); 51] #greyhound (greyhound | A sighthound originally bred for coursing game using their acute vision, agility); 52] #guineahen (domestic guineafowl | The helmeted guineafowl, native to subSaharan Africa, is also raised domesticall); 53] #hare (brown hare | Hares and jackrabbits are wild members of the rabbit family. Brown hares are sma); 54] #hornet (hornet | Large nesting wasp native to Eurasia and southern England, transported into Nort); 55] #horse (horse | Domesticated horse; different breeds are all considered of the same species. The); 56] #kingfisher (common kingfisher | Small blue and orange bird with a large head pointed beak; frequents riparian ar); 57] #lark (lark | In the UK, the lark family includes the woodlark, the skylark, and the shore lar); 58] #leech (leech | A type of blood-sucking worm that was often used for medical treatment in a proc); 59] #Long_tailed_wren (long-tailed wren | The Naga wren-babbler or long-tailed wren-babbler (Spelaeornis chocolatinus), a ); 60] #mongrel (mongrel dog | Term used in the UK for mixed or indeterminate breed dogs.); 61] #Newfoundland_dog (Newfoundland dog | Large, muscular working dog with a thick coat and webbed feet. Developed in east); 62] #nightingale (nightingale | A medium-sized migratory songbird, brown above and beige or whitish below, nativ); 63] #ox (oxen | Large, domesticated grazing animals, often castrated bullocks of larger cattle b); 64] #partridge (grey partridge | Medium-sized plump grey game bird, smaller than a pheasant and larger than a qua); 65] #peacock (peacock | Native to the Indian subcontinent, widely introduced as domestic birds elsewhere); 66] #pheasant (pheasant | Large long-tailed game bird, native to Asia and with populations elsewhere natur); 67] #pig (domestic pig | Large omnivorous domestic animal kept as livestock primarily for meat, but pig's); 68] #pony (pony | Small breeds of horse, often with stocky and heavy body types with round heads a); 69] #pug (pug | Companion animal bred in China and popularized in European courts from the 16th ); 70] #rabbit (rabbit | Small, grey-brown furry mammal that lives in groups in networks of underground b); 71] #rat_black (black rat | Medium-sized black to light brown rodent with a lighter underside and a scaly ta); 72] #rat_brown (brown rat | Large grey-brown rodent with a scaly tail, an omnivorous burrowing rat that pref); 73] #robin (robin redbreast | Small songbird, native to Europe, now considered a type of Old World flycatcher.); 74] #rock_dove (rock dove | Very common and widely-distributed dove, originally native to Eurasia and North ); 75] #rook (rook | Large member of the crow family, with a distinctive light-colored bill and feath); 76] #sheep (sheep | Domesticated grazing animals kept as livestock for their fleece and milk, and as); 77] #shore_lark (shore lark | Lark native to northern Eurasia and North America; also known as the horned lark); 78] #skylark (skylark | Eurasian songbird with gray-brown plumage above and whitish plumage beneath. Fam); 79] #snake (grass snake | Native to Eurasia, including the UK semi-aquatic non-venomous colubrid snake. Of); 80] #spaniel (spaniel | In Mitford's time, spaniels were classified as land or water types, and as sprin); 81] #squirrel (squirrel | Tree squirrel with tufted ears native to Europe, Asia, and the UK. North America); 82] #stock_dove (stock dove | Eurasian dove, pale grey above and below with a pinkish neck and iridescent gree); 83] #swallow (swallow); 84] #swan (mute swan | The mute swan, a large white waterbird with a distinctive orange-red and black k); 85] #terrier (terrier | In the 19th century, terriers were categorized as short- or long-legged, as well); 86] #trout (brown trout | The only trout native to the UK, their native range extends from Norway in the n); 87] #turkey (turkey | Large domestic fowl raised as poultry. Breeds descend from a subspecies from cen); 88] #turtle_dove (turtle dove | Small, pale brown and gray migratory member of the dove and pigeon family. Once ); 89] #wood_pigeon (woodpigeon | The most common member of the dove and pigeon family in Britain, a large grey pi); 90] #woodlark (woodlark | Eurasian lark with distinctive black and yellow facial markings. Prefers open cl); 91] #wren_crested (crested wren | Tiny olive-green songbird whose head has a distinctive yellow or orange stripe, ); 92] #acacia (acacia | Mitford likely refers to the false acacia or black locust, a thorny hardwood tre); 93] #aconite (winter aconite | Tuberous, low-growing yellow flowering plant native to Europe and naturalized in); 94] #alder (alder | Group of deciduous trees and shrubs with serrated leaves and woody catkins, gene); 95] #anemone (anemone | Mitford may refer to the wood anemone (Anemone nemorosa), an early-spring flower); 96] #apple_tree (apple tree | Deciduous tree producing showy pink and white flowers and then firm round pomes,); 97] #apricot_tree (apricot | Flowering fruit tree of the plum family, believed to be native to Asia, although); 98] #arum (arum | The so-called arum lily is a native European woodland plant, not a true lily. It); 99] #ash (ash | Deciduous tree with compound leaves, black leaf buds, inconspicuous purple-red f); 100] #asparagus (asparagus | Flowering perrenial plant whose young shoots are cultivated as a vegetable. Nati); 101] #auricula (auricula | Wild member of the primrose family, bearing in spring yellow flowerets above a r); 102] #azalea (azalea | Flowering shrub carrying abundantly showy red, pink, or white blooms in spring, ); 103] #bay (bay | Small evergreen tree with aromatic leaves, native to the Mediterranean and grown); 104] #bean (common bean | Also called the green bean, the common bean is a member of a large family of her); 105] #bean_broad (broad bean | Member of the large family of herbaceous flowering plants whose seeds or legumes); 106] #beech (beech | A genus of deciduous trees, native to temperate Europe, Asia and North America. ); 107] #beetroot (beetroot | Garden plant grown primarily for its edible roots, but also for its edible leave); 108] #birch_weep (weeping birch | Medium-sized birch tree with white, peeling bark, triangular leaves that turn ye); 109] #bluebell (bluebell | Bulbous flowering perennial plant, native to Atlantic western Europe and the UK,); 110] #bracken (fern | A genus of large, sturdy ferns, common throughout the world. It may be the most ); 111] #bramble (bramble | In the UK, generally refers to the common blackberry, a prickly shrub with archi); 112] #briar (briar | Historically used to refer to any thorny shrub, including the bramble, or common); 113] #broom (broom | Perennial flowering shrub, member of the legume or pea family, native to Europe ); 114] #buttercup (common buttercup | Perennial wildflower of medium height with small, shiny yellow flowers with prom); 115] #cabbage (cabbage | Cultivated variety of Brassica oleracea, grows as dense-leaved round heads. Like); 116] #Cabbage_red (red cabbage | Edible arden plant, related to the green cabbage whose leaves are dark red-purpl); 117] #campanula (campanula | General term used for a large genus of plants with white or blue bell-shaped flo); 118] #carnation (carnation | Cultivated variety of the clove or clove-pink. Scentless types are used for men'); 119] #celery (celery | Both wild celery and the cultivated variety are the same species. Wild varieties); 120] #cherry_bird (bird-cherry | Large deciduous shrub native to Eurasia and the UK, smaller than the wild cherry); 121] #cherry_wild (wild cherry | Deciduous hardwood fruit tree, native to Eurasia and the UK. Deeply veined oval ); 122] #China_Aster (China Aster | An annual flowering plant native to China and Korea, with single or double daisy); 123] #chrysanthemum (chrysanthemum | Semi-hardy fall-flowering perennial native to East Asia and to Northeastern Euro); 124] #cistus (gum cistus | Evergreen shrub bearing papery white flowers with a dark red spot at the base of); 125] #clematis (clematis | Mitford likely uses this term to refer to the native British species, C. vitalba); 126] #clove (clove | Spicy clove-scented member of the pink family, native to southern Europe and int); 127] #convolvulus (convolvulus | One of numerous species of vines with trumpet-shaped flowers.); 128] #corn (corn | Refers to agricultural plants whose seeds are used to produce flour, or to the s); 129] #cotton_grass (cottongrass | Sedge that develops fluffy white heads.); 130] #cowslip (cowslip | Mitford likely refers to Primula veris (also called cowslip, common cowslip, cow); 131] #cranesbill (crane's bill | Common name for several different species of perennial wild Geranium native to E); 132] #crocus (crocus | Early spring-flowering dwarf bulbous plant with blooms in purple, yellow, or whi); 133] #cucumber_plant (cucumber | Annual creeping vine grown for its round or cylindrical fruits. Native to India ); 134] #currant_bl (black currant | blackcurrant); 135] #currant_red (redcurrant | redcurrant); 136] #dahlia (dahlia | Group of tuberous flowering plants, brightly colored and highly variable in size); 137] #daisy (daisy | Perennial white daisy native to Europe and the UK, sometimes with pink-tinged pe); 138] #dogwood (dogwood | Woody flowering shrub which develops reddish stems in winter and carries cluster); 139] #elder (elder | Large leafy shrub that carries umbrels of small white flowers and then tiny purp); 140] #elm (elm | The so-called English elm is a deciduous tree with serrated leaves, a variety of); 141] #fern (fern | Large group of vascular plants that reproduce via spores rather than flowers or ); 142] #filbert (filbert | Deciduous nut-bearing tree in the birch family, native to southeastern Europe an); 143] #fir (fir | Evergreen coniferous trees found through much of North and Central America, Euro); 144] #flower (flower | Flowering plants, whether domesticated or wild.); 145] #forget_me_not (Forget-Me-Not | Blue-flowered perennial plant in the borage family, with long, narrow leaves, na); 146] #foxglove (foxglove | Flowering plant native to western Europe, the Mediterranean, and the UK, and nat); 147] #fuchsia (fuchsia | Small upright or spreading flowering shrub, with showy, pendulous bi-colored blo); 148] #fungus (fungus | The UK is home to more than 15,000 varieties of fungi and lichens, including yea); 149] #furze (furze | A spiny evergreen shrub with scented yellow blooms native to the UK and western ); 150] #gentianella (gentianella | UK varieties include the early gentian (Gentianella anglica) and Chiltern gentia); 151] #geranium (geranium | In Mitford's time, a group of wild and cultivated plants that encompassed both g); 152] #gooseberry (Gooseberry | Woody shrub bearing spiny stems, native to Eurasia and North Africa, grown for i); 153] #gorse (gorse | Low evergreen shrub with yellow blooms, a member of the pea family. Synonymous w); 154] #grass (grass | Large and economically important family of herbaceous plants. Includes cereal gr); 155] #greengage (greengage | A green variety of plum, thought to be a subspecies of Prunus domestica. The fir); 156] #Guelder_rose (Guelder rose | Flowering shrub with clusters of white flowers and red fruits, native to Europe,); 157] #harebell (harebell | Perennial flowering plant in the Campanula or bellflower family, native across a); 158] #hawthorn (common hawthorn | Flowering thorny shrub that develops a red, berry-like fruit that is actually a ); 159] #hay (hay | Mixed grasses or other herbaceous plants largely grown and harvested as animal f); 160] #hazel (hazel | Deciduous nut-bearing tree in the birch family, native to Europe and western Asi); 161] #hearts_ease (heart's-ease | Wild pansy native to the UK.); 162] #heath (heath | General term for low, flowering shrubs such as heath, heather, or ling, that cov); 163] #hepatica (hepatica | Low-growing flowering plant with fleshy leaves and blue, purple, or pink flowers); 164] #holly (holly | Large evergreen tree or shrub, underplanting forest oaks or other large trees, o); 165] #hollyhock (hollyhock | Biennial garden plant featuring many large single or double flowers in pink, red); 166] #honesty (honesty | Bushy flowering garden plant grown primarily for its decorative seed pods, rathe); 167] #honeysuckle (honeysuckle | Twining summer-flowering woody shrub, native to much of Europe, Turkey, and Nort); 168] #hop_bines (hop-bines | Twining plant using stiff, hairy stems (bines) to climb. Flowers of the female p); 169] #horse_chestnut (horse-chestnut | Large, deciduous fruit-bearing tree, native to a small area of southeastern Euro); 170] #ivy (ivy | Flowering evergreen vine native to Eurasia and North Africa, it has a climbing o); 171] #jasmine (jasmine | A climbing woody shrub with fragrant white flowers, native to Asia and naturaliz); 172] #laburnum (laburnum | Small flowering tree with showy pendulous yellow flower clusters that later deve); 173] #larkspur (larkspur | Usually refers to annual varieties of delphinium, formerly categorized seuparate); 174] #lavender (lavender | Medium-height evergreen flowering shrub with narrow leaves and pale purple flowe); 175] #lilac (lilac | Large flowering shurb native to the Balkan Peninsula, introduced as a garden pla); 176] #lily (lily | True lilies are flowering perennials that grow from bulbs, carrying large, trump); 177] #lily_red (red lily | A summer-blooming true lily native to southern Europe, introduced to cultivation); 178] #lily_tiger (tiger-lily | Likely the summer-blooming true lily native to Europe and naturalized elsewhere,); 179] #lily_valley (lily of the valley | Scented woodland flowering plant native to the cool temperate Northern Hemispher); 180] #lime_tree (lime tree | Group of large, deciduous trees called the lime tree in the UK, this family of t); 181] #maple (maple | Small broad-leafed tree with yellow-green flowers producing winged seeds, which ); 182] #marsh_marygold (marsh marigold | Medium-sized plant in the buttercup family that prefers marshes, wetlands, and w); 183] #mayflower (mayflower | Flowering thorny shrub that develops a red, berry-like fruit that is actually a ); 184] #melon_plant (melon | Mitford likely refers to the European or common cantalope, although both the mel); 185] #Michaelmas_daisy (Michaelmas daisy | The Michaelmas daisy or aster is a Eurasian perennial plant that blooms in late ); 186] #mignonette (garden mignonette | Tall, thin pale yellow flower spike growing from base leaves. Native to Europe, ); 187] #moss (moss | Nonvascular, low-growing plants that prefer damp soils, part of the large group ); 188] #MtDaisy (Mountain daisy | Low-growing evergreen perennial plant with showy white flowers. Native to south-); 189] #mushroom (field mushroom | pink bottom); 190] #myrtle (common myrtle | Evergreen flowering shrub bearing white flowers with many showy white stamens an); 191] #oak (common oak | Mitford likely refers to the common or English oak (Quercus robur), a variety of); 192] #onion (onion | ); 193] #orchid (orchid | Flower plant member of the large family of the Orchidaceae, which contains nearl); 194] #oxlip (oxlip | Spring-flowering member of the Primula family related to primroses (P. vulgaris)); 195] #passion_flower (passion flower | Flowering vines, most of which are native to neotropical zones in the Americas. ); 196] #pear (pear | The domestic pear tree is descended from the Eurasian wild pear, imported into B); 197] #pelargonium (pelargonium | A group of flowering plants From the time of Linnaeus, both geraniums and pelarg); 198] #peony (peony | Flowering herbaceous perennial shrub with large showy red, pink or white flowers); 199] #periwinkle (periwinkle | Spring-blooming trailing groundcover with dark green leaves and purple, blue, or); 200] #pine_Scots (Scots pine | Eurasian evergreen tree bearing long needles and cones, the only pine native to ); 201] #pink (pink | Used generally for any of various members of the Dianthus family, particularly f); 202] #plum_tree (plum tree | Tree of the family Rosaceae which bears flowers and sweet purple, red, or yellow); 203] #polyanthus (polyanthus | A cultivated variety of Primula, bearing flowers of many colors on raised umbrel); 204] #poplar_bl (black poplar | Medium-sized deciduous tree with heart-shaped leaves native to northwest Europe,); 205] #poppy (poppy | Annual red poppy flower with showy black stamens and hairy stems and buds, nativ); 206] #Portugal_laurel (Portugal laurel | Large flowering evergreen shrub in the cherry family, native to southwest Europe); 207] #potato (potato | ); 208] #primrose (primrose | One of Mitford’s favorite flowers, can bloom with creamy yellow flowers from lat); 209] #privet (privet | Shrub native to Eurasia and North Africa, as well as the UK, with glossy dark gr); 210] #ranunculus (ranunculus | Single-flowered red wildlflower with cup-shaped flowers, native to the Mediterra); 211] #rhododendron (rhododendron | Flowering shrub carrying abundantly showy round flower clusters in shades of mau); 212] #rose (rose | Large family of flowering shrubs that may appear as upright shrubs, woody climbe); 213] #rose_damask (damask rose | A tall shrub rose with curved thorns and prickled stems, bearing large double fl); 214] #rose_moss (moss rose | A sport of the hybridized centifolia rose (also called the cabbage rose), known ); 215] #rose_wild (wild rose | Mitford uses this term to refer to the dog rose, a climbing rose native to Europ); 216] #snowdrop (common snowdrop | Small white-flowered plant propagated by bulbs, native to Europe and the Middle ); 217] #stock (stock | Group of more than fifty types of tall, spike-flowered plants in the Brassica fa); 218] #strawberry (wild strawberry | A perennial plant in the Rose family that grows naturally throughout much of the); 219] #sweet_briar (sweet-briar | Species of rose native to Eurasia and also a common garden and naturalized hedge); 220] #sweet_pea (sweet pea | Spring-blooming vine with pink, purple, blue, or white flowers, native to Italy ); 221] #SweetWilliam (Sweet William | Member of the pink family whose clusters of flowers grow in an upward-facing umb); 222] #sycamore (sycamore | Large-leaved flowering tree in the soapberry and lychee family, native to Centra); 223] #syringa (syringa | Flowering shrub in the hydrangea family, native to southern Europe and cultivate); 224] #thorn (thorn | Mitford likely uses this term to refer to the common hawthorn.); 225] #thyme (thyme | Evergreen ground cover with aromatic leaves and pale purple flowers, native to W); 226] #tuberose (tuberose | A perennial plant that is frequently used in perfumes.); 227] #tulip (tulip | Large family of spring-blooming bulbs native to southern Europe and central Asia); 228] #turnip (turnip | Grown for its fleshy root, for consumption by both humans and livestock. Other s); 229] #vine (vine | Woody vining plants important as the source of grapes. The wine grape are native); 230] #violet (violet | One of Mitford’s favorite flowers (as it was of many of her contemporaries). Nat); 231] #VirginsBower (Virgin's Bower | Climbing woody shrub in the clematis family, with panicles of fragrant green-whi); 232] #wallflower (common wallflower | Flowering plant native to the Mediterranean basin and widely used as a garden pl); 233] #wheat (wheat | Grassy plant cultivated as a cereal grain, cultivated in the Middle East since a); 234] #willow (willow | Group of more than 400 species of tree, ranging in size from shrubs to large tre); 235] #wisteria (wisteria | Group of woody climbing vines bearing cascading purple flower plu0mes, native to); 236] #woodsorrel (wood sorrel | Mitford likely refers to common wood sorrel, a member of the oxalis family, nati); 237] #yew (yew | Small long-lived evergreen conifer native to parts of Eurasia, North Africa and ); 238] #Apollo_Belvedere (Apollo Belvedere Pythian Apollo 120-150 A.D. | A marble sculpture from classical antiquity, believed to have been created aroun); 239] #Brocas_monument_Bramley; 240] #BrokenFiddle_WA (The Broken Fiddle William Allan circa 1821 Benjamin Robert Haydon described this painting to Mitford in a letter from Edinburgh in November 1821. Haydon wrote: I find Sir William Allan only in the town, he is painting a very clever picture of The Broken Fiddle. A wooden-legged sailor has broken his fiddle on the head of a young scamp for some mischievous trick; an old woman, his granddam, is shaking her fist at the sailor, who is enjoying the pain of the crying boy. . . . It promises to be a very clever thing indeed. The background in colour and effect is the best thing he has done., as excerpted in Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk, Vol. 2, p. 74 . The painting was frequently mentioned by 1820s periodical writers as one of Allan’s best. In 1822, Blackwood’s called it a piece of quite a different cast from anything he had formerly attempted. It is a highly humorous composition, and the glow of colouring is such as perhaps Wilkie himself never surpassed. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 11 (1822): p. 439 .); 241] #ChrstEJrslm_Haydon (Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem | One of Haydon’s three enormous paintings of biblical scenes, together with The J); 242] #EnragedMus_WH (The Enraged Musician William Hogarth 30 November 1741 This engraving depicts a scene in which a violin player leans out his window, annoyed by the cacophony of unmusical sounds coming from the street outside.); 243] #Gala_Richmond_TCH (A Gala at Richmond Hofland Unknown, circa 1821 | Mitford gives this as the title of a Hofland painting exhibited at Somerset Hous); 244] #Jerusalem_Crucifixion_TCH (Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion Hofland | A Hofland painting on a New Testament subject exhibited at the British Instituti); 245] #JudgmntSolomon_Haydon (The Judgment of Solomon 1814 | The earliest of the three enormous biblical paintings for which Haydon was known); 246] #Lazarus_Haydon (The Resurrection of Lazarus The Raising of Lazarus 1821-1823 | Painting of enormous dimensions exhibited in 1823 at Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly); 247] #Richmond_TwickPk_TCH (Richmond from Twickenham Park circa 1821); 248] #Te_Deum (Te Deum Traditional Latin Christian hymn of praise and thanksgiving, the conventional title is a short form of the opening lyrics, Te Deum Laudamus.); 249] #Whereer_Handel (Where’er You Walk An aria sung by Jupiter from Handel’s 1743 opera Semele (HWV58).) #Act_of_Union (The Act of Union | The unification of Ireland with Great Britain (England and Scotland), to form th) #American_Revol (The American Revolutionary War | War in which Great Britain under King George III lost its North American colonie) #ChasI_trial (Trial of Charles I | Charles I was tried before the Commissioners of the High Court of Justice, appoi) #Commonwealth (Commonwealth of England | The Commonwealth refers to the period of time when England was governed as a rep) #EngCivilWar (English Civil Wars | A series of conflicts between British Parliamentarian, supporters of Oliver Crom) #French_Revol (The French Revolution | Period of conflict and crisis in France, at first characterized by peaceful effo) #Glorious_Revol (Glorious Revolution of 1688 | Parliamentary alliance with the Dutch William of Orange to oust King James II fr) #halleys_comet (Appearance of Halley's Comet | A short-period comet visible to the naked eye from earth, it appears every 74 to) #HaydonHymanWed (Haydon-Hyman wedding) #MexIndependence (Mexican War of Independence) #Milan_Wars (Milan Wars | A series of conflicts, also known as the Wars in Lombardy, between the Republic ) #Newport_Tr (Treaty of Newport | Ultimately unsuccessful treaty negotiations conducted in fall 1648 between Charl) #Peterloo (The Peterloo Massacre | The British cavalry charged into a crowd of by some estimates 60,000 to 80,000, ) #Protectorate (Commonwealth of England | The Protectorate refers to the period of time when England and Wales, Scotland a) #Qu_Caroline_Affair (The Queen Caroline Affair | King George IV’s struggles with Parliament to divorce his estranged wife, Caroli) #QuarterSessions_Berks (Berkshire Courts of Quarter Sessions | Until 1972, the U.K. courts of quarter sessions, commonly called the quarter ses) #Regency (the Regency | The period between 1811 and 1820 when George, Prince of Wales, governed the king) #regicide (the execution of King Charles I at Whitehall Palace, London) #Restoration (the Restoration | The period following the restoration of Stuart King Charles II to the English th) #riot1795 (Food Riots in 1795) #ScottChristie_Duel (Duel of John Scott and Jonathan Christie | The duel which led to John Scott’s death, brought on by escalating conflicts bet) #Waterloo (Battle of Waterloo | The battle fought at Waterloo, Belgium on Sunday, 18 June 1815 that decisively d) #adder (common European adder | Venomous snake widespread throughout Eurasia and the UK. They are not particular) #ant (ant | Small, mostly wingless social insect. Symbolic of hard work, prudence, and fores) #Arabian_horse (Arabian horse | A breed known for its stamina and athleticism, as well as its fine bone structur) #bee (bee | Social insect collecting nectar to produce wax and honey. Both honeybees and bum) #blackbird (common blackbird | Medium-sized black member of the thrush family, with a yellow-orange bill and di) #butterfly (butterfly | Mitford mentions seeing a most beautiful butterfly in the grounds near her home ) #cat (cat | Now, as in Mitford's time, cats may be classed as domestic (kept as companion an) #chicken (chicken | Domesticated birds kept as livestock and used for meat, eggs, and feathers. Desc) #cow (cow | Large domesticated grazing animal raised as livestock for meat, milk, or hides. ) #cricket (cricket | A dark-colored flightless cricket found in dry grasslands and heathlands. In Mit) #cuckoo (common cuckoo | Migratory medium-sized blue-gray bird with long tail and wings that arrives in t) #deer (deer | Medium-sized hoofed mammals. Scottish red and roe deer are native to the UK, and) #deer_fallow (fallow deer | A medium-sized animal with light red-brown fur, paler rump and tail, and branchi) #deer_red (red deer | Large deer with dark, red-brown fur, paler rump and tail, and branching antlers.) #deer_roe (roe deer | The most common deer in the UK, a medium-sized animal with light red-brown fur, ) #dog (dog | First animal species to be domesticated, before the developmment of farming, by ) #donkey (donkey | Domestic animal descended from the African wild ass, mostly used as draught or p) #dove (dove | During the 19th century, four types of doves and pigeons were found in Britain: ) #dragonfly (dragonfly | Predatory flying insect common to wetlands in temperate climates such as the UK.) #duck_wild (wild duck | Large dabbling duck with yellow-orange bill and dark blue and white wing tips, n) #earwig (earwig | Dark brown crawling insect with back pincers and lighter brown legs and folded l) #ferret (European ferret | Carnivorous mammal native to Eurasia, North Africa, and the UK. Shorter and stou) #flea (flea | A type of insect that typically bites animals and humans.) #glow_worm (glow-worm | A nocturnal beetle found throughout Europe and Asia, a member of the bioluminesc) #goat (goat | Domestic grazing animals kept for their milk, meat, and skins. One of the earlie) #golden_beetle (golden beetle | Despite the common name, likely the common red ladybird.) #goose (goose | Large domestic waterfowl raised as poultry. Kept for their eggs, meat, and feath) #grasshopper (grasshopper | Insect of the order of Orthoptera with large head, chewing mouthparts, and large) #greyhound (greyhound | A sighthound originally bred for coursing game using their acute vision, agility) #guineahen (domestic guineafowl | The helmeted guineafowl, native to subSaharan Africa, is also raised domesticall) #hare (brown hare | Hares and jackrabbits are wild members of the rabbit family. Brown hares are sma) #hornet (hornet | Large nesting wasp native to Eurasia and southern England, transported into Nort) #horse (horse | Domesticated horse; different breeds are all considered of the same species. The) #kingfisher (common kingfisher | Small blue and orange bird with a large head pointed beak; frequents riparian ar) #lark (lark | In the UK, the lark family includes the woodlark, the skylark, and the shore lar) #leech (leech | A type of blood-sucking worm that was often used for medical treatment in a proc) #Long_tailed_wren (long-tailed wren | The Naga wren-babbler or long-tailed wren-babbler (Spelaeornis chocolatinus), a ) #mongrel (mongrel dog | Term used in the UK for mixed or indeterminate breed dogs.) #Newfoundland_dog (Newfoundland dog | Large, muscular working dog with a thick coat and webbed feet. Developed in east) #nightingale (nightingale | A medium-sized migratory songbird, brown above and beige or whitish below, nativ) #ox (oxen | Large, domesticated grazing animals, often castrated bullocks of larger cattle b) #partridge (grey partridge | Medium-sized plump grey game bird, smaller than a pheasant and larger than a qua) #peacock (peacock | Native to the Indian subcontinent, widely introduced as domestic birds elsewhere) #pheasant (pheasant | Large long-tailed game bird, native to Asia and with populations elsewhere natur) #pig (domestic pig | Large omnivorous domestic animal kept as livestock primarily for meat, but pig's) #pony (pony | Small breeds of horse, often with stocky and heavy body types with round heads a) #pug (pug | Companion animal bred in China and popularized in European courts from the 16th ) #rabbit (rabbit | Small, grey-brown furry mammal that lives in groups in networks of underground b) #rat_black (black rat | Medium-sized black to light brown rodent with a lighter underside and a scaly ta) #rat_brown (brown rat | Large grey-brown rodent with a scaly tail, an omnivorous burrowing rat that pref) #robin (robin redbreast | Small songbird, native to Europe, now considered a type of Old World flycatcher.) #rock_dove (rock dove | Very common and widely-distributed dove, originally native to Eurasia and North ) #rook (rook | Large member of the crow family, with a distinctive light-colored bill and feath) #sheep (sheep | Domesticated grazing animals kept as livestock for their fleece and milk, and as) #shore_lark (shore lark | Lark native to northern Eurasia and North America; also known as the horned lark) #skylark (skylark | Eurasian songbird with gray-brown plumage above and whitish plumage beneath. Fam) #snake (grass snake | Native to Eurasia, including the UK semi-aquatic non-venomous colubrid snake. Of) #spaniel (spaniel | In Mitford's time, spaniels were classified as land or water types, and as sprin) #squirrel (squirrel | Tree squirrel with tufted ears native to Europe, Asia, and the UK. North America) #stock_dove (stock dove | Eurasian dove, pale grey above and below with a pinkish neck and iridescent gree) #swallow (swallow) #swan (mute swan | The mute swan, a large white waterbird with a distinctive orange-red and black k) #terrier (terrier | In the 19th century, terriers were categorized as short- or long-legged, as well) #trout (brown trout | The only trout native to the UK, their native range extends from Norway in the n) #turkey (turkey | Large domestic fowl raised as poultry. Breeds descend from a subspecies from cen) #turtle_dove (turtle dove | Small, pale brown and gray migratory member of the dove and pigeon family. Once ) #wood_pigeon (woodpigeon | The most common member of the dove and pigeon family in Britain, a large grey pi) #woodlark (woodlark | Eurasian lark with distinctive black and yellow facial markings. Prefers open cl) #wren_crested (crested wren | Tiny olive-green songbird whose head has a distinctive yellow or orange stripe, ) #acacia (acacia | Mitford likely refers to the false acacia or black locust, a thorny hardwood tre) #aconite (winter aconite | Tuberous, low-growing yellow flowering plant native to Europe and naturalized in) #alder (alder | Group of deciduous trees and shrubs with serrated leaves and woody catkins, gene) #anemone (anemone | Mitford may refer to the wood anemone (Anemone nemorosa), an early-spring flower) #apple_tree (apple tree | Deciduous tree producing showy pink and white flowers and then firm round pomes,) #apricot_tree (apricot | Flowering fruit tree of the plum family, believed to be native to Asia, although) #arum (arum | The so-called arum lily is a native European woodland plant, not a true lily. It) #ash (ash | Deciduous tree with compound leaves, black leaf buds, inconspicuous purple-red f) #asparagus (asparagus | Flowering perrenial plant whose young shoots are cultivated as a vegetable. Nati) #auricula (auricula | Wild member of the primrose family, bearing in spring yellow flowerets above a r) #azalea (azalea | Flowering shrub carrying abundantly showy red, pink, or white blooms in spring, ) #bay (bay | Small evergreen tree with aromatic leaves, native to the Mediterranean and grown) #bean (common bean | Also called the green bean, the common bean is a member of a large family of her) #bean_broad (broad bean | Member of the large family of herbaceous flowering plants whose seeds or legumes) #beech (beech | A genus of deciduous trees, native to temperate Europe, Asia and North America. ) #beetroot (beetroot | Garden plant grown primarily for its edible roots, but also for its edible leave) #birch_weep (weeping birch | Medium-sized birch tree with white, peeling bark, triangular leaves that turn ye) #bluebell (bluebell | Bulbous flowering perennial plant, native to Atlantic western Europe and the UK,) #bracken (fern | A genus of large, sturdy ferns, common throughout the world. It may be the most ) #bramble (bramble | In the UK, generally refers to the common blackberry, a prickly shrub with archi) #briar (briar | Historically used to refer to any thorny shrub, including the bramble, or common) #broom (broom | Perennial flowering shrub, member of the legume or pea family, native to Europe ) #buttercup (common buttercup | Perennial wildflower of medium height with small, shiny yellow flowers with prom) #cabbage (cabbage | Cultivated variety of Brassica oleracea, grows as dense-leaved round heads. Like) #Cabbage_red (red cabbage | Edible arden plant, related to the green cabbage whose leaves are dark red-purpl) #campanula (campanula | General term used for a large genus of plants with white or blue bell-shaped flo) #carnation (carnation | Cultivated variety of the clove or clove-pink. Scentless types are used for men') #celery (celery | Both wild celery and the cultivated variety are the same species. Wild varieties) #cherry_bird (bird-cherry | Large deciduous shrub native to Eurasia and the UK, smaller than the wild cherry) #cherry_wild (wild cherry | Deciduous hardwood fruit tree, native to Eurasia and the UK. Deeply veined oval ) #China_Aster (China Aster | An annual flowering plant native to China and Korea, with single or double daisy) #chrysanthemum (chrysanthemum | Semi-hardy fall-flowering perennial native to East Asia and to Northeastern Euro) #cistus (gum cistus | Evergreen shrub bearing papery white flowers with a dark red spot at the base of) #clematis (clematis | Mitford likely uses this term to refer to the native British species, C. vitalba) #clove (clove | Spicy clove-scented member of the pink family, native to southern Europe and int) #convolvulus (convolvulus | One of numerous species of vines with trumpet-shaped flowers.) #corn (corn | Refers to agricultural plants whose seeds are used to produce flour, or to the s) #cotton_grass (cottongrass | Sedge that develops fluffy white heads.) #cowslip (cowslip | Mitford likely refers to Primula veris (also called cowslip, common cowslip, cow) #cranesbill (crane's bill | Common name for several different species of perennial wild Geranium native to E) #crocus (crocus | Early spring-flowering dwarf bulbous plant with blooms in purple, yellow, or whi) #cucumber_plant (cucumber | Annual creeping vine grown for its round or cylindrical fruits. Native to India ) #currant_bl (black currant | blackcurrant) #currant_red (redcurrant | redcurrant) #dahlia (dahlia | Group of tuberous flowering plants, brightly colored and highly variable in size) #daisy (daisy | Perennial white daisy native to Europe and the UK, sometimes with pink-tinged pe) #dogwood (dogwood | Woody flowering shrub which develops reddish stems in winter and carries cluster) #elder (elder | Large leafy shrub that carries umbrels of small white flowers and then tiny purp) #elm (elm | The so-called English elm is a deciduous tree with serrated leaves, a variety of) #fern (fern | Large group of vascular plants that reproduce via spores rather than flowers or ) #filbert (filbert | Deciduous nut-bearing tree in the birch family, native to southeastern Europe an) #fir (fir | Evergreen coniferous trees found through much of North and Central America, Euro) #flower (flower | Flowering plants, whether domesticated or wild.) #forget_me_not (Forget-Me-Not | Blue-flowered perennial plant in the borage family, with long, narrow leaves, na) #foxglove (foxglove | Flowering plant native to western Europe, the Mediterranean, and the UK, and nat) #fuchsia (fuchsia | Small upright or spreading flowering shrub, with showy, pendulous bi-colored blo) #fungus (fungus | The UK is home to more than 15,000 varieties of fungi and lichens, including yea) #furze (furze | A spiny evergreen shrub with scented yellow blooms native to the UK and western ) #gentianella (gentianella | UK varieties include the early gentian (Gentianella anglica) and Chiltern gentia) #geranium (geranium | In Mitford's time, a group of wild and cultivated plants that encompassed both g) #gooseberry (Gooseberry | Woody shrub bearing spiny stems, native to Eurasia and North Africa, grown for i) #gorse (gorse | Low evergreen shrub with yellow blooms, a member of the pea family. Synonymous w) #grass (grass | Large and economically important family of herbaceous plants. Includes cereal gr) #greengage (greengage | A green variety of plum, thought to be a subspecies of Prunus domestica. The fir) #Guelder_rose (Guelder rose | Flowering shrub with clusters of white flowers and red fruits, native to Europe,) #harebell (harebell | Perennial flowering plant in the Campanula or bellflower family, native across a) #hawthorn (common hawthorn | Flowering thorny shrub that develops a red, berry-like fruit that is actually a ) #hay (hay | Mixed grasses or other herbaceous plants largely grown and harvested as animal f) #hazel (hazel | Deciduous nut-bearing tree in the birch family, native to Europe and western Asi) #hearts_ease (heart's-ease | Wild pansy native to the UK.) #heath (heath | General term for low, flowering shrubs such as heath, heather, or ling, that cov) #hepatica (hepatica | Low-growing flowering plant with fleshy leaves and blue, purple, or pink flowers) #holly (holly | Large evergreen tree or shrub, underplanting forest oaks or other large trees, o) #hollyhock (hollyhock | Biennial garden plant featuring many large single or double flowers in pink, red) #honesty (honesty | Bushy flowering garden plant grown primarily for its decorative seed pods, rathe) #honeysuckle (honeysuckle | Twining summer-flowering woody shrub, native to much of Europe, Turkey, and Nort) #hop_bines (hop-bines | Twining plant using stiff, hairy stems (bines) to climb. Flowers of the female p) #horse_chestnut (horse-chestnut | Large, deciduous fruit-bearing tree, native to a small area of southeastern Euro) #ivy (ivy | Flowering evergreen vine native to Eurasia and North Africa, it has a climbing o) #jasmine (jasmine | A climbing woody shrub with fragrant white flowers, native to Asia and naturaliz) #laburnum (laburnum | Small flowering tree with showy pendulous yellow flower clusters that later deve) #larkspur (larkspur | Usually refers to annual varieties of delphinium, formerly categorized seuparate) #lavender (lavender | Medium-height evergreen flowering shrub with narrow leaves and pale purple flowe) #lilac (lilac | Large flowering shurb native to the Balkan Peninsula, introduced as a garden pla) #lily (lily | True lilies are flowering perennials that grow from bulbs, carrying large, trump) #lily_red (red lily | A summer-blooming true lily native to southern Europe, introduced to cultivation) #lily_tiger (tiger-lily | Likely the summer-blooming true lily native to Europe and naturalized elsewhere,) #lily_valley (lily of the valley | Scented woodland flowering plant native to the cool temperate Northern Hemispher) #lime_tree (lime tree | Group of large, deciduous trees called the lime tree in the UK, this family of t) #maple (maple | Small broad-leafed tree with yellow-green flowers producing winged seeds, which ) #marsh_marygold (marsh marigold | Medium-sized plant in the buttercup family that prefers marshes, wetlands, and w) #mayflower (mayflower | Flowering thorny shrub that develops a red, berry-like fruit that is actually a ) #melon_plant (melon | Mitford likely refers to the European or common cantalope, although both the mel) #Michaelmas_daisy (Michaelmas daisy | The Michaelmas daisy or aster is a Eurasian perennial plant that blooms in late ) #mignonette (garden mignonette | Tall, thin pale yellow flower spike growing from base leaves. Native to Europe, ) #moss (moss | Nonvascular, low-growing plants that prefer damp soils, part of the large group ) #MtDaisy (Mountain daisy | Low-growing evergreen perennial plant with showy white flowers. Native to south-) #mushroom (field mushroom | pink bottom) #myrtle (common myrtle | Evergreen flowering shrub bearing white flowers with many showy white stamens an) #oak (common oak | Mitford likely refers to the common or English oak (Quercus robur), a variety of) #onion (onion | ) #orchid (orchid | Flower plant member of the large family of the Orchidaceae, which contains nearl) #oxlip (oxlip | Spring-flowering member of the Primula family related to primroses (P. vulgaris)) #passion_flower (passion flower | Flowering vines, most of which are native to neotropical zones in the Americas. ) #pear (pear | The domestic pear tree is descended from the Eurasian wild pear, imported into B) #pelargonium (pelargonium | A group of flowering plants From the time of Linnaeus, both geraniums and pelarg) #peony (peony | Flowering herbaceous perennial shrub with large showy red, pink or white flowers) #periwinkle (periwinkle | Spring-blooming trailing groundcover with dark green leaves and purple, blue, or) #pine_Scots (Scots pine | Eurasian evergreen tree bearing long needles and cones, the only pine native to ) #pink (pink | Used generally for any of various members of the Dianthus family, particularly f) #plum_tree (plum tree | Tree of the family Rosaceae which bears flowers and sweet purple, red, or yellow) #polyanthus (polyanthus | A cultivated variety of Primula, bearing flowers of many colors on raised umbrel) #poplar_bl (black poplar | Medium-sized deciduous tree with heart-shaped leaves native to northwest Europe,) #poppy (poppy | Annual red poppy flower with showy black stamens and hairy stems and buds, nativ) #Portugal_laurel (Portugal laurel | Large flowering evergreen shrub in the cherry family, native to southwest Europe) #potato (potato | ) #primrose (primrose | One of Mitford’s favorite flowers, can bloom with creamy yellow flowers from lat) #privet (privet | Shrub native to Eurasia and North Africa, as well as the UK, with glossy dark gr) #ranunculus (ranunculus | Single-flowered red wildlflower with cup-shaped flowers, native to the Mediterra) #rhododendron (rhododendron | Flowering shrub carrying abundantly showy round flower clusters in shades of mau) #rose (rose | Large family of flowering shrubs that may appear as upright shrubs, woody climbe) #rose_damask (damask rose | A tall shrub rose with curved thorns and prickled stems, bearing large double fl) #rose_moss (moss rose | A sport of the hybridized centifolia rose (also called the cabbage rose), known ) #rose_wild (wild rose | Mitford uses this term to refer to the dog rose, a climbing rose native to Europ) #snowdrop (common snowdrop | Small white-flowered plant propagated by bulbs, native to Europe and the Middle ) #stock (stock | Group of more than fifty types of tall, spike-flowered plants in the Brassica fa) #strawberry (wild strawberry | A perennial plant in the Rose family that grows naturally throughout much of the) #sweet_briar (sweet-briar | Species of rose native to Eurasia and also a common garden and naturalized hedge) #sweet_pea (sweet pea | Spring-blooming vine with pink, purple, blue, or white flowers, native to Italy ) #SweetWilliam (Sweet William | Member of the pink family whose clusters of flowers grow in an upward-facing umb) #sycamore (sycamore | Large-leaved flowering tree in the soapberry and lychee family, native to Centra) #syringa (syringa | Flowering shrub in the hydrangea family, native to southern Europe and cultivate) #thorn (thorn | Mitford likely uses this term to refer to the common hawthorn.) #thyme (thyme | Evergreen ground cover with aromatic leaves and pale purple flowers, native to W) #tuberose (tuberose | A perennial plant that is frequently used in perfumes.) #tulip (tulip | Large family of spring-blooming bulbs native to southern Europe and central Asia) #turnip (turnip | Grown for its fleshy root, for consumption by both humans and livestock. Other s) #vine (vine | Woody vining plants important as the source of grapes. The wine grape are native) #violet (violet | One of Mitford’s favorite flowers (as it was of many of her contemporaries). Nat) #VirginsBower (Virgin's Bower | Climbing woody shrub in the clematis family, with panicles of fragrant green-whi) #wallflower (common wallflower | Flowering plant native to the Mediterranean basin and widely used as a garden pl) #wheat (wheat | Grassy plant cultivated as a cereal grain, cultivated in the Middle East since a) #willow (willow | Group of more than 400 species of tree, ranging in size from shrubs to large tre) #wisteria (wisteria | Group of woody climbing vines bearing cascading purple flower plu0mes, native to) #woodsorrel (wood sorrel | Mitford likely refers to common wood sorrel, a member of the oxalis family, nati) #yew (yew | Small long-lived evergreen conifer native to parts of Eurasia, North Africa and ) #Apollo_Belvedere (Apollo Belvedere Pythian Apollo 120-150 A.D. | A marble sculpture from classical antiquity, believed to have been created aroun) #Brocas_monument_Bramley #BrokenFiddle_WA (The Broken Fiddle William Allan circa 1821 Benjamin Robert Haydon described this painting to Mitford in a letter from Edinburgh in November 1821. Haydon wrote: I find Sir William Allan only in the town, he is painting a very clever picture of The Broken Fiddle. A wooden-legged sailor has broken his fiddle on the head of a young scamp for some mischievous trick; an old woman, his granddam, is shaking her fist at the sailor, who is enjoying the pain of the crying boy. . . . It promises to be a very clever thing indeed. The background in colour and effect is the best thing he has done., as excerpted in Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk, Vol. 2, p. 74 . The painting was frequently mentioned by 1820s periodical writers as one of Allan’s best. In 1822, Blackwood’s called it a piece of quite a different cast from anything he had formerly attempted. It is a highly humorous composition, and the glow of colouring is such as perhaps Wilkie himself never surpassed. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 11 (1822): p. 439 .) #ChrstEJrslm_Haydon (Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem | One of Haydon’s three enormous paintings of biblical scenes, together with The J) #EnragedMus_WH (The Enraged Musician William Hogarth 30 November 1741 This engraving depicts a scene in which a violin player leans out his window, annoyed by the cacophony of unmusical sounds coming from the street outside.) #Gala_Richmond_TCH (A Gala at Richmond Hofland Unknown, circa 1821 | Mitford gives this as the title of a Hofland painting exhibited at Somerset Hous) #Jerusalem_Crucifixion_TCH (Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion Hofland | A Hofland painting on a New Testament subject exhibited at the British Instituti) #JudgmntSolomon_Haydon (The Judgment of Solomon 1814 | The earliest of the three enormous biblical paintings for which Haydon was known) #Lazarus_Haydon (The Resurrection of Lazarus The Raising of Lazarus 1821-1823 | Painting of enormous dimensions exhibited in 1823 at Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly) #Richmond_TwickPk_TCH (Richmond from Twickenham Park circa 1821) #Te_Deum (Te Deum Traditional Latin Christian hymn of praise and thanksgiving, the conventional title is a short form of the opening lyrics, Te Deum Laudamus.) #Whereer_Handel (Where’er You Walk An aria sung by Jupiter from Handel’s 1743 opera Semele (HWV58).) plant (Use to mark names of plants by kind, variety, genus, and/or species. If the mention is imprecise and you want to mark a short string of text as referring to a plant, use the rs element with type="plant".) animal (Use to mark references to animal types by kind, variety, genus, and/or species. If the mention is imprecise and you want to mark a short string of text as referring to a kind of animal, use the rs element with type="animal". ) event (Use to mark names of events, like the Battle of Hastings. If the mention is imprecise and you want to mark a short string of text as referring to a specific event, use the rs element with type="event". ) indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (referencing string) contains a general purpose name or referring string. [13.2.1. Personal Names 3.6.1. Referring Strings] person (Use only when you need to disambiguate unnamed references to people. When there is a name, use the persName element.) org (Use only when you need to disambiguate unnamed references to organizations, families, collectives of people. When there is a name, use the orgName element.) place (Use only when you need to disambiguate unnamed references to places. When there is a name, use the placeName element.) event (Use only when you need to disambiguate unnamed references to events. When there is a name, use the name element with type="event".) letter (Use to mark references to correspondence.) plant (Use to mark references to plants by kind, variety, genus, and/or species. If you see a kind, variety, genus, and/or species name, use the name element with type="plant".) animal (Use to mark references to animal types when they are unnamed by kind, variety, genus, and/or species. If you see a kind, variety, genus, and/or species name, use the name element with type="animal". ) title (Use only where necessary to mark unnamed references to documents, readings, texts in the absence of a title. If this is a title, use the title element with an @ref. If there is mention of an author, date, or other bibliographic information all together, like Scott's Midlothian, use a bibl element with @corresp around the full span of referencing text, wrapping the parts as you can with author and title elements (no @ref attributes needed inside, just @corresp on the outer bibl) .) art (Use only where necessary to mark unnamed references to works of art in the absence of a title. If you have a title, use the title element with type="art".) (electronic mail address) contains an email address identifying a location to which email messages can be delivered. [3.6.2. Addresses] (address) contains a postal address, for example of a publisher, an organization, or an individual. [3.6.2. Addresses 2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc. 3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information] (address line) contains one line of a postal address. [3.6.2. Addresses 2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc. 3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information] contains a full street address including any name or number identifying a building as well as the name of the street or route on which it is located. [3.6.2. Addresses] (postal code) contains a numerical or alphanumeric code used as part of a postal address to simplify sorting or delivery of mail. [3.6.2. Addresses] (postal box or post office box) contains a number or other identifier for some postal delivery point other than a street address. [3.6.2. Addresses] (number) contains a number, written in any form. [3.6.3. Numbers and Measures] indicates the type of numeric value. Suggested values include: 1] cardinal; 2] ordinal; 3] fraction; 4] percentage cardinal absolute number, e.g. 21, 21.5 ordinal ordinal number, e.g. 21st fraction fraction, e.g. one half or three-quarters percentage a percentage [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ supplies the value of the number in standard form. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) (measure) contains a word or phrase referring to some quantity of an object or commodity, usually comprising a number, a unit, and a commodity name. [3.6.3. Numbers and Measures] specifies the type of measurement in any convenient typology. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (measure group) contains a group of dimensional specifications which relate to the same object, for example the height and width of a manuscript page. [10.3.4. Dimensions] contains a symbol, a word or a phrase referring to a unit of measurement in any kind of formal or informal system. [3.6.3. Numbers and Measures] (date) contains a date in any format. [3.6.4. Dates and Times 2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc. 2.6. The Revision Description 3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information 15.2.3. The Setting Description 13.4. Dates] (time) contains a phrase defining a time of day in any format. [3.6.4. Dates and Times] (abbreviation) contains an abbreviation of any sort. [3.6.5. Abbreviations and Their Expansions] (type) allows the encoder to classify the abbreviation according to some convenient typology. Sample values include: 1] suspension (suspension); 2] contraction (contraction); 3] brevigraph; 4] superscription (superscription); 5] acronym (acronym); 6] title (title); 7] organization (organization); 8] geographic (geographic) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (expansion) contains the expansion of an abbreviation. [3.6.5. Abbreviations and Their Expansions] (pointer) defines a pointer to another location. [3.7. Simple Links and Cross-References 16.1. Links] Only one of the attributes @target and @cRef may be supplied on . (reference) defines a reference to another location, possibly modified by additional text or comment. [3.7. Simple Links and Cross-References 16.1. Links] Only one of the attributes @target' and @cRef' may be supplied on (list) contains any sequence of items organized as a list. [3.8. Lists] The content of a "gloss" list should include a sequence of one or more pairs of a label element followed by an item element plants animals art (type) describes the nature of the items in the list. Suggested values include: 1] gloss (gloss); 2] index (index); 3] instructions (instructions); 4] litany (litany); 5] syllogism (syllogism) gloss (gloss) each list item glosses some term or concept, which is given by a <label> element preceding the list item. index (index) each list item is an entry in an index such as the alphabetical topical index at the back of a print volume. instructions (instructions) each list item is a step in a sequence of instructions, as in a recipe. litany (litany) each list item is one of a sequence of petitions, supplications or invocations, typically in a religious ritual. syllogism (syllogism) each list item is part of an argument consisting of two or more propositions and a final conclusion derived from them. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (item) contains one component of a list. [3.8. Lists 2.6. The Revision Description] (label) contains any label or heading used to identify part of a text, typically but not exclusively in a list or glossary. [3.8. Lists] (heading) contains any type of heading, for example the title of a section, or the heading of a list, glossary, manuscript description, etc. [4.2.1. Headings and Trailers] (heading for list labels) contains the heading for the label or term column in a glossary list or similar structured list. [3.8. Lists] (heading for list items) contains the heading for the item or gloss column in a glossary list or similar structured list. [3.8. Lists] (note) contains a note or annotation. [3.9.1. Notes and Simple Annotation 2.2.6. The Notes Statement 3.12.2.8. Notes and Statement of Language 9.3.5.4. Notes within Entries] (note group) contains a group of notes [3.9.1.1. Encoding Grouped Notes] (index entry) marks a location to be indexed for whatever purpose. [3.9.2. Index Entries] a single word which follows the rules defining a legal XML name (see ), supplying a name to specify which index (of several) the index entry belongs to. indicates the location of any form of external media such as an audio or video clip etc. [3.10. Graphics and Other Non-textual Components] (MIME media type) specifies the applicable multimedia internet mail extension (MIME) media type [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (graphic) indicates the location of a graphic or illustration, either forming part of a text, or providing an image of it. [3.10. Graphics and Other Non-textual Components 11.1. Digital Facsimiles] provides encoded binary data representing an inline graphic, audio, video or other object. [3.10. Graphics and Other Non-textual Components] The encoding used to encode the binary data. If not specified, this is assumed to be Base64. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (milestone) marks a boundary point separating any kind of section of a text, typically but not necessarily indicating a point at which some part of a standard reference system changes, where the change is not represented by a structural element. [3.11.3. Milestone Elements] (gathering beginning) marks the beginning of a new gathering or quire in a transcribed codex. [3.11.3. Milestone Elements] (page beginning) marks the beginning of a new page in a paginated document. [3.11.3. Milestone Elements] (line beginning) marks the beginning of a new (typographic) line in some edition or version of a text. [3.11.3. Milestone Elements 7.2.5. Speech Contents] (column beginning) marks the beginning of a new column of a text on a multi-column page. [3.11.3. Milestone Elements] (analytic level) contains bibliographic elements describing an item (e.g. an article or poem) published within a monograph or journal and not as an independent publication. [3.12.2.1. Analytic, Monographic, and Series Levels] (monographic level) contains bibliographic elements describing an item (e.g. a book or journal) published as an independent item (i.e. as a separate physical object). [3.12.2.1. Analytic, Monographic, and Series Levels] (series information) contains information about the series in which a book or other bibliographic item has appeared. [3.12.2.1. Analytic, Monographic, and Series Levels] (author) in a bibliographic reference, contains the name(s) of an author, personal or corporate, of a work; for example in the same form as that provided by a recognized bibliographic name authority. [3.12.2.2. Titles, Authors, and Editors 2.2.1. The Title Statement] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. contains a secondary statement of responsibility for a bibliographic item, for example the name of an individual, institution or organization, (or of several such) acting as editor, compiler, translator, etc. [3.12.2.2. Titles, Authors, and Editors] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (statement of responsibility) supplies a statement of responsibility for the intellectual content of a text, edition, recording, or series, where the specialized elements for authors, editors, etc. do not suffice or do not apply. May also be used to encode information about individuals or organizations which have played a role in the production or distribution of a bibliographic work. [3.12.2.2. Titles, Authors, and Editors 2.2.1. The Title Statement 2.2.2. The Edition Statement 2.2.5. The Series Statement] (responsibility) contains a phrase describing the nature of a person's intellectual responsibility, or an organization's role in the production or distribution of a work. [3.12.2.2. Titles, Authors, and Editors 2.2.1. The Title Statement 2.2.2. The Edition Statement 2.2.5. The Series Statement] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (title) contains a title for any kind of work. [3.12.2.2. Titles, Authors, and Editors 2.2.1. The Title Statement 2.2.5. The Series Statement] @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. classifies the title according to some convenient typology. Sample values include: 1] main; 2] sub (subordinate); 3] alt (alternate); 4] short; 5] desc (descriptive) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ Suggested values include: 1] #Ackermans_Juv_ForgetMeNot (Ackermann's Juvenile Forget Me Not | 1830—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic S); 2] #Amulet (The Amulet; or Christian and Literary Remembrancer | 1826—1836 | Gift book/annual started in 1826. Mitford published yearly in this periodical be); 3] #Anniversary_annual (The Anniversary | 1829 | Short-lived gift book/annual published in 1829. Mitford published the story Goin); 4] #Anti-Jacobin (The Anti-Jacobin, or Weekly Examiner | 1797-11-20—1798-07-09 | Conserative Tory newspaper founded by George Canning whose short run of 36 issue); 5] #Berkshire_Chron (Berkshire Chronicle | Newspaper founded in 1825, now known as the Reading Chronicle.); 6] #Bijou_annual (The Bijou: An Annual of Literature and the Arts | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1828 and 1830. Mitford published ); 7] #Blackwoods (Blackwood’s Magazine | 1817-04—1980 | Founded as a Tory magazine in opposition to the Whig Edinburgh Review.); 8] #BritishCritic_per (British Critic, A New Review | Conservative periodical with High Church editorial views. Published monthly betw); 9] #Cameo_annual (The Cameo: A Melange of Literature and the Arts, selected from the Bijou | Short-lived giftbook/annual from the early 1830s. Title pages are undated. Altho); 10] #Christmas_Box (The Christmas Box: An Annual Present for Young Persons | 1829—1830 | Short-lived gift book/annual for children. Mitford published in this periodical ); 11] #Comic_Offering (The Comic Offering, or Ladies' Melange of Literary Mirth | Literary humor annual edited by and for women founded by Smith, Elder, and co. M); 12] #Courier_news (The Courier | 1804-04-20—1842-07-06 | London newspaper that ran daily except on Sundays from 1804 to 1842.); 13] #EclecticRev (The Eclectic Review | Monthly periodical published between 1805 and 1868. Focusesd on long and short r); 14] #Edinburgh_Tales (The Edinburgh Tales | 1845—1846 | Three-volume anthology of stories published in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine while u); 15] #EdinburghMag1785to1816 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Published by Sibbald, 1785 to 1816, then published by Constable until 1826.); 16] #EdinburghMag1817to1826 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Previously published by Sibbald, then published by Constable, 1817 to 1826.); 17] #EdinburghRev_per (Edinburgh Review, second series | Quarterly political and literary review founded by Francis Jeffrey, Sydney Smith); 18] #English_Annual (The English Annual | Short-lived annual from the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in 1838.); 19] #EuroMag (European Magazine | Monthly periodical published from 1782 until 1826. Original title: European Maga); 20] #Examiner (The Examiner | 1808—1886 | Weekly periodical launched by editor Leigh Hunt and his brother, the printer Joh); 21] #Findens_Tableaux_annual (Finden's Tableaux | 1837—1843 | Finden's Tableaux was a lavishly illustrated gift book/annual produced between 1); 22] #ForgetMeNot (Forget Me Not | 1822-11—1847 | Gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic Shoberl thro); 23] #Friendships_Off (Friendship's Offering | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s by Lupton Relfe and then revived in the ); 24] #Gem_annual (The Gem | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1829 and 1832, perhaps the succes); 25] #John_Bull (John Bull | English periodical founded in 1820 and published between 1820 and 1825 and in a ); 26] #Journal_BellesLettres (The Journal of Belles Lettres | American annual published between 1832 and 1842 Mitford was published in this pe); 27] #Juv_Forget (The Juvenile Forget Me Not: A Christmas or New Year's Gift, or Birthday Present | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1837. Mitford published); 28] #Juv_Keepsake (The Juvenile Keepsake | Gift book/annual for children. Mitford published her story The Two Magpies in th); 29] #La_Belle_Assemblee (La Belle Assemblée, Or Bell's Court and Fashionable Magazine, Addressed Particularly to the Ladies | 1806—1832 | A general-interest miscellaneous periodical aimed at a female readership. Origin); 30] #Ladys_Mag (The Lady's Magazine | 1770—1847 | A popular and influential monthly magazine for women that ran from 1756 until 18); 31] #Ladys_Mag_Ser1 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, series one | 1770—1818 | Monthly magazine for women founded by bookseller and publisher John Coote and ed); 32] #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v1-3 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, new series 2, vol. 1-3 | 1820—1822 | A continuation of The Lady's Magazine as a new series (series two), volumes 1 th); 33] #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v4-10 (The Lady's Magazine; or Mirror of the Belle-Lettres, Fine Arts, Fashions, Music, Drama, &c., new series 2, vol. 4-10 | 1823—1829 | Many of Mitford's contributions to the magazine were to this series, a continuat); 34] #Ladys_Monthly_Museum (Lady’s Monthly Museum; Or, Polite Repository of Amusement and Instruction | A monthly periodical running from 1798 to 1832.); 35] #Laurel_annual (The Laurel: Fugitive Poetry of the XIXth century | 1830 | Literary annual published in 1830 and edited by Miss S. Lawrence. Mitford publis); 36] #Letter_to_HM_1820 (An Englishwoman’s Letter to Mrs. Hannah More on the Present Crisis | | Anonymously published eighteen-page pamphlet on the Queen Caroline Affair. World); 37] #Lit_Gazette (The Literary Gazette, and Journal of Belles Lettres, Arts, Sciences | Periodical founded by Henry Colburn, ran from 1817 to 1863. For details on the j); 38] #Lit_Souvenir (The Literary Souvenir, or, Cabinet of Poetry and Romance | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s and 1830s and edited by Alaric Watts. Mi); 39] #LondonMag (The London Magazine | 1820—1829 | An 18th-century periodical of this title (The London Magazine, or Gentleman’s Mo); 40] #Marshalls_Christmas (Marshall's Christmas Box: A Juvenile Annual | 1828—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by William Marshall. Mitford published in th); 41] #Metropolitan (The Metropolitan | 1831—1850 | A London monthly originally titled The Metropolitan: A Monthly Journal of Litera); 42] #MonthlyMag (The Monthly Magazine | Monthly general-interest periodical. Published between 1796 and 1843. Founded by); 43] #Museum_per (The Museum; or Record of Literature, Fine Arts, Antiquities, the Drama, &c. | 1822-04-27 | Weekly periodical edited by Peter Bayley and printed by John Valpy.); 44] #New_Monthly_Mag (New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal | Periodical edited by Thomas Campbell and Cyrus Redding from 1821 to 1830, after ); 45] #New_Years_Gift (The New Year's Gift and Juvenile Souvenir | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1836. Mitford published); 46] #NewYork_Visiter (New York Visiter and Parlour Companion | Short-lived American periodical published between 1838 and 1840. An interview wi); 47] #Observer (The Observer | Founded on December 4, 1791 by W.S. Bourne. It is the first Sunday newspaper in ); 48] #Pamphleteer_per (The Pamphleteer | Published between 1813 and 1828. Full title: The Pamphleteer: Respectfully Dedic); 49] #Panoramic_Misc (Panoramic Miscellany, and Review of Literature, Science, Arts, Inventions and Occurrences | 1826-01-31—1826-06-01 | Periodical edited by John Thelwall to which Mitford, signing as M, contributed t); 50] #Pledge_Friendship (The Pledge of Friendship: A Christmas Present, and New Year's Gift | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1826 and 1828. Mitford published ); 51] #Poetical_Album (The Poetical Album and Register of Modern Fugitive Poetry | 1828—1829 | Short-lived literary annual published between 1828 and 1829 and edited by Alaric); 52] #Political_Register (Cobbett's Weekly Political Register | Weekly periodical issued by William Cobbett from 1802 to 1835. Founded as Tory a); 53] #QuarterlyRev_per (Quarterly Review | 1809—1967 | Tory periodical founded by George Canning in 1809, published by John Murray. Wil); 54] #ReadingMer_per (The Reading Mercury and Oxford Gazette, etc. | Newspaper of Reading, Berkshire. Founded as The Reading Mercury, or Weekly Enter); 55] #Remember_Me (Remember Me: A Token of Christian Affection; consisting of entirely original pieces in prose and verse. | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s and 1840s. Mitford published in this per); 56] #Remembrance_annual (Remembrance | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in); 57] #Review_RaisingLaz (Mr. Haydon’s Raising of Lazarus | 1823-04-01 | Detailed discussion of the contents of Haydon’s painting, The Raising of Lazarus); 58] #Royal_LadysMag (The Royal Lady's Magazine; and Archives of the Court of St. James | 1831—1835 | Mitford published in this periodical in 1832.); 59] #Sheffield_Iris (The Iris | Newspaper of Sheffield, Yorkshire, to which Barbara Hofland contributed poems.); 60] #Spectator (The Spectator | A daily periodical founded by Joseph Addison Richard Steele which was published ); 61] #Stage (Letter by Philo-Dramaticus | Letter reprinted in the Observer on June 20, 1825 from Blackwoods. The letter is); 62] #Tatler (The Tatler | A literary and society journal founded by Richard Steele which was published fro); 63] #Times_news (The Times | Newspaper issued daily, begun in London in 1785 as The Daily Universal Register,); 64] #Trueman_Clergy (Timothy Trueman’s Admonitions to the Clergy, Respecting Tithes: First Published in a Letter Inserted in the Statesman Newspaper, and Now Reprinted with Several Corrections and Additions, Particularly an Introduction | 1816 | Pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acquaintance Mr. Johnson.); 65] #Trueman_Gehazi (The Curse of Gehazi, or, Leprosy of Corruption: Exemplified in a Narrative of the Life of Robert Watkins, alias Robert Turner Watkins, alias Bribery Bob, Who was Executed on the 30th of July Last, for the Robbery and Murder of Mr. Stephen Rodway, Late of Cricklade, in Whitshire | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua); 66] #Trueman_Westminster (A Letter to the Independent Electors of Westminster, as it Appeared in the Independent Whig of Sunday, May 21, 1809 | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua); 67] #Winters_Wreath (The Winter's Wreath | Gift book/annual published from the mid-1820s to 1832. Some issues subtitled, a ); 68] #Abbot_WS (The Abbot | 1820 | Historical novel: One of Scott’s series of Tales from Benedictine Sources, The A); 69] #Absent_Member_BR (The Absent Member | 1835 | This story was also published in the Amulet for 1835.); 70] #Absentee (The Absentee | 1812); 71] #Account_GeoMathews (Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews | 1819 | Full title: Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews: Wh); 72] #AccountOfIndia (Description of the character, manners, and customs of the people of India : and of their institutions, religious and civils | 1818 | ); 73] #Acct_Knox (Account of the captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, in the island of Ceylon | 1818 | Full title: Account of the Captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, ); 74] #Acct_War1808 (Account of the War in Spain and Portugal, and in the South of France, from 1808, to 1814, inclusive | 1818 | She rated considered it a sad uncandid military book); 75] #AcctDenmark1692 (An Account of Denmark in 1692 | 1694 | Full title: An Account of Denmark as it was in the year MDCXCII.); 76] #Admiral_on_Shore_OV (An Admiral on Shore [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 77] #Advice_Julia (Advice to Julia: A Letter in Rhyme | 1820 | A poem that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on October 7 1820.); 78] #Aeneid_CP (The Works of Virgil, in Latin and English. The original Text correctly printed from the most authentic Editions, collated for this Purpose. The Æneid Translated By the Rev. Mr. Christopher Pitt, The Eclogues and Georgics, with Notes on the Whole, By the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton. With several New Observations By Mr. Holdsworth, Mr. Spence, and Others. Also, A Dissertation on the Sixth Book of the Æneid, by Mr. Warburton. On the Shield of Æneas, by Mr. W. Whitehead. On the Character of Japis, by the late Dr. Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester. And, Three Essays on Pastoral, Didactic and Epic Poetry, by the Editor | 1753); 79] #Aeneid_Dryden (The Aeneid | 1688 | Dryden’s translation of The Aeneid may be found in Miscellany Poems, in two part); 80] #Aeneid_JB (The Æneid of Virgil, translated into blank verse by J. Beresford | 1794); 81] #Aeneid_Virgil (The Aeneid | Latin epic poem written between 29 and 19 BC.); 82] #Aeschylus_Potter (The Tragedies of Aeschylus | Translation of Aeschylus’s plays read by Mitford.); 83] #Aesops_Fables_Croxall (Fables of Aesop and Others, Translated into English. With Instructive Applications; and a Cut Before Each Fable. | 1722—1728 | The most influential and frequently reprinted English translation of the Fables ); 84] #Agamemnon_play (Agamemnon | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the first play of the Oresteia); 85] #Age_Elizabeth (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth | 1820 | Mitford indicated that she read Hazlitt’s Lectures in her Journal on October 22,); 86] #Aladdin_panto (Aladdin | There were many pantomimes under this name on the English stage, many combining ); 87] #Alcestis_play (Alcestis | Athenian tragedy attributed to Euripides. First produced at the City Dionysia fe); 88] #Alice_DS_1827 (Alice: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f); 89] #All_For_Love_play (All for Love | 1678 | First performed in 1677 and published in 1678, based on Antony and Cleopatra.); 90] #AllsWellTEW (All’s Well that Ends Well | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1604 and first printed in 1623.); 91] #Altham (Altham and His Wife: A Domestic Tale | 1810 | 1 vol. Mitford calls it a pretty tale. Source: Journal); 92] #America_Birkbeck (Notes on a Journey in America, from the Coast of Virginia to the Territory of Illinois | 1817 | Mitford likely read the second edition, published in London in 1818 by J. Ridgwa); 93] #AmStories_Above10 (American Stories for Young People, Intended for Children above Ten Years of Age | 1832); 94] #AmStories_Under10 (American Stories for Little Boys and Girls, Intended for Children under Ten Years of Age | 1831); 95] #Anecdotes_WSeward (Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons | 1804 | 4 vols. Full title: Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons: Chiefly of the Last and ); 96] #AnecdotesTo1700_JM (Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasion to the Year 1700 | 1811 | Full title: Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasi); 97] #Another_Glance_OV (Another Glance at Our Village | 1886—1888 | Alternative title assigned to A Parting Glance at Our Village in Walter Scott Pu); 98] #Antigone_MRM_1827 (Antigone: A Portrait in Verse | 1827 | 1827 verse portrait based on Antigone.); 99] #Antigone_play (Antigone); 100] #Antiquary (The Antiquary); 101] #AntiquitatesCurio (Antiquitates Curiosae: the etymology of many remarkable old sayings, proverbs, & singular customs | 1819); 102] #Antony_Cleopatra (Antony and Cleopatra | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1607 and first printed in 1623.); 103] #Arabian_Tales (Arabian Tales; or, A Continuation of the Arabian Nights Entertainments, consisting of stories related by the Sultana of the Indies, newly tr[anslated] from the original Arabic into French by Dom Chavis and Cazotte; and tr[anslated] from the French into English, by Robert Heron | 1792 | Mitford was likely familiar with this 1792 English translation of the Thousand a); 104] #As_You_Like_It_play (As You Like It | 1623 | First performed around 1599 and first printed 1623.); 105] #Athalie_play (Athalie | 1691 | One of two plays written by Jean Racine (along with Esther), for the students at); 106] #Atherton (Atherton, and Other Tales | 1854); 107] #Aunt_Deborah_CS (Aunt Deborah | 1835); 108] #Aunt_Martha_OV (Aunt Martha [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-second story in volume one of Our Village in ); 109] #AuthAcct_FrRev (Authentic Account of the French Revolution | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it interesting. Source: Journal.); 110] #AutumnRhine (An Autumn Near the Rhine | 1818 | Full title: An Autumn Near the Rhine; Or Sketches of Courts, Society, Scenery, &); 111] #BaronsDa_FT (The Baron's Daughter | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 112] #Beacon_FT (The Beacon | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 113] #Beau_Fletch (The Works of Beaumont and Fletcher, in Fourteen Volumes: With an Introduction and Explanatory Notes | 1812 | ); 114] #BeautifulWoman_1827 (On a Beautiful Woman [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 7 in the 1827 collection (page 300) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Month); 115] #Beauty_MRM (Beauty: An Ode. | 1811 | Poem first collected in 1811 Poems, mentioned in a 13 February 1821 letter from ); 116] #Beauty_of_Village_CS (The Beauty of the Village | 1835 | This story also appeared in the Friendship's Offering for 1835".); 117] #Bees_Fable (The Fable of the Bees, or, Private vices, public benefits: containing several discourses to demonstrate that human frailties, during the degeneracy of mankind, may be turn’d to the advantage of the civil society, and made to supply the place of moral virtues. | 1714); 118] #BeggarGirl (The Beggar Girl and her Benefactors | 1790 | 5 vols. Minerva Press. Mitford rated it as famous.); 119] #Belford_Races_BR (Belford Races | 1835); 120] #Belford_Regis (Belford Regis; or, Sketches of a Country Town | 1835); 121] #Belinda_ME (Belinda | 1801); 122] #Belles_Ballroom1_Will_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. I - The Will | 1835 | This story was orginally published in the Forget Me Not for 1834 with the title ); 123] #Belles_Ballroom2_Matchmaking_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. II - Matchmaking Match-Making | 1835 | This story was published, in a slightly different version, in the Friendship's O); 124] #Belles_Ballroom3_SilverArrow_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. III - The Silver Arrow | 1835 | This story also appeared as The Silver Arrow in the English Annual for 1836.); 125] #Belles_Ballroom_BR (Belles of the Ballroom | 1835 | A series of stories within Mitford's later book of prose sketches, Belford Regis); 126] #BelovedMotherBirthday_1810 (To my Beloved Mother, On Her Birth-Day, June 15, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 127] #Bertha_1811 (Bertha. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 128] #Bertram_CM (Bertram; or, The Castle of St. Aldobrand: a tragedy, in five acts | 1816); 129] #BessyBell_1811 (Bessy Bell and Mary Gray. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 130] #Bible (Christian Bible | The sacred scriptures of Christianity consisting of the Old and New Testament.); 131] #Bibletrans_Bellamy (The Holy Bible Newly Translated from the Original Hebrew: with Notes Critical and Explanatory | 1818 | Published by subscription in 1818. Originally published in three volumes in abou); 132] #Bio_Note_OV_JMDent (Biographical Note [Our Village, J.M. Dent, 1900+ edition]); 133] #Bio_Preface_OV_Caldwell (Biographical Preface {Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d., 1910s?]); 134] #Bio_Preface_VilTales (Biographical Preface [to Village Tales and Sketches, Routledge, 1880] | 1881); 135] #Bio_SketchMRM_Works_Crissy (Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy edition, 1841; Crissy & Markley, 1846]); 136] #BioMem_PrCharlotte (Biographical Memoir of the Public and Private Life of the Much Lamented Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales and Saxe-Coburg | 1817 | Full title: A biographical memoir of the public and private life of the much lam); 137] #BirdCatcher_OV (The Bird-Catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 138] #Black_Velvet_Bag_LM (The Black Velvet Bag [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-07 | This sketch was first published in the July 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. I); 139] #Black_Velvet_Bag_OV (The Black Velvet Bag [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 140] #Blanch (Blanch: A Poem in Four Cantos | 1827); 141] #BlankPaperBook_1827 (Written in a Blank-Paper Book Given to the Author by a Friend [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 1 in the 1827 collection (page 293) . Also appeared in the 1821 New Month); 142] #BlindMansStory_1811 (The Blind Man's Story. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 143] #Bluebeard_GC (Bluebeard, or Female Curiosity: a Dramatic Romance in Three Acts | 1798); 144] #Boarding_School_Rec_English_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. III. The English Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12-31 | This sketch was issued as No. III in the Boarding School Recollections series th); 145] #Boarding_School_Rec_French_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. I. The French Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-10-31 | This sketch appeared as No. 1 in the Boarding School Recollections series in The); 146] #Boarding_School_Rec_LM (Early Recollections [subseries published in Lady's Magazine] Boarding School Recollections. No. I. The French Teacher Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows Boarding School Recollections. No. III. The English Teacher | An occasional series of sketches by Mitford for The Lady's Magazine. Some of the); 147] #Boarding_School_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_LM (Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows | 1822-11 | This sketch appeared as No. II in the Boarding School Recollections series in Th); 148] #Bonduca_play (Bonduca | First performed around 1613, first printed in 1647.); 149] #BoR (Bill of Rights | 1689 | One of the basic instruments of the British constitution, the English Bill of Ri); 150] #BowlesPamphletWar_1820 (A reply to the charges brought by the reviewer of Spence's Anecdotes in the Quarterly review for October 1820 against the last editor of Pope's works, and author of A letter to Mr. Campbell on The invariable principles of poetry | 1820 | Bowles' riposte of 1820 in the midst of a pamphlet war over Alexander Pope’s wri); 151] #Bramley_Maying_LM (Bramley Maying [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 152] #Bramley_Maying_OV (Bramley Maying [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I); 153] #Branford (Branford | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it pretty good.); 154] #Bridal_Eve_DS_1827 (Bridal Eve: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f); 155] #Bride_FT (The Bride | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 156] #Bride_of_Lammermoor_WS (The Bride of Lammermoor | 1819 | Part of Tales of my Landlord, third series. Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes ); 157] #Buccaneer_FT (The Buccaneer | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 158] #BurkeWks_Rivington (The Works of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke | 1801—1823 | The Rivingtons published a comprehensive edition of Burke's works and correspond); 159] #BustFox_1810 (On a Bust of Fox. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 160] #Byron_6thPoems (The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. Vol. 6 of 6 | 1818 | Full title: The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. In Six Volumes. Vol. V); 161] #Cain_play (Cain: A Mystery | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Sardanapalus.); 162] #Calamities (Calamities of Authors | 1812 | Full title: Calamities of Authors: including some inquiries respecting their mor); 163] #Camilla_FB (Camilla, or a Picture of Young Lady | 1796); 164] #CanonsCriticism (The canons of criticism, and glossary, being a supplement to Mr. Warburton's edition of Shakespear. | 1765 | Mitford mentions reading Edwards' Canons of Criticism in her Journal on 12 June ); 165] #CanterburyTales (The Canterbury Tales | 1400 | Collection of 23 tales and a prologue frame story, written over a period of year); 166] #Captive_DS_1827 (The Captive: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 167] #CaptivityCaptKnox (Account of the Captivity of Robert Knox and Other Englishmen, in the Island of Ceylon: And of the Captain’s Miraculous Escape and Return to England in September 1680, After Detention on the Island of Nineteen Years and a Half | 1818); 168] #CaribCh (The Carib Chief: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | ); 169] #Carpenters_Daughter_BR (The Carpenter's Daughter | 1835 | This story was first published in the Friendship's Offering for 1834.); 170] #Cartel_FT (The Cartel | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 171] #CarysDante (The Vision; or, Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise | 1814 | Printed for the author.); 172] #Cast_Signal_FT (Castile. The Signal | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 173] #Castle_in_Air_OV (A Castle in the Air [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 174] #Cecilia_FB (Cecilia; or Memoirs of an Heiress | 1782); 175] #Cenci_play (The Cenci: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | Percy Bysshe Shelley's only completed stage play was written in 1819, informed b); 176] #CharlesI_MRMplay (Charles the First; An Historical Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1834); 177] #CharlesV (The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V | 1769); 178] #Chas_Grandison_novel (The history of Sir Charles Grandison: In a series of letters published from the originals, by the editor of Pamela and Clarissa. | 1753); 179] #ChasI_GCtoJG1825 (George Colman letter to James Graham | 1825-09-29 | Letter from George Colman to James Graham, Duke of Montrose, regarding the decis); 180] #ChasI_GCtoMRM1825 (George Colman letter to Mary Russell Mitford | 1825-10-10 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, notifying her of the decision); 181] #ChasI_JGtoGC1825 (James Graham letter to George Colman | 1825-09-25 | Letter from James Graham, Duke of Montrose to George Colman, regarding the decis); 182] #ChasI_MRMtoGC1825 (Mary Russell Mitford letter to George Colman | 1825-12-18 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, regarding the decision to ref); 183] #ChasI_Warrant (Death Warrant of Charles Stuart | 1649-01-29 | The warrant for the execution of Charles I for treason, signed on January 29, 16); 184] #Chaucer_Wks_Martins (Poetical Works of Geoffrey Chaucer | 1782 | Collected poetical works, including the Canterbury Tales, in 14 volumes, publish); 185] #Cheerfulness_1810 (To Cheerfulness. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 186] #ChildeHaroldsPil (Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage | Published in parts between 1812 and 1818.); 187] #Children_of_the_Village_Routledge (Children of the Village Dora Creswell Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1880 | An illustrated collection of Mitford's Our Village stories, largely but not enti); 188] #Children_of_Village_OV (Children of the Village [Our Village subseries] Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1830—1832 | The title of a subseries within the Our Village books that ran through volumes f); 189] #Children_Vil_Amy_Lloyd_OV (Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been publishe); 190] #Children_Vil_FosterMother_OV (Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 191] #Children_Vil_Harry_Lewington_OV (Children of the Village. Harry Lewington [Our Village version] Harry Lewington and his Dog [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu); 192] #Children_Vil_Pride_Shall_Have_Fall_OV (Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with a few revisions, in volume four of Our Village in 183); 193] #Children_Vil_TheMagpies_OV (Children of the Village. The Magpies [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 194] #Children_Vil_TheRobins_OV (Children of the Village. The Robins [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu); 195] #Children_Vil_Two_Dolls_OV (Children of the Village. The Two Dolls [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 196] #Children_Vil_Young_Master_Ben_OV (Children of the Village. Young Master Ben [Our Village version] Young Master Ben [Comic Offering version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 197] #China_Jug_OV (The China Jug [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with some revision, in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 198] #Choephorae_Aes_play (Choephoræ | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the second play of the Oresteia); 199] #Christina (Christina, The Maid of the South Seas; A Poem | 1811); 200] #Christmas_Amusements1_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. 1 [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished w); 201] #Christmas_Amusements2_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. II [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. Portions of it (Char); 202] #Christmas_Amusements3_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. III [Our Village version] | 1832 | This story appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. A portion of it, incl); 203] #Christmas_Amusements4_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. IV [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 204] #Christmas_Amusements5_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. V [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 205] #Christmas_Amusements6_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. VI [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 206] #Christmas_Amusements_OV (Christmas Amusements [Our Village subseries] Christmas Amusements, No. I Christmas Amusements, No. II Christmas Amusements, No. III Christmas Amusements, No. IV Christmas Amusements, No. V Christmas Amusements, No. VI | 1832 | The title of a subseries of sketches that appeared in volume five of Our Village); 207] #Christmas_Party_OV (A Christmas Party [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 208] #ChronHist_Arctic (A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions | 1818 | Full title: A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions; Undertak); 209] #Cid_play (The Cid | 1637); 210] #Cinna_play (Cinna | 1643); 211] #CircNarr_Russia (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia | 1814 | 2 vols. Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia: embell); 212] #Cistineae (Cistineae: the Natural Order of Cistus, or Rock-Rose; Illustrated by Coloured Figures & Descriptions of All the Distinct Species, and the Most Prominent Varieties, that could be at Present produced in the Gardens of Great Britain; With the Best Directions for Their Cultivation and Propagation | 1825—1830 | ); 213] #City_Wives_play (The City Wives’ Confederacy | A comedic play by Sir John Vanbrugh based on Florent Carton de Dancourt’s Les bo); 214] #Clarissa (Clarissa, or, The history of a young lady : comprehending the most important concerns of private life: and particularly shewing, the distresses that may attend the misconduct both of parents and children, in relation to marriage | 1748); 215] #ClarkesTravelsScand (Travels in Various Countries of Europe, Asia and Africa. Part the third, section the first: Scandinavia | 1819 | Clarke began publishing a series of travel accounts in 1811 under the series tit); 216] #ClassicalTour_Hoare (A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily | 1819 | Full title: A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily: tending to illustrate som); 217] #Claudias_Dr (Claudia’s Dream | One of Mitford’s dramatic sketches, appeared in Lady’s Magazine September 30, 18); 218] #CoA (the Code of Alfred | 0893 | This law book, or Doom-book, is attributed to King Alfred. In the text, Alfred’s); 219] #Coeur_de_Lion_poem (Coeur de Lion; or the Third Crusade. A Poem in 16 books. | 1822); 220] #Coll_PolTracts (A Collection of Political Tracts | 1754 | Full title: A Collection of Political Tracts: By the author of the Dissertation ); 221] #Collectanea (Collectanea Curiosa, or Miscellaneous Tracts: Relating to the History and Antiquities of England and Ireland, the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and a Variety of Other Subjects | 1781); 222] #ComicDramas_ME (Comic Dramas, in Three Acts | 1817 | Contains three plays: Love and Law; The Two Guardians; and The Rose, Thistle and); 223] #Compl_Angler (The Compleat Angler, or, The Contemplative Man’s Recreation: Being a Discourse of Rivers, and Fish-ponds, and Fish and Fishing: Not Unworthy the Perusal of Most Anglers | 1653 | First published in 1653, then expanded and republished in further editions in 16); 224] #Confessions_OpiumEater_nonfict (Confessions of an English Opium-Eater); 225] #Consumption_1811 (Ode to Consumption. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted as a selection in Benjamin Suggitt Nayler's 18); 226] #Corinne_deS (Corinne, ou, L’Italie | 1807); 227] #Coriolanus_play (Coriolanus | 1623 | Believed to have been written between 1605 and 1610, first printed); 228] #Cottage_Names_OV (Cottage Names [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 229] #Country_Apothecary_OV (A Country Apothecary [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub); 230] #Country_Barber_OV (A Country Barber [Our Village version] The Last of the Barbers [Literary Souvenir version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub); 231] #Country_Cricket_Match_LM (A Country Cricket Match [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-06); 232] #Country_Cricket_Match_OV (A Country Cricket Match [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182); 233] #Country_Excursions_BR (Country Excursions | 1835); 234] #Country_Lodgings_CS (Country Lodgings | 1835); 235] #Country_Neighbours (Tales of Fancy: Country Neighbors; or, The Secret | 1816 | Country Neighbors makes up volumes two and three of the three-volume work. As sh); 236] #Country_Pictures_OV (Country Pictures [alternative title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version] | The sketch entitled Our Village was sometimes retitled Country Pictures in some ); 237] #Country_Stories (Country Stories | 1835); 238] #Cousin_Mary_LM (Cousin Mary [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04); 239] #Cousin_Mary_OV (Cousin Mary [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the ninth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It); 240] #Cranford (Cranford | 1853); 241] #Cribbage_Players_OV (The Cribbage Players. A Country Dialogue [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 242] #CrimTrials_Porteous (Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-Lothian | 1818 | Full title: Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-L); 243] #Critic_play (The Critic: or, a Tragedy Rehearsed | A burlesque satire on theatrical production and performance, first performed in ); 244] #CritProse_Dryden (The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden | 1800 | Full title: The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden, Now First); 245] #Cunigonda_DS_1827 (Cunigonda's Vow: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 246] #Curate_St_Nicholas_BR (The Curate of St. Nicholas | 1835 | A version of this story was published as Our Rector in the English Annual for 18); 247] #Cyllenius_epic (The Travels of Cyllenius: A Poem, in 66 cantos | 1795 | First published in 1795 and privately printed by Charles Dickinson himself. Peri); 248] #Cymbeline_play (Cymbeline | 1623 | First performed around 1611 and first printed in 1623.); 249] #Daniells (Rural Sports | Printed in numerous editions between 1801-1817.); 250] #Deaf_Dumb_play (Deaf and Dumb); 251] #DeafasPost_play (Deaf as a Post (Drury Lane, 1823) | a one-act farce); 252] #Decline_Fall (The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire); 253] #Dedication_to_Father_OV1 (Dedication to her father [of Our Village] | In late editions of Our Village, Mitford added this dedication to her father. No); 254] #Delphine (Delphine | 1802 | Mitford rated it not good and much too dismal.); 255] #DeRance (De Rancé: a Poem | 1815); 256] #Desc_NSWales (A Description of the Colony of New South Wales | 1819 | Full title: A Statistical, Historical, and Political Description of the Colony o); 257] #DescCat_Louvre (A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the Louvre | 1817 | Full title: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the); 258] #Diary_Dodington (The Diary of the late George Bubb Dodington | 1784 | Full title: The Diary of the Late George Bubb Dodington, Baron of Melcombe Regis); 259] #Diary_Invalid (The Diary of an Invalid | 1820 | Full title: The Diary of an Invalid; being the journal of a tour in pursuit of h); 260] #Discipline (Discipline: A Novel | 1814 | First edition published anonymously.); 261] #Display_JT (Display | 1815 | Full title: Display: A Tale. For Young People.); 262] #Dissenting_Minister_BR (The Dissenting Minister | 1835); 263] #DoctorCasden_LM (Doctor Casden | 1824-06 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in June 1824. It was re-titled for v); 264] #DoctorTubb_OV (Doctor Tubb [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 265] #Don_Juan_poem (Don Juan | Published in parts between 1820 and 1824.); 266] #Don_Quixote_novel (El ingenioso hidalgo don Quijote de la Mancha | Published in two volumes in 1605 and 1615); 267] #Don_Sebastian_play (Don Sebastian); 268] #DonningtonCastle_1827 (On Visiting Donnington Castle [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 18 in the 1827 collection (pages 311-12). Also appeared in the 1821 New M); 269] #Dora_Creswell_OV (Dora Creswell [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It also appeared as); 270] #Douglas_play (Douglas: A Tragedy | 1757 | First performed in 1756in Edinburgh, followed by a performance in London in 1757); 271] #Dramatic_Works_of_MRM (The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford | 1854); 272] #DramaticScenes (Dramatic Scenes, Sonnets, and Other Poems | 1827); 273] #Dudley (Dudley | 1819 | 3 volumes. by Miss O'Keeffe.); 274] #Early_Rec_Caroline_Cleveland_OV (Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 275] #Early_Rec_Cobbler_Over_Way_OV (Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 276] #Early_Rec_English_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The English Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 277] #Early_Rec_French_Emigrants_OV (Early Recollections. French Emigrants [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch originally appeared in the February 29, 1824 issue of The Lady's Mag); 278] #Early_Rec_French_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The French Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It originally appeare); 279] #Early_Rec_General_and_Lady_OV (Early Recollections. The General and his Lady [Our Village version] The General and His Lady: A Sketch [Literary Souvenir version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 280] #Early_Rec_My_Godfather_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published); 281] #Early_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_OV (Early Recollections. My School-Fellows | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 282] #Early_Rec_MyGodfathers_Manoeuvering_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 283] #Early_Rec_OV (Early Recollections [Our Village subseries] Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Early Recollections. The English Teacher Early Recollections. French Emigrants Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Early Recollections. The French Teacher Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuverings Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman | 1826—1832 | The title of an Our Village subseries, Early Recollections first ran occasionall); 284] #Early_Rec_Tom_Hopkins_OV (Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins [Our Village version] Tom Hopkins [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was published pre); 285] #Early_Rec_Widow_Gentlewoman_OV (Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished i); 286] #EditorIntro_OV_DentEveryman (Editor's Introduction [Dent Everyman edition]); 287] #EditorIntro_OV_FolioSoc (Our Village, Folio Society, 1996); 288] #EditorIntro_OV_Macmillan ( | This introduction by Anne Thackeray Ritchie was influential in establishing Mitf); 289] #EditorIntro_OV_OUP_pb (Editor's Introduction [Oxford University Press, pb]); 290] #EditorIntro_OV_Penguin (Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987]); 291] #EditorIntro_OV_SampsonLowMSR_BC (Our Village [Sampson Low, Martson, Seale & Rivington edition, 1882] | This introduction appeared in the 1882 Sampson Low, Martson & and Rivington, and); 292] #Ellen_OV (Ellen [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. ); 293] #Ellesmere (Ellesmere | Author and date unidentified.); 294] #Emily_DS (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Originally appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505. Later repri); 295] #Emily_DS_1827 (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505 . Late); 296] #Emma_JA (Emma: A Novel | 1819); 297] #Enc_Metr (Encyclopedia Metropolitana; or, Universal Dictionary of Knowledge (30 vols., 1817-1845)); 298] #Endymion (Endymion); 299] #Eng_KingsWd_FT (England. The King's Ward | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 300] #EnglefieldHouse_1827 (Englefield House [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 10 in the 1827 collection (page 303) .); 301] #Epilogue_Orestes_TNT (Epilogue to Orestes by Euripides | Talfourd wrote an Epilogue for a performance of Orestes by Euripides . Later pri); 302] #Epistle_Friend_1810 (Epistle to a Friend. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 303] #EpitaphOnMary_1811 (Epitaph on Mary, the Wife of George Mitford, Esq. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 304] #EskdaleHerdboy (The Eskdale Herd-Boy | 1819 | Full title: The Eskdale Herd-Boy, a Scottish Tale for the Instruction and Amusem); 305] #Essays_of_Elia_nonfict (The Essays of Elia); 306] #Eunice (Eunice | 1809); 307] #Euro_Settlements_in_Am (An Account of the European Settlements in America, in six parts | 1757); 308] #Evelina_FB (Evelina: Or, The History of a Young Lady’s Entrance Into the World | 1778 | First edition published anonymously.); 309] #EveningHour_1827 (Sweet is the balmy evening hour | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line. Also appeared in the 1827 Pledg); 310] #EveningPrimrose_1810 (To the Evening Primrose. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 311] #EveningsRichest_1827 (Evening's richest colours glowing | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 312] #FaerieQu_ES (The Faerie Queene | ); 313] #Fair_Rosamund_DS_1827 (Fair Rosamund: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 314] #FairEleanor_1811 (Fair Eleanor: A Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 315] #FaithfulShepherdess_JF (The Faithful Shepherdess | Likely first performed in 1608 and first appeared in print in 1609.); 316] #Fall_Jerusalem_HM (The Fall of Jerusalem | 1820 | Full title: The Fall of Jerusalem: A Dramatic Poem.); 317] #FallofRobespierre (The Fall of Robespierre: An Historic Drama | 1794 | Three-act historical drama collaboratively written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge an); 318] #Fannys_Fairings_OV (Fanny's Fairings [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub); 319] #Father_Bocking_1810 (To my Father, on his Return from Bocking. May 29, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 320] #FavoriteBower_1810 (Written in a Favorite Bower, Previous to Leaving Home, May 14, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem refers to Mitford's home Bertram House and is dated May 14, 1809. This); 321] #Fawn_DS_1827 (The Fawn: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 322] #Fiesco_MRMplay (Fiesco | Mitford’s first attempt to write a full-length tragedy, never performed or print); 323] #Fiesco_play (Die Verschwörung des Fiesco zu Genua; or Fiesco’s Conspiracy at Genoa); 324] #FindensT_1838 (Findens' Tableaux: A Series of Picturesque Scenes of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1837 | 1838 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed five selections.); 325] #FindensT_1839 (Findens' Tableaux of the Affections; A series of Picturesque Illustrations of the Womanly Virtues | 1838 | 1839 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed four selections.); 326] #FindensT_1840 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXL | 1839 | 1840 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.); 327] #FindensT_1841 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXLI | 1840 | 1841 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.); 328] #FindensT_1843 (Finden's Tableaux of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1842 | A two-volume anthology of previously-published stories and poems from Finden's T); 329] #Fingal_Ossian (Fingal: An Ancient Epic Poem, in Six Books: Together with Several Other Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic Language, by James Macpherson. | 1762 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.); 330] #Fisherman_in_Married_State_OV (The Fisherman in his Married State [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It is a second part ); 331] #FishingSeat_1827 (The Fishing-Seat, Whiteknights [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 14 in the 1827 collection (page 307) . Also appeared in the 1827 Literary); 332] #Flirtation_Extraordinary_BR (Flirtation Extraordinary | 1835 | This story was also published in the English Annual for 1837 with the title A Se); 333] #Flora_Fest (Festival of Flora | 1818 | ); 334] #Florence_Macarthy_SO (Florence Macarthy: An Irish Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she was very much amused by it. Later, she writes that she ); 335] #ForgetMeNot_1827 (The Forget-Me-Not [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 3 in the 1827 collection (page 295) .); 336] #Foscari_MRMplay (Foscari: A Tragedy | 1826); 337] #Fragments_Ossian (Fragments of Ancient Poetry Collected in the Highlands of Scotland, and Translated from the Galic or Erse Language | 1760 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.); 338] #Frags_Dumas (Fragments des oeuvres d'Alexandre Dumas choisis à l'usage de la jeunesse par Miss Mitford | 1846); 339] #Freshwater_Fisherman_OV (The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It also appeared in ); 340] #FriendBirthday_1827 (To a Friend on Her Birthday [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 15 in the 1827 collection (page 308) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont); 341] #FriendsAlbum_1827 (Written in a Friend's Album [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 17 in the 1827 collection (page 310) . Also appeared in Marshall's Christ); 342] #FriendToLisbon_1827 (On the Departure of a Friend to Lisbon for the Recovery of Her Health [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 21 in the 1827 collection (page 315) .); 343] #FudgeFamilyParis (The Fudge Family in Paris | 1818); 344] #GammerGurton (Gammer Gurton’s Needle | Comic play written during the 1550s, considered one of the first comedies in Eng); 345] #Gaston_deBlondeville (Gaston de Blondeville | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep); 346] #Gaston_novel (Gaston de Blondeville); 347] #GaySummerMorn_1827 ('Tis a gay summer morn, and the sunbeams dance | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 348] #George3_CourtFam (George III, his court, and family | 1820); 349] #Geraniaceae (Geraniaceae: The Natural Order of Gerania, Illustrated by Coloured Figures and Descriptions; Comprising the Numerous and Beautiful Mule-varieties Cultivated in the Gardens of Great Britain, with Directions for Their Treatment | 1820—1830 | Printed in 5 volumes between 1820 and 1830.); 350] #GhostStories_OV (Ghost Stories [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 351] #Gleaner_FT (The Gleaner | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 352] #Glenarvon_fict (Glenarvon); 353] #Glenfergus_fict (Glenfergus. In Three Volumes | 1820); 354] #GlowWorm_1810 (To the Glow-Worm. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 355] #Going_to_Races_OV (Going to the Races [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu); 356] #Grace_Neville_OV (Grace Neville [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was previously p); 357] #Great_Farmhouse_LM (A Great Farmhouse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-02 | This sketch was collected in volume one of Our Village .); 358] #Great_Farmhouse_OV (A Great Farmhouse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It or); 359] #Greek_Plays_BR (The Greek Plays | 1835); 360] #Ground_Ash_CS (The Ground Ash | 1835); 361] #GulliversTr_JS (Jonathan Swift | 1726 | Amended 1735); 362] #Guy_Mannering (Guy Mannering); 363] #Hacho (Hacho; or, the Spell of St. Wilten | 1819 | Narrative poem in imitation of Scott, written while the author was at Cambridge.); 364] #HalidonHill (Halidon Hill; A Dramatic Sketch from Scottish History | 1822); 365] #Hamlet_play (Hamlet | 1603 | First performed around 1602 and first printed in 1603.); 366] #Hannah_LM (Hannah [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village in 1824.); 367] #Hannah_OV (Hannah [Our Village version] | 1824 | Hannahappeared as the second story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It was ori); 368] #HaroldEx (Harold the Exile | 1819 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously and with no publisher listed. Considered to be ); 369] #Harry_L_Talking_Gent_LM (Harry L., or The Talking Gentleman [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-08 | This sketch appeared in the August 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. It was lat); 370] #HavardChasI_play (The Tragedy of Charles I | 1747); 371] #HayCarrying_OV (Hay-Carrying [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was first publis); 372] #Haydon_Corresp (Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk | ); 373] #Haymakers_OV (The Haymakers. A Country Story [Our Village Version[ | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu); 374] #Haymaking_OV (Haymaking [alternate title assigned to Hay-Carrying in some later editions of Our Village]); 375] #Hazlitt_LecComic (Lectures on the English Comic Writers); 376] #Hazlitt_LecDrama (Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth); 377] #HeadlongHall (Headlong Hall | 1816 | Mitford rated it as famous.); 378] #HearingTalfourd_1827 (On Hearing Mr. Talfourd Plead in the Assize-Hall at Reading, On His First Circuit, March 1821 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 13 in the 1827 collection (page 306) .); 379] #Heart_of_Mid (The Heart of Midlothian | 1822); 380] #Heiress_MRM (The Heiress | Projected novel by Mary Russell Mitford, apparently never completed. Coles posit); 381] #Helen_play (Helen); 382] #Henry_Talbot_DS_1827 (Henry Talbot: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 383] #HenryIVpt1_play (Henry IV, part one | First printed in 1598; likely in performance before that date.); 384] #HenryIVpt2_play (Henry IV, part two | 1600); 385] #HenryV_play (Henry V); 386] #HenryVIII_play (Henry VIII); 387] #Heraline_LMH (Heraline; or, Opposite Proceedings | 1821 | 4 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entry of 9 August 9 18); 388] #HermitInLondon (The Hermit in London | 1819 | Published anonymously. 5 volumes. Full title: The Hermit In London, Or, Sketches); 389] #Hester_BR ( | 1835); 390] #Hist_Crusades_CM (The History of the Crusades | 1820 | Full title: The History of the Crusades, for the recovery and possession of the ); 391] #Hist_JSpinner (The History of Jenny Spinner | 1800 | Full title: The History of Jenny Spinner, the Hertfordshire Ghost. Written by he); 392] #Hist_ParisianMass (The History of the Parisian Massacre | 1810 | Full title: The History of the Parisian Massacre; Wherein all the minute circums); 393] #HistAcctAfrica_JL (Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late J. Leyden | 1817 | Full title: Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late); 394] #HistEdRichII_Howard (History of the Reigns of Edward and Richard II | 1690 | Published near the end of his life, this play involved Sir Robert, a royalist sy); 395] #HistEngland_Hume (The History of England | 1754—1761 | Hume wrote the six volumes of this monumental history in reverse chronological o); 396] #History_Burnet (Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time | 1818 | Full title: Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time from the restoration of King); 397] #History_Municipal_Church_St_Lawrence (A History of the Municipal Church of St. Lawrence, Reading | 1883 publication used by Needham to establish local histories and identities of ); 398] #HistWIndies_BE (History of the West Indies | 1798 | 5 volumes. Full title: The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British West In); 399] #HoflandsJerusalem_1827 (On Mr. Hofland's Picture of Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 2 in the 1827 collection (page 294) . Also appeared in the 1826 Amulet as); 400] #Holcroft_Mems (Memoirs of the Late Thomas Holcroft, Written by Himself and Continued to the Time of His Death | 1816); 401] #Honeymoon_play (The Honeymoon); 402] #Honor_OCallaghan_CS (Honor O'Callaghan | 1835); 403] #HopG_FT (Hop-Gathering | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 404] #Hopping_Bob_OV (Hopping Bob [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 405] #Horace_play (Horace | 1640); 406] #HoundandHorn_1827 (With hound and horn and huntsman's call | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 407] #Hudibras_SB (Hudibras | First published in three parts in 1663, 1664 and 1678, then as a single edition ); 408] #HumanLife_SR (Human Life: A Poem | 1819); 409] #Humphrey_Clinker_fict (The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker | 1771); 410] #Hypocrite (The Hypocrite | A satirical version of Moliere’splay, Tartuffe by Bickerstaff.); 411] #Il_Pensoroso (Il Pensoroso | 1645 | Written 1632, together with L' Allegro.); 412] #Iliad (The Iliad | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.); 413] #Illinois_Birkbeck (Letters from Illinois: Illustrated by a Map of the United States, Shewing Mr. Birkbeck’s Journey from Norfolk to Illinois and a Map of English Prairie and the Adjacent Country by John Melish | 1818 | Mitford likely read this edition, published in London; editions also appeared in); 414] #Illus_LitHist (Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century | 1818 | Full title: Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century, Con); 415] #Imitated_Italian_1810 (Imitated from the Italian. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 416] #Impromptu_Whitbread_1810 (Impromptu, On Hearing Mr. Whitbread Declare, On Lord Melville's Trial, That He Fondly Trusted his Name Would Descend with Honor to Posterity. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 417] #Independence (Independence | Author and date unidentified.); 418] #Independence_1827 (Independence | 1827 | 1827 narrative poem.); 419] #India_JournalResidence_Graham (Maria Graham | 1812 | Another edition was published in 1813 in Edinburgh by A. Constable and Company, ); 420] #Inez_deCastro_MRMplay (Inez de Castro; A Tragedy in Five Acts | ); 421] #InfantileLove_1811 (Infantile Love. | 1811 | 1811 poem. A portion of this poem appears as an epigraph in Poems by Eliza Gabri); 422] #Inferno_Dante (Inferno | 1472 | The Inferno is the first part of Dante Alighieri’s 14th-century epic poem %h3 Di); 423] #Inquisitive_Gent_OV (The Inquisitive Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 424] #InsaneWorld (The Insane World | 1818 | Full title: The Insane World; or, a Week in London. A Satire. Mitford dismissed ); 425] #IntendedRemoval_1827 (On an Intended Removal From a Favourite Residence. November, 1820 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 20 in the 1827 collection (page 314) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont); 426] #IntNarr_Bruce (An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Abyssinia | 1790 | Full title: An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Ab); 427] #Intro_DW (Introduction | 1854 | Introduction, first published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not); 428] #Intro_Farewell_to_OV_v5 (Introduction. Farewell to Our Village | 1832 | This sketch appeared as the introduction to the fifth and final volume of Our Vi); 429] #Introduction_ExtractsLetters_OV_v3 (Introduction [to Our Village, volume 3] | 1828 | This essay appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828.); 430] #Introductory_Letter_to_Miss_W_OV (Introductory Letter, to Miss W. [Our Village version] | 1830 | This appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village, by way of introduction. The l); 431] #InvariablePrin_WLB (The Invariable Principles of Poetry, in a Letter Addressed to Thomas Campbell, Esq.; Occasioned by Some Critical Observations in his Specimens of British Poets, Particularly Relating to the Poetical Character of Pope. | | Part of a controversy over the significance poetry of Alexander Pope in the earl); 432] #Ion_Euripides (Ion | -0414—-0412 | The ancient Greek play on which Thomas Noon Talfourd based his political tragedy); 433] #Ion_TNTplay (Ion); 434] #Irish_Haymaker_BR (The Irish Haymaker | 1835); 435] #Isabella_poem (Isabella, or the Pot of Basil | 1820 | Keats's narrative poem is adapted from the tale of Isabella and Lorenzo from Gio); 436] #Italian_AR (The Italian | 1797 | Full title: The Italian, or the Confessional of the Black Penitents. A Romance.); 437] #ItalianTrans_ChasD (Italian Translations | 1819 | Unpublished manuscript translations of works in Italian. Mitford reviewed the ma); 438] #Ivanhoe (Ivanhoe); 439] #Jack_Hatch_OV (Jack Hatch [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published); 440] #Jesse_Cliffe_CS (Jesse Cliffe | 1835 | This story was also published in The Library of Fiction; or Family Story Teller ); 441] #Jessy_Lucas_OV (Jessy Lucas [Our Village version] Jessy of Kibe's Farm [Bijou version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 442] #JoannasProphecy_1810 (Joanna's Prophecy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 443] #JohnBull_play (John Bull the Englishman’s Fireside, a Comedy in five acts. | 1805); 444] #JohnGospel_NewTest (The Gospel of John | Fourth Book of the New Testament of the Christian Bible, presumably (and contest); 445] #Johnson_Lives (Lives of the English Poets | 1783); 446] #Journal_Greenland (Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the years 1770 to 1778 | 1818 | Full title: Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the); 447] #Journal_India1817 (Journal of a Route Across India | 1819 | Full title: Journal of a Route Across India, Through Egypt, to England, in the L); 448] #Journal_Soldier71st (A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st | 1819 | Full title: A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st, or Glasgow Regiment, Highland Li); 449] #Julian_MRMplay (Julian; a Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823); 450] #Julius_Caesar_play (Julius Caesar | 1599 | Shakespeare's play about the assassination of Julius Caesar.); 451] #JuniusLtrs (The Letters of Junius | 1772 | Collection of letters written pseudonymously between 1769 and 1772 and colleccte); 452] #Kehama (The Curse of Kehama: A Poem in Two Volumes | 1810); 453] #Kenilworth_WS (Kenilworth | 1821); 454] #King_Harwood_BR (King Harwood | 1835); 455] #King_John_play (The Life and Death of King John | Likely written in the mid-1590s; not published until it appeared in the First Fo); 456] #King_John_Valpy (King John, an Historical Tragedy, Altered from Shakespeare, as it was Acted at Reading School for the Subscription to the Naval Pillar, to be Erected in Honor of the Naval Victories of the Present War | 1800); 457] #King_Lear_play (King Lear); 458] #KingAnecd (Political and Literary Anecdotes of His Own Times. | According to the title page, a memoir of Dr. William King, written in his sevent); 459] #KingCoal (King Coal's Levée | 1819 | Full title: King Coal's Levee, Or Geological Etiquette, With Explanatory Notes; ); 460] #KingsPg_FT (The King's Page | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 461] #Knights_Swan (Knights of the Swan | 1796 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Knights of the Swan: or, the court of Charlemagne: a ); 462] #Lallegro (John Milton | 1645 | Poem found in Milton’s 1645 Poems of Mr. John Milton both English and Latin, Com); 463] #Lamb_Chas_NewStyleActing (Charles Lamb); 464] #Lamb_Chas_Works (Charles Lamb | ); 465] #Lament_Tasso (Lament of Tasso); 466] #Laodamia_WW (Laodamia | 1815); 467] #Last_Letters_Jac_Ortis (The Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis | 1802 | Epistolary novel read by Mitford who describes it in her Journal on 15 June 1820); 468] #LeavingPicture_1827 (On Leaving a Favourite Picture [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 16 in the 1827 collection (page 309) . Appeared in the 1821 New Monthly M); 469] #LecComic_WHaz (Lectures on the English Comic Writers, delivered at the Surry Institution | 1819 | Spelled Surry on title page.); 470] #LecDramatic_WHaz (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth, Delivered at the Surry Institution | 1820); 471] #LecPoetry_WHaz (Lectures on the English Poets, delivered at the Surrey Institution | 1819); 472] #Lects_WmLawrence (Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and the Natural History of Man | 1819 | Full title: Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and t); 473] #LectsHistLit_Schlegel (Lectures on the History of Literature: Ancient and Modern | 1819); 474] #Lectures_Dramatic (A course of lectures on dramatic art and literature | 1815 | Translation of Schlegel's Vorlesungen über dramatische Kunst und Litteratur, fi); 475] #Lectures_JOpie (Lectures on Painting | 1809 | Full title: Lectures on Painting, Delivered at the Royal Academy of Arts: with a); 476] #Lectures_Paint_HF (Lectures on Painting: Delivered at the Royal Academy, March, 1801. | 1801); 477] #LegendGoodWomen (The Legend of Good Women | A collection of legends believed to be composed during the 1380s.); 478] #Legends_B (Metrical Legends of Exalted Characters | 1821 | ); 479] #LeightonPr (Leighton Priory | Author and date unidentified.); 480] #Letters_Hearne_Aubrey (Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: To Which are Added, Hearne’s Journeys to Reading, and to Whaddon Hall, the Seat of Browne Willis, Esq., and Lives of Eminent Men by John Aubrey, Esq., the Whole Now First Published from the Originals | 1813); 481] #Letters_NItaly (Letters from the North of Italy | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Letters from the North of Italy: Addressed to Henry Hallam, ); 482] #Letters_to_Heber (Letters to R. Heber, Esq., containing critical remarks on the series of novels beginning with Waverley and an attempt to ascertain their author | 1821); 483] #LIEO_Poems (Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems | 1820 | Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, published in July 1820, ); 484] #Life_Burke_RB (The Life of Burke | 1800 | Full title: The Life of Edmund Burke: Comprehending an Impartial Account of his ); 485] #Life_DukeofMarl_WC (Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough: With His Original Correspondence; Collected from the Family Records at Blenheim, and Other Authentic Sources. Illustrated with Portraits, Maps, and Military Plans. | 1818); 486] #Life_LadyRussell (Some Account of the Life of Rachael Wriothesley, Lady Russell, by the editor of Madam Du Deffand’s letters. | 1819 | Source: HathiTrust); 487] #Life_of_Johnson (Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. | 1791 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D., Comprehending an Accoun); 488] #Life_Wesley (The Life of Wesley | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Life of Wesley; and the Rise and Progress of Methodis); 489] #Life_WmRussell (The Life of William, Lord Russell | 1820 | Full title: The Life of William, Lord Russell; with some account of the times in); 490] #LifeRichard2 (The Life and Reign of King Richard the Second, by a Person of Quality | 1681); 491] #Lights_Shadows (Lights and Shadows of American Life | 1832); 492] #LilyBells_1827 (The lily bells are wet with dew | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 493] #Lit_Pocket_Bk (The Literary Pocket Book, or Companion for the Lover of Art and Nature | Literary almanac edited by Leigh Hunt that includes original poems by P. Shelley); 494] #Little_Miss_Wren_OV (Little Miss Wren [Our Village version] Little Miss Wren: a Sketch [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 495] #Little_Rachel_OV (Little Rachel [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 496] #Lives_HaydnMoz (The Lives of Haydn and Mozart | 1818 | Written by Marie-Henri Beyle, better known as Stendahl, under the pseudonym L. A); 497] #London_Visitor_CS (The London Visitor | 1835); 498] #Lost_Dahlia_CS (The Lost Dahlia | 1835); 499] #Lost_Found_OV (Lost and Found [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 500] #Lost_Keys_OV (The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 501] #Lost_Won_OV (Lost and Won [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be); 502] #LostPearl_FT (Ceylon. The Lost Pearl | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 503] #Louisa_OV (Louisa [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 504] #LoveSickMaid_1811 (The Love-Sick Maid; An Imitation of the Writers of the Seventeenth Century. [1811 version] | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 505] #Ltrs_Cont_JW (Letters from the Continent | 1819 | Full title: Letters from the Continent During the Months of October, November, a); 506] #Lucy_LM (Lucy [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-09 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 507] #Lucy_OV (Lucy [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the sixth sketch in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It); 508] #Lucy_Revisited_LM (Lucy Re-visited [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-08 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in August 1824. It was re-titled for); 509] #Macbeth_play (Macbeth); 510] #Mademoiselle_Therese_OV (Mademoiselle Therese [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 511] #Mademoiselle_Tournon (Mademoiselle de Tournon | 1820 | ); 512] #Mahomet_play (Mahomet | 1741); 513] #Maids_Tragedy_play (The Maid’s Tragedy); 514] #Manfred (Manfred); 515] #ManinMoon_Hone (The Man in the Moon | 1820 | Full title: The Man in the Moon, A Speech from the Throne to the Senate of Lunat); 516] #Manners (Manners: A Novel | 1817 | 3 vols. Written under the pseudonym Madame Panache. Mitford rated it a pretty th); 517] #MansfieldPk (Mansfield Park | 1814 | 3 volumes. Full title: Mansfield Park: A Novel. Published as by the Author of Pr); 518] #Marianne_OV (Marianne [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 519] #MariaWinningCup_1810 (On Maria's Winning the Cup, At the Ilsley Coursing Meeting. November 9, 1808. Inscribed to W. Cobbett, Esq. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 520] #MarinersTale_1811 (The Mariner's Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 521] #Marino_Faliero (Marino Faliero); 522] #Mark_Bridgman_BR (Mark Bridgman | 1835); 523] #Marmion_WS (Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field | 1808); 524] #Marriage_SF (Marriage: A Novel | 1818 | Mitford records that she liked it very much; she also says that it made me laugh); 525] #Masque_Seasons_DS_1827 (Masque of the Seasons: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 526] #Materials_WB (Materials for Thinking | 1806); 527] #MaternalAffection_1811 (Maternal Affection. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 528] #Matthew_Shore_OV (Matthew Shore [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 529] #Mazeppa_By (Mazeppa, a Poem. | 1819 | Mitford records that she liked it very much.); 530] #Measure_Measure_play (William Shakespeare | 1623 | Comedy likely written in 1603 or 1604, first known to be published in the First ); 531] #Medecine_esprit (La Médecine de l’esprit | 1753); 532] #Melincourt (Melincourt | 1817 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.); 533] #Melmoth_CM (Melmoth the Wanderer: A Tale | 1820); 534] #Memoirs_of_the_life_of_Colonel_Hutchinson (Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson | 1806 | Lady Lucy Hutchinson composed the Memoirs sometime between the date of her husba); 535] #Memory_John_Moore_1810 (To The Memory of Sir John Moore. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 536] #Mems_AnneBoleyn (Memoirs of the Life of Anne Boleyn, Queen of Henry VIII. By Miss Benger. | 1818 | 2 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entries of March 25, 2); 537] #Mems_Conde (Memoirs of the Life of the Great Condé | 1807 | Translated into English from the French by Fanny Holcroft. Mitford called them n); 538] #Mems_Curran (Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the Right Honourable John Philpot Curran | 1817 | Full title: Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the ); 539] #Mems_ElizHamilton (Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, with a selectio); 540] #Mems_Evelyn (Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writing of John Evelyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writings of John Evelyn, Esq. ); 541] #Mems_Huet (Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranches | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranche); 542] #Mems_Martyn (Memoirs of the Rev. Henry Martyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoir of the Rev. Henry Martyn, B.D. late fellow of St. John's Coll); 543] #Mems_Montrose (Memoirs of the Most Renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs of the most renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose. Tran); 544] #Mems_Napoleon1815 (Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1820 | Mitford rated it rather dull but then also called it a most interesting book.); 545] #Mems_RLEdgeworth (Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth, Esq. begun by himsel); 546] #Mems_Sidney_TZ (Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Sir Philip Sidney | 1808 | Mitford rated it as stupid.); 547] #Mems_Temple (Mémoires Particuliers de la Captivité de la Famille Royale de la Tour de Temple | 1817 | Full title: Mémoires particuliers, formant avec l'ouvrage de M. Hue et le Journa); 548] #Mems_Vaux (Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life of James Hardy Vaux | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Volume 1: Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life ); 549] #Mems_WilhelminaofPrussia (Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina | 1812 | Full title: Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina: princess royal of Prussia, m); 550] #MemsQE1 (Memoirs of the Court of Elizabeth, Queen of England | 1818 | 2 volumes.); 551] #Merchant_of_Venice_play (The Merchant of Venice); 552] #Merope_play (Merope); 553] #Merry_Wives_play (The Merry Wives of Windsor | 1602 | First printed in 1602; believed to have been written prior to 1597.); 554] #Metamorphoses (Metamorphōseōn librī | 0008 | First translated into English by William Caxton in 1480.); 555] #Methought_sonnet23 (Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint | 1673 | Milton's sonnet later designated 23, Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint, som); 556] #MidsummerNtsD (A Midsummer Night's Dream); 557] #Milton_PoemsI (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1645 | Milton's first published collection of poems.); 558] #Milton_PoemsII (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1673); 559] #MiltonWksLife_CS (The Prose Works of John Milton: with a Life of the Author | 1806 | Mitford rated it very good.); 560] #Minstrelsy_WS (Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border: Consisting of Historical and Romantic Ballads, Collected in the Southern Counties of Scotland; with a Few of Modern Date, Founded upon Local Tradition | 1802); 561] #MiscPoems_Dryden (Miscellany Poems, in two parts. Containing new translations of Virgil’s Eclogues, Ovid’s Love-elegies, several parts of Virgil’s Æneids, Lucretius, Theocritus, Horace, &c. With several original poems, never before printed. | 1688); 562] #Miseries_JB (The Miseries of Human Life, Or the Last Groans of Timothy Testy and Samuel Sensitive; with a few supplementary sighs from Mrs. Testy. With which are now for the first time Interspersed, Varieties, Incidental to the Principal Matter, In Prose and Verse. In Nine Additional Dialogues, as Overheard by James Beresford, A.M. Fellow of Merton-College, Oxford | 1807); 563] #MiserMarried (The Miser Married: A Novel | 1813 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it a clever thing.); 564] #Miss_Philly_Filkin_CS (Miss Philly Filkin, the China Woman | 1835); 565] #Mission_Ashantee (Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee | 1819 | Full title: Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee: with a statistical accou); 566] #Missionary_SO (The Missionary: An Indian Tale | 1811 | ); 567] #MissMurray_1810 (To the Hon. Miss Murray, with Miss Rowden's "Poetical Introduction to Botany." | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 568] #Mod_Antiques_LM (Modern Antiques [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-03 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 569] #Mod_Antiques_OV (Modern Antiques [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I); 570] #MoleCatcher_OV (The Mole-catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 571] #Monastery (The Monastery | As Mitford reads, she rates it not very good, not so good as some of his Novels ); 572] #Montorio_CM (The Fatal Revenge; or, the Family of Montorio | 1807); 573] #Moonlight_Adventure_OV (A Moonlight Adventure [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 574] #Moore_ViewItaly (A View of Society and Manners in Italy: with Anecdotes relating to some Eminent Characters | ); 575] #MoralTales_ME (Moral Tales for Young People | 1801 | In 3 volumes. Includes: Forester, The Prussian Vase, The Knapsack, The Good Aunt); 576] #Mordaunt (Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Countries | 1800 | Full title: Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Coun); 577] #More_of_OurVillage_LM (More of Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-12 | This sketch was published in The Lady's Magazine in December 1824. It was re-tit); 578] #Morland (Morland | Author and date unidentified.); 579] #Morning_Ramble_OV (A Morning Ramble | Subtitle of the Our Village, third volume story, Wheat Hoeing, that was adopted ); 580] #MossyMs (Manuscript tribute to Mossy | Manuscript tribute to Mossy, written after his death.); 581] #MossyPoem (Manuscript poem to Mossy | Manuscript poem to Mossy, written after his death.); 582] #MotherSleeping_1827 (To My Mother Sleeping [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 6 in the 1827 collection (page 299) .); 583] #Mr_Jos_Hanson_CS (Mr. Joseph Hanson, the Haberdasher | 1835); 584] #MRM_Bio_Selected_OV_Blackie (Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?]); 585] #Mrs_Hollis_BR (Mrs. Hollis, the Fruiterer | 1835); 586] #Mrs_Mosse_OV (Mrs. Mosse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the twentieth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.); 587] #Mrs_Tompkins_BR (Mrs. Tompkins, the Cheesemonger | 1835); 588] #Much_Ado_play (Much Ado About Nothing); 589] #MungoPark_1810 (Lines, Suggested by the Uncertain Fate of Mungo Park, the Celebrated African Traveller. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 590] #My_Godmothers_OV (My Godmothers [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 591] #MyGarden_MRM (My Garden: A Nineteenth-Century Writer on her English Cottage Garden | 1990); 592] #MysteriousWife (The Mysterious Wife: a novel | 1797 | 4 volumes. Minerva Press. Published under the pseudonym Gabrielli.); 593] #Mystery_TG (Mystery, or Forty Years Ago: A Novel | 1820 | 3 vols. Mitford considered it not very good.); 594] #Napoleon_memoir_nonfict (Mémoires pour servir à l’histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1819—1820 | Two volume publication: the first volume was published in 1819 and the second in); 595] #NapoleonPeint (Napoleon Peint Par Lui-même. Extraits du Véritable Manuscrit de Napoleon Bonaparte, par un Amércain | 1818 | ); 596] #Narr_Algiersin1816 (A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816 | 1819 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816, under the); 597] #Narr_Campaign_Saxony (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 1813 | 1820 | Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 18); 598] #Narr_EgyptCataracts (Narrative of a Journey in Egypt and the Country Beyond the Cataracts | 1817); 599] #Narr_SAmPatriots (Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Join the South American Patriots | 1818 | Full title: Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Jo); 600] #Narr_Senegal (Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816 | 1817 | Full title: Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816; Undertaken by Order of the); 601] #Narrative_Eqypt_RW (A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt | 1800 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt. Under Sir Ralph Abercrombie.); 602] #NarrativePoems (Narrative Poems on the Female Character in the Various Relations of Human Life | 1813); 603] #Nat_Calendar (A Naturalist's Calandar: with Observations in Various Branches of Natural History | 1795 | This book, published posthumously, gives precise accounts of the actions of anim); 604] #Nat_Hist_Selborne (The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne | 1789 | This influential book of nature writing is ostensibly formed from 110 letters ad); 605] #NaturalisHist (Naturalis Historiæ | 0077—0079 | Encyclopedic work of thirty-seven books, organized in ten volumes. Source: LBT); 606] #NearRuinedFarm_1811 (Stanzas Written Near a Ruined Farm. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 607] #New_Married_Couple_OV (A New Married Couple [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 608] #NewTestament_Bible (The New Testament | The second half of the Christian Bible, containing scriptures composed in Greek ); 609] #NewWhigGuide (The New Whig Guide | 1819 | Authorship attributed to Viscount Henry John Temple Palmerston John Wilson Croke); 610] #NewYearsDay_1827 (New Year's Day. 1819 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 11 in the 1827 collection (page 304) .); 611] #NightmareAbbey (Nightmare Abbey | 1818 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.); 612] #NightMay_1810 (The Night of May. To Miss W-- | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 613] #NoFiction (No Fiction | 1820 | Full title: No Fiction: a narrative founded on recent and interesting facts. Mit); 614] #Northanger_Abbey (Northanger Abbey | 1817 | First issued together with Persuasion in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Persuasio); 615] #Note_OVBlackwoodsEd (Note [to Our Village, Blackwoods Educational Series edition, 1884] | 1884 | Introductory note to the Blackwood's Educational Series edition of Our Village.); 616] #Obs_CauseEffect (Observations on the Nature and Tendency of the Doctrine of Mr. Hume, concerning the relation of cause and effect | 1806); 617] #Obs_Landscape (Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening | 1818 | Full title: Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening: Incl); 618] #ODonnel_SO (O’Donnel: A National Tale | 1814); 619] #Odyssey (The Odyssey | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.); 620] #Oedipus_play (Oedipus Tyrranus | Mitford tends to refer to this play by its Greek title, Oedipus Tyrranus.); 621] #Old_Bachelor_OV (An Old Bachelor [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the sixteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824); 622] #Old_David_Dykes_BR (Old David Dykes | 1835); 623] #Old_Emigre_BR (The Old Emigre | 1835); 624] #Old_Gipsy_OV (The Old Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 625] #Old_Master_Green_OV (Old Master Green. A Village Sketch. [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 626] #Old_Mortality (Old Mortality); 627] #OldManor_CS (Old Manor House | 1793 | ); 628] #OldTestament_Bible (The Old Testament | The collection of ancient Hebrew scriptures comprising the first half of the Chr); 629] #Olive_Hathaway_OV (Olive Hathaway [Our Village version] Olive Hathaway: a Village Sketch [Pledge of Friendship version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 630] #OnRdngBalldWW_MRMpoem (On Reading a Ballad of Wordsworth | 1822-08-31); 631] #Orestes_PB (Orestes in Argos; a Tragedy in Five Acts, by the late Peter Bayley, Esq. | 1825 | After his sudden death in 1823, Peter Bayley’s wife arranged to have his work pe); 632] #Orestes_play (Orestes | -0408); 633] #Orig_Miniature (The Original of the Miniature. A Novel. | 1816 | 4 volumes. Printed at the Minerva Press.); 634] #Ormond_novel (Harrington, A Tale, and Ormond, A Tale. In Three Volumes. Vol.I | 1817); 635] #Othello_play (Othello); 636] #Otto (Otto of Wittelsbach: A Tragedy | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep); 637] #Otto_Babo (Otto von Wittelsbach | 1783 | First performed in 1782. German tragedy based on the life of Otto II of Wittelsb); 638] #Our_Maying_OV (Our Maying | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in .); 639] #Our_Village1st_ed (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. [Volume I.] [volume one] | 1824 | The first edition, first volume of Our Village appeared without a volume number ); 640] #Our_Village2nd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume II. [volume two] | 1826); 641] #OurVillage_3rd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume III. [volume three] | 1828); 642] #OurVillage_4th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume IV. [volume four] | 1830); 643] #OurVillage_5th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume V. [volume five] | 1832); 644] #OurVillage_BelfordsClarke (Our Village [Belfords Clarke 1880 edition] Editor Introduction [Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, Belfords Clarke editions] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1880 | Edition reprinted from the 1879 illustrated edition published by Sampson Low, Ma); 645] #OurVillage_Bell (Our Village, New edition, second series [George Bell and Sons, first published 1848]The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1877 | Re-issue of the 1848 Henry G. Bohn edition after George Bell & Sons had bought i); 646] #OurVillage_BlackwoodsEd (Our Village [Blackwoods Educational Series, 1884] | 1884 | A selected edition of Our Village stories for the juvenile market. It reprints t); 647] #OurVillage_Bohn (Our Village, Henry G. Bohn, New Edition, First Series The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1848 | A two-volume edition of Our Village stories that reprints most titles from the s); 648] #OurVillage_Caldwell (Our Village [Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and); 649] #OurVillage_CountryPictures_WalterScott (Our Village: Country Pictures [Walter Scott edition, 1884, 1888] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village story] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Another Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh A Morning Ramble [alternate title of Wheat Hoeing Whitsun-Eve Haymaking [alternate title of Hay-Carrying Our Maying Lost and Found Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Harry Lewington A Castle in the Air Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls A Visit to Richmond Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1886—1888 | An illustrated edition of selected sketches from Our Village. The contents are o); 650] #OurVillage_DentEveryman (Our Village [Dent Everyman edition, 1936, 1951] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Dent Everyman series edition, 1936, 1951] MRM's Dedication to her Father Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1936—1951 | A much-republished selected edition of Our Village stories, published by Dent in); 651] #OurVillage_FolioSoc (Our Village [Folio Society, 1996] Editor's Introduction, Our Village, Folio Society, 1996 Dedication to her father Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velveet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1997 | Based on the volume published by George G. Harrap in 1947, illustrated by Shirle); 652] #OurVillage_Hurst (OurVillage [Hurst edition, 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and); 653] #OurVillage_ISIS (Our Village [ISIS Clear Type Classics, 1992] Country Pictures Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1992 | Selected large-print hardcover edition of Our Village stories. The edition compi); 654] #OurVillage_JMDent (Temple Classics | 1900—1902—1906—1930—1935 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches that went through multiple editions in ); 655] #OurVillage_Macmillan (Our Village, 1 volume, Macmillan edition, 1893 Editor Introduction [Our Village, Macmillan edition, 1893] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village (story)] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copose Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1893 | This selected edition of the Our Village stories is illustrated with black and w); 656] #OurVillage_OUP_pb (Our Village [Oxford University Press edition, 1982] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Oxford University Press pb edition, 1982] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. A farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1982 | Selected paperback edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illustrated 194); 657] #OurVillage_Penguin (Our Village [Penguin edition, 1987] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987| Our Village [story, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor the Talking Gentleman Walks in the Country. Nutting A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy A New Married Couple A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Lost and Won Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races A Castle in the Air Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1987 | Selected edition of Our Village stories, drawn largely from the first four volum); 658] #OurVillage_PrenticeHall (Our Village [Prentice Hall 1986 edition] Our Village [story, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy A Christmas Party Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Lost and Found Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf The Haymakers | 1986 | A selected edition of sketches from Our Village, based on the edition originally); 659] #OurVillage_SampsonLowMSR (Our Village. Illustrated. New and cheaper edition. [Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, 1882] Editor's Introduction [to Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington edition, 1882] Our Village [story] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1882 | This edition includes only the Walks in the Country stories. It contains numerou); 660] #OurVillage_story (Our Village | 1821 | This refers to the draft sketch of the story whose title became eponymous with M); 661] #OurVillage_story_LM (Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12 | This sketch became the first and standard introductory story to volume one of Ou); 662] #OurVillage_story_OV (Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | The sketch entitled Our Village appeared as the first sketch in the Our Village ); 663] #OurVillage_TicknorReadFields (Our Village [story] | 1853 | This edition re-prints virtually all of the Our Village stories, with the except); 664] #OurVillage_Unit (Our Village [Unit Library edition, 1902] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village, sketch [Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood Early Recollections. The English Teacher Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland | 1902 | A selected edition of stories from Our Village. It reprints virtually the whole ); 665] #OurVillage_WhiteLion (Our Village [White Lion edition, 1976] Publisher's Note and Introduction [Our Village, White Lion edition, 1976] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1976 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illlustrated 1947 George ); 666] #OV ( | All editions of Our Village as a collection of related sketches and stories, eve); 667] #OV_Harrap_1947 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1947] | 1947 | This 1947 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes); 668] #OV_Macmillan_1893 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1893] | 1893 | This 1893 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes); 669] #PaintersDa_DS_1827 (The Painter's Daughter: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 670] #PaintersDa_DS_LM (The Artist: A Dramatic Sketch | 1822 | First published in The Lady's Magazine, new series 2, volume 3 (1822) under this); 671] #ParadiseLost (John Milton | ); 672] #Parisina (Parisina | 1816); 673] #Parting_Glance_OV (A Parting Glance at Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch was the twenty-fourth and final story to appear in volume one of Our); 674] #Parvenus (Les Parvenus; ou, Les Aventures de Julien Delmours | 1819); 675] #Pattys_New_Hat_OV (Patty's New Hat [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been previous); 676] #Pen_Sword_1810 (The Pen and the Sword. Inscribed to the Rt. Hon. R. B. Sheridan. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 677] #Pendennis_WT (The History of Pendennis: His Fortunes and Misfortunes, His Friends and His Greatest Enemy | 1849); 678] #Peoples_Charter (People's Charter | 1838 | The formal declaration of the Chartist movement, which the Chartists strove to h); 679] #Percival (Percival: or, Nature Vindicated: a Novel. | 1801 | Mitford called it a stupid old Novel. Source: Journal.); 680] #Percy_Reliques (Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, consisting of Old Heroic Ballads, Songs, and other Pieces of our Earlier Poets, Together with Some of Later Date | 1765); 681] #Peregrine_Pickle (The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, In Which are Included Memoirs of a Lady of Quality | 1751); 682] #Persuasion (Persuasion | 1817 | First issued together with Northanger Abbey in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Per); 683] #Peter_Jenkins_BR (Peter Jenkins, the Poulterer | 1835); 684] #PeterBell_JHR (Peter Bell: A Lyrical Ballad | ); 685] #PeterBell_WW (Peter Bell. A Tale in Verse. | 1817 | Mitford reports that she liked it and the parody by J. H. Reynolds very much. So); 686] #Peters_Letters_novel (Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk | | Mitford rated it very good. In journal entry Saturday 4 September 1819 .); 687] #Petrarque_deG (Pétrarque et Laura | 1819); 688] #Phedre_play (Phèdre | 1677 | A play retelling the plot of the ancient Greek Hyppolytus by Euripedes, concentr); 689] #Philaster_play (Philaster | 1620 | First performed before 1611, first printed in 1620.); 690] #Philoctetes_play (Philoctetes); 691] #PictTour_FrSw (A Picturesque Tour Through France, Switzerland, on the Banks of the Rhine, and Through Part of the Netherlands in the Year 1816 | 1817 | Mitford rated it as stupid. Unsigned, author unknown.); 692] #Pilgrim_Cross (The Pilgrim of the Cross | 1805 | 4 vols. Full title: The Pilgrim of the Cross: or, the Chronicles of Christabelle); 693] #Pirate_novel (The Pirate | 1822 | ); 694] #Pizarro_play (Pizarro); 695] #Pl_Friendship (The Pleasures of Friendship: A Poem, in two parts | 1810 | Long poem, first published in 1810 and reprinted in 1812 and 1818.); 696] #PO_BerkshireDir (Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, and Oxfordshire; with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | 1847—1854 | Text and page images of the 1854 edition may be accessed through the University ); 697] #PO_Directory_Berkshire (The Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | A series of directories of local gentry and tradespeople in the counties of the ); 698] #Poems1645_Milton (John Milton | 1645); 699] #Poems_1st_ed_MRM (Poems | 1810 | 1 volume.); 700] #Poems_2nd_ed_MRM (Poems: Second Edition with Considerable Additions | 1811 | 2 volumes.); 701] #Poems_2vols_WW (Poems by William Wordsworth [...] in Two Volumes | 1815 | 2 volumes. Full title: Poems by William Wordsworth: Including Lyrical Ballads, a); 702] #PoemsOdes_Valpy1804 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. To Which is Added Some Account of the Lives of Rev. Mr. Benwell and Rev. Dr. Butt | 1804); 703] #PoemsOdes_Valpy1826 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. Second edition. | 1826); 704] #PopetoArbuthnot (An Epistle from Mr. Pope to Dr. Arbuthnot (1734)); 705] #PopularTales_ME (Popular Tales | 1804 | In 3 volumes. Volume 1 includes: Lame Jervas, The Will, The Limerick Gloves, Out); 706] #Portrait_Blanch_1811 (A Portrait. [from Blanch, an Unfinished Poem.] | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 707] #Portugal_1811 (Portugal. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 708] #PR_JLeyden (The Poetical Remains of the Late Dr. John Leyden, with Memoirs of his Life, by the Rev. James Morton. | Source: HathiTrust); 709] #Pratt_1810 (To Mr. Pratt. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 710] #Prayer_Souls_Desire (Prayer is the Soul's Sincere Desire | 1818 | ); 711] #Preface_OV_v1 (Preface [to Our Village, volume one] | 1824); 712] #Preface_OV_v2 (Preface [to Our Village, volume two] | 1826); 713] #Preface_OV_v3 (Preface [to Our Village, volume three] | 1828); 714] #Preface_OV_v4 (Preface [to Our Village, volume four] | 1830); 715] #Prelude_WW (The Prelude, or, Growth of a Poet's Mind: An Autobiographical Poem | 1850 | Autobiographical narrative poem, originally intended to introduce a poetic work ); 716] #Pride_and_Prejudice (Pride and Prejudice: A Novel | 1813); 717] #PrioryTales_H (Tales of the Priory | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading these tales in her Journal entries of July 1820, findin); 718] #Prisoner_Chillon (Prisoner of Chillon); 719] #PrivateCorr_BF (The Private Correspondence of Benjamin Franklin | 1817 | Full title: The private correspondence of Benjamin Franklin [ . . .]: comprising); 720] #PrivLife_Misc_JN (Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father | 1818 | Full title: Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father. To which are added miscell); 721] #Prologue_ReadingSchool_1810 (Prologue, Intended to Have Been Spoken Before the First Part of Henry the Fourth, Acted by the Gentlemen of the Reading School Meeting, October 23, 1809. Inscribed to the Rev. Dr. Valpy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 722] #Prom_Chained (Prometheus Chained | One of R. Potter’s eighteenth-century translations of Aeschylus’s plays, from hi); 723] #PromBound_Aesch (Prometheus Bound | The authorship of this influential ancient Greek tragedy was classically attribu); 724] #ProudL_FT (The Proud Ladye. A Chapter from the Chronicles of Adlersberg. | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 725] #Pub_Note_Intro_WhiteLion (Publisher's Note and Introduction); 726] #Quakers_EL (The Quakers: A Tale | 1817); 727] #Queen_of_the_Meadow_OV (The Queen of the Meadow [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 728] #QueenhooH (Queenhoo Hall, A Romance | 1808 | 3 volumes. Published with Ancient Times, a drama as volume 4.); 729] #QueensWake (The Queen’s Wake: a Legendary Poem | 1813 | A long poem, first published in 1813, purporting to be a collection of poems and); 730] #Quiet_Gentlewoman_OV (A Quiet Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 731] #RatCatcher_OV (The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu); 732] #Raymond (Raymond | Author and date unidentified.); 733] #RecluseScotland (The Recluse of the Appenines; or the Automaton Chief. A Romance. | 1820 | Read by Mitford, as recorded in her Journal in September 1820.); 734] #Recoll_Reign_GeoIII (Recollections and Reflections, Personal and Political, as Connected with Public Affairs, During the Reign of George III | 1822); 735] #Recollections (Recollections of a Literary Life; or, Books, Places, and People | 1852 | London edition in three volumes; New York edition in two volumes.); 736] #Remarkable_Character_of_Old_School_LM (A Remarkable Character of the Old School [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01-31 | This sketch was published in the January 31, 1824 issue of The Lady's Magazine. ); 737] #Remarks_HistEng (Remarks on the History of England | 1743 | Full title: Remarks on the History of England: From the Minutes of Humphry Oldca); 738] #Remarks_Italy (Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, During an Excursion in Italy, in the Years 1802 and 1803. | 1816 | Mitford records she was charmed with it in her journal entry of Monday 15 Februa); 739] #Remarks_scepticism (Remarks on Scepticism | 1819 | Full title: Remarks on Scepticism especially as it is connected with the subject); 740] #Residuary_Legatee_OV (The Residuary Legatee. A True Story [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe); 741] #ReturnFair_FT (The Return from the Fair | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 742] #Revenge_play (The Revenge: a Tragedy | First acted in 1721.); 743] #RevisitingSchool_1810 (On Revisiting the School Where I was Educated. Addressed to Mrs. Rowden, of Hans Place. | 1810 | 1810 poem addressed to Mitford's friend and former teacher Frances Rowden, refer); 744] #RevoltofIslam (The Revolt of Islam: A Poem, in Twelve Cantos | 1816 | The second published version of a poem that Percy Bysshe Shelley originally titl); 745] #Reynolds_LitWks (The Literary Works of Sir Joshua Reynolds | 1819 | Full title: The Literary Works Of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Knight. Late President Of); 746] #Rhododaphne (Rhododaphne: Or, The Thessalian Spell: A Poem | 1818); 747] #RichardIII_play (The Life and Death of Richard the Third | Dramatizes King Richard III’s usurpation of the throne of England. The date of c); 748] #Richelieu_play (Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy. A Play in Five Acts | 1839 | Loosely based on the historical Cardinal Richelieu; title role originated by Wil); 749] #Rienzi (Rienzi; a Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1828 | There appears to be no printed edition of Rienzi authorized by Mitford upon its ); 750] #Rienzi_EBL (Rienzi, The Last of the Roman Tribunes | 1835 | Edward Bulwer-Lytton's novel; a 1835 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienz); 751] #Rienzi_Wagner (Rienzi, der Letzte der Tribunen | 1842 | Richard Wagner's opera; an 1842 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienzi, th); 752] #Rival_Sisters (The Rival Sisters, a Poem in Three Cantos | 1813); 753] #Rivals_RBS (The Rivals: A Comedy | First performed in 1776 at Covent Garden Theatre. Upon reading the play, Mitford); 754] #RobinsonCrusoe_DD (The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner" | 1719 | Full title: The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of Yo); 755] #Rome_ThreeMonths_Graham (Three Months Passed in the Mountains East of Rome: during the year 1819 | | Illustrated with engravings. Source: Google Books and WorldCAT. Mitford mentions); 756] #Romeo_Juliet (Romeo and Juliet | 1597 | Shakespeare's tragedy, first published in 1597 in a quarto edition that is missi); 757] #Rosamund_Story_of_Plague_BR (Rosamund. A Story of the Plague | 1835); 758] #Rosedale_OV (Rosedale [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village .); 759] #RoundheadsDa_FT (The Roundhead's Daughter | 1839 | A short story by Mitford set during the English Republican Era and the Restorati); 760] #Rule_a_Wife_play (Rule a Wife and Have a Wife | Play was first performed in 1624 and first printed in 1640); 761] #RusticT_FT (The Rustic Toilet | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 762] #Ruth_OT (Book of Ruth | Book of the Old Testament, considered a historical book in the canon of the the ); 763] #Sacrifice_Isabel (The Sacrifice Of Isabel: A Poem. | 1816 | Mitford rated it an elegant Poem.); 764] #Sad_Shepherd_BJ (The Sad Shepherd: Or, A Tale of Robin Hood, a Fragment | Appeared in this form in 1783, edited by Francis Godolphin Waldron and Peter Wha); 765] #Sadak_Kalasrade (Sadak and Kalasrade; or, The Waters of Oblivion. A Romantic Opera in Two Acts | 1835 | Title page indicates Printed for the proprietor by S.G. Fairbrother, Lyceum Prin); 766] #Sailors_Wedding_BR (The Sailor's Wedding | 1835 | This story was also published in English Annual for 1835.); 767] #Sardanapalus_play (Sardanapalus: A Tragedy | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Cain.); 768] #Sc_SirAllan_FT (Scotland. Sir Allan and His Dog | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 769] #Scenery_1810 (Sonnet, On Being Requested to Write on Scottish Scenery. | 1810 | 1810 sonnet. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerabl); 770] #SeaSide_Recollections_OV (Sea-side Recollections [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 771] #SecretCell_1811 (The Secret Cell. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 772] #Selected_Stories_from_OV_Blackie (Selected Stories from Our Village [Blackie and Sons, Ltd., n.d., 1920s?] Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?] Hannah Lucy Cousin Mary Ellen A Village Beau The Vicar's Maid The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Grace Neville Olive Hathaway A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines The Village Schoolmistress Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Mole-Catcher Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint The China Jug The Election The Two Sisters Hopping Bob the Incendiary. A Country Tale The Cousins The Residuary Legatee Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland A Moonlight Adventure | 1919-12-31—1929-12-31 | This edition of Our Village selections appears to have been published for the ju); 773] #Self_Control (Self Control: A Novel | 1811 | First edition published anonymously.); 774] #Sense_S (Sense and Sensibility | 1811 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously as by a Lady. Mitford rated it very good.); 775] #Sermons_Chalmers (Sermons preached in the Tron Church, Glasgow | 1819 | Likely the new sermons that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on 2 July 18); 776] #Sermons_RRussell (Manuscript sermons | Unpublished manuscript sermons by Mitford's grandfather. Mitford owns a copy, wh); 777] #Shakespeare_Times_nonfict (Shakespeare and His Times: Including the Biography of the Poet; Criticisms on his Genius and Writings; A New Chronology of the Plays; A Disquisition on the Object of His Sonnets; And a History of the Manners, Customs, and Amusements, Superstitions, Poetry, and Elegant Literature of His Age | 1817 | Mitford considered it good materials badly used. In journal entry Sunday 19th Ma); 778] #Sicilian_MM (The Sicilian | 1798 | Minerva Press.); 779] #Siege_DS_1827 (The Siege | 1827 | Dramatic sketch which appeared in Lady's Magazine of September 30, 1822:462-66 a); 780] #Silchester_1811 (Silchester. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 781] #Simple_Story (A Simple Story | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading this novel in her Journal on October 16, 1820.); 782] #Sintram_Comp (Sintram and His Companions: A Romance | ); 783] #Sir_Fr_Darrell (Sir Francis Darrell; or, the Vortex. A Novel | ); 784] #SirPFrancisDenied (Sir Philip Francis denied!: a letter addressed to the British nation | 1817 | James Wilmot's niece Olivia Wilmot Serres claims that her uncle wrote The Letter); 785] #Sketch_FriendsFam (A Sketch of my Friend's Family | 1817 | Full title: A Sketch of my Friend's Family: intended to suggest some practical h); 786] #SketchBook_WI (The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. | 1819); 787] #Sketches_France (Sketches descriptive of Italy, in the years 1816 and 1817; with a brief account of travels in various parts of France and Switzerland, in the same years. | 1820 | Mitford may have read this in the summer of 1820.); 788] #Sketches_of_America (Sketches of America: a Narrative of a Journey of Five Thousand Miles Through the Eastern and Western States of America; Contained in Eight Reports Addressed to the Thirty-nine English Families by whom the Author was Deputed, in June 1817, to Ascertain Whether Any, and What Part of the United States Would be Suitable for Their Residence. With Remarks on Mr. Birkbeck’s Notes and Letters | 1818 | The work’s subtitle refers to to Morris Birkbeck’s Notes on a Journey in America); 789] #SoldierBoy (Soldier Boy | Author and date unidentified.); 790] #Song_FairestThings_1811 (Song. ["The fairest things are those which live"] | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 791] #Specimen_Nat_poem (The Monks and the Giants: Prospectus and Specimen of an Intended National Work; Intended to Comprise the Most Interesting Particulars Relating to King Arthur and his Round Table, by William and Robert Whistlecraft of Stow-Market, in Suffolk, Harness and Collar Makers | 1818 | An ottava rima burlesque written by John Hookham Frere under the nom de plume Wi); 792] #Specimens_BritPoets (Specimens of the British Poets | 1819 | 7 vols. The Essay on English Poetry which prefaces this collection, forms part o); 793] #Specimens_Dramatic_Poets (Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, Who Lived About the Time of Shakespeare. With Notes | 1808); 794] #Speeches_Windham (Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Windham | 1812 | 3 volumes. Full title: Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Wi); 795] #SpencesAnec (Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters of Books and Men. Collected from the Conversation of Mr. Pope, and Other Eminent Persons of His Time | 1820 | Spence’s Anecdotes were collected and published posthumously in 1820 by Edmund M); 796] #St_Botany (Poetical Introduction to the Study of Botany (1801)); 797] #Stephen_Lane_BR (Stephen Lane, the Butcher | 1835); 798] #StMagdaleneAM (The Fast of St. Magdalen: A Romance | ); 799] #StolenL_FT (The Stolen Letter | 1840 | A poem by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of National ); 800] #Stories_AmLife (Stories of American Life; by American Writers | 1830); 801] #StoryWoods_FT (A Story of the Woods | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 802] #Stranger_play (The Stranger); 803] #Sun_Set_MRM (Sun-Set. | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1811 Poems, mentioned in a ); 804] #Suppers_and_Balls_BR (Suppers and Balls | 1835); 805] #Surgeons_Courtship_BR (The Surgeon's Courtship | 1835 | This story was previously published in The Royal Lady's Magazine, and Archives o); 806] #Sybille_1810 (Sybille. A Northumbrian Tale. | 1810 | 1810 narrative poem. Mitford's introductory argument indicates that she wrote th); 807] #TaleOf2Cities (A Tale of Two Cities | 1859); 808] #Tales_Heart (Tales of the heart | 1820 | ); 809] #TalesHall_GC (Tales of the Hall | 1819 | 2 vols. Verse. Last work published in his lifetime.); 810] #TalesofFancy_Shipwreck (Tales of Fancy: The Shipwreck | 1816 | The Shipwreck makes up volume one of the three-volume work. The remaining volume); 811] #TalesofmyLandord_3rd (Tales of my Landlord, 3rd series | 1819 | 4 volumes. The Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes one and two and Legend of Mon); 812] #TalesofWHS (Tales of Wonder, of Humour, and of Sentiment; Original and Translated | 1818 | 2 vols. Volume 1 contains Zelis, The Weathercock, The Magic Dollar Volume 2 cont); 813] #Talking_Gentleman_OV (The Talking Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the nineteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182); 814] #Talking_Lady_LM (The Talking Lady [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 815] #Talking_Lady_OV (The Talking Lady [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eleventh story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.); 816] #Tartuffe (Tartuffe | Controversial play by the French author Molière. The title character poses as a ); 817] #Temora_Ossian (Temora, an Ancient Epic Poem, in Eight Books: Together with Several Other Epic Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic language, by James Macpherson. | 1763 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.); 818] #Tempest_play (The Tempest); 819] #Tenants_of_Beechgrove_OV (The Tenants of Beechgrove [Our Village version] The Lady of Beechgrove | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the second story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. I); 820] #TenYearsatTripoli (Miss Tully | 1816 | Mitford may have read the third edition, published in 1819.); 821] #TestofLove (The Testament of Love | In Mitford’s time, believed to be the work of Chaucer. Now attributed to Thomas ); 822] #Th_d_Gr (Théâtre des Grecs); 823] #ThaddeusofWarsaw (Thaddeus of Warsaw | 1803 | ); 824] #The_Election_OV (The Election [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was first publish); 825] #The_Town_BR (The Town | 1835); 826] #The_Two_Foscari (The Two Foscari: A Tragedy | 1821 | A historical blank verse tragedy by Lord Byron that tells the story of Doge Fosc); 827] #TheChalkpit_OV (The Chalk-Pit [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It has previously b); 828] #TheCousins_OV (The Cousins [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe); 829] #TheIncendiary_OV (The Incendiary. A Country Tale [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in the fifth and final volume of Our Village in 1832. It wa); 830] #TheRunaway_OV (The Runaway [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 831] #TheTambourine_BR (The Tambourine | 1835); 832] #TheVillage (The Village [alternate title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version | Alternative title assigned to the sketch, Our Village, in the 1884 Blackwood's E); 833] #ThreeMusketeers (The Three Musketeers | 1846 | First published in serial form in the French newspaper Le Siècle between March a); 834] #ToHenryRichardson_1827 (To Mr. Henry Richardson. On His Performance of Admetus in the Alcestis of Euripides as Represented in the Original Greek at Reading School [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 4 in the 1827 collection (pages 296-97) .); 835] #Tom_Cordery_LM (Tom Cordery [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 836] #Tom_Cordery_OV (Tom Cordery [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824); 837] #ToMay_1810 (To May. 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 838] #TomCrib (Tom Crib’s Memorial to Congress | 1819); 839] #ToMissPorden_1827 (To Miss Porden: On Her Poem of COEUR DE LION [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 8 in the 1827 collection (page 301) . Also appeared in the August 17, 182); 840] #TomJones_HF (The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling | 1749); 841] #ToMrHaydon_Nature_1827 (To Mr. Haydon, On a Study From Nature [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 9 in the 1827 collection (page 302) . Also appeared in the July 19, 1817 ); 842] #TomThumb_Fielding (Scriblerus Secundus | 1730 | First performed outside the Haymarket Theatre in September 1730.); 843] #TomThumb_OHaraAdpt (Kane O’Hara | Comic opera adapation of Henry Fielding’s Tom Thumb . Roach’s edition of 1811 fe); 844] #Touchy_Lady_OV (The Touchy Lady [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 845] #Tour_Alet (A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse | 1816 | Full title: A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse by Dom Claude Lancelot, Auth); 846] #Tour_Normandy (Account of a Tour in Normandy | 1820); 847] #Town_v_Country_CS (Town versus Country | 1835); 848] #TraitsNature (Traits of Nature | 1812 | 5 volumes.); 849] #Travels_Acerbi (Travels through Sweden, Finland, and Lapland to the North Cape, in the Years 1798 and 1799. | 1802); 850] #Travels_Belzoni (Narrative of the Operations and Recent Discoveries within the Pyramids, Temples, Tombs, and Excavations, in Egypt and Nucia | 1821 | Mitford mentions reading this in her Journal on September 29, 1821.); 851] #Travels_NGermany (Travels in the North of Germany | 1820 | Full title: Travels in the North of Germany: Describing the Present State of the); 852] #Travels_Nile (Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771 1772, and 1773 | 1790); 853] #Travels_Nubia (Travels in Nubia | 1819 | Published by the Association for Promoting the Discovery for the Interior Parts ); 854] #Travels_TheoDucas (Travels of Theodore Ducas | 1822 | Full title: The Travels of Theodore Ducas of Candia in Various Countries in Euro); 855] #TwelfthNight_Shkspr (Twelfth Night | 1601 | A late dark romantic comedy in Shakespeare’s oeuvre, with first recorded product); 856] #Two_N_Kinsmen (Two Noble Kinsmen | Tragicomedy likely first performed around 1613 and first printed in 1634; genera); 857] #Two_Sisters_OV (Two Sisters [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be); 858] #Two_Valentines_OV (The Two Valentines [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 859] #TwoHoflandLandscapes_1827 (On Two of Mr. Hofland's Landscapes [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 12 in the 1827 collection (page 305) .); 860] #TwoPapers (Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and an Essay [ . . . ] attributed to the Editor of the Ex-m-n-r | Satire aimed at Leigh Hunt. Full title: Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and a); 861] #TwopennyPost (Intercepted Letters, or, the Twopenny Post-bag | 1813); 862] #Undine (Undine: A Romance, translated from the German | Mitford would likely have been familiar with the 1818 translation by George Soan); 863] #Valerius_novel (Valerius: A Roman Story | ); 864] #Vampyre (The Vampyre: A Tale | 1819 | ); 865] #Venice_Preserved_play (Venice Preserv’d | 1683 | First performed in 1683 and printed soon thereafter. Frequently re-staged until ); 866] #Verses_with_Primroses_1810 (Verses, Sent with Some Primroses to a Young Lady, who had Promised us a Visit Early in the Spring. Feb. 7, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 867] #VeryWoman_play (A Very Woman; or the Prince of Tarent | Authorship and date contested.); 868] #Vespers_of_Palermo (The Vespers of Palermo: A Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823); 869] #Vicar_Wakefield (The Vicar of Wakefield: A Tale. Supposed to be Written by Himself | 1766); 870] #Vicars_Maid_OV (The Vicar's Maid [Our Village version] The Vicar's Maid: A Village Story [Amulet version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published); 871] #Vicissitudes (Vicissitudes | Author and date unidentified. May be On the Origin and Vicissitudes of Literatur); 872] #VictoryOfBarrosa_1811 (On the Victory of Barrosa. To Mrs. Taylor, of Hartley Court, Near Reading, Mother of Colonel Norcott. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 873] #View_Europe (View of the State of Europe during the Middle Ages | 1818 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it good.); 874] #Village_Beau_OV (A Village Beau [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventeenth story in volume one of Our Village in 18); 875] #Village_Schoolmistress_OV (The Village Schoolmistress [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 876] #Village_Tales_and_Sketches (Village Tales and Sketches Biographical Preface [Village Tales and Sketches, Nimmo edition, 1881] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Titled here A Morning Ramble] A Village Schoolmistress Whitsun-Eve Our Maying Dora Creswell Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother The Lost Keys [Retitled here "the Lost Key"] | 1881 | Edited collection of Our Village sketches, consisting mostly but not exclusively); 877] #VillageA_FT (The Village Amanuensis | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 878] #Virginius_play (Virginius); 879] #Visit_LaTrappe (A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe, in 1817 | 1818 | Full title: A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817 With Notes Taken Durin); 880] #Visit_Paris (A Visit To Paris in 1814: Being a Review of the Moral, Political, Intellectual, and Social Condition of the French Capital | 2nd edition, corrected and with a new preface referring to late events, publishe); 881] #Visit_to_Lucy_OV (A Visit to Lucy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. ); 882] #Visit_to_Richmond_OV (A Visit to Richmond [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 883] #Vivian (Vivian | 1812); 884] #VoiceofPraise_MRM (The Voice of Praise | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1810 Poems, mentioned in a ); 885] #Voyage_PolarExp (A Voyage of Discovery, Made Under the Orders of the Admiralty, in his Majesty's ships Isabella and Alexander for the purpose of exploring Baffin's Bay, and Enquiring into the possibility of a North-West Passage. | 1819); 886] #VoyagePG_WH (A Voyage up the Persian Gulf, and a Journey Overland from India to England, in 1817 | 1819 | ); 887] #Wager_FT (Florence. The Wager | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 888] #Walk_Switz1816 (A Walk Through Switzerland in September 1816 | 1818); 889] #Walk_Through_Village_OV (A Walk Through the Village [Our Village version] | 1826 | This was the first sketch to appear in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 890] #Walks_Country_LM (Walks in the Country [Lady's Magazine subseries versions] The Copse The Hard Summer Nutting Violeting Number IX Wood-Cutting | | Title given to the popular series of sketches written by Mitford for The Lady's ); 891] #Walks_Country_OV (Walks in the Country [Our Village subseries versions] The Copse The Cowslip Ball The Dell The Fall of the Leaf The First Primrose Frost and Thaw Hannah Bint The Hard Summer Nutting The Old House at Aberleigh The Shaw Violeting The Visit The Wood | 1824—1830 | A popular subseries within Our Village, republished or adapted from the periodic); 892] #Walks_Cowslip_Ball_OV (Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the thirteenth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. ); 893] #Walks_Fall_of_Leaf_OV (Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1830 | This sketch appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village in 1830.); 894] #Walks_First_Primrose_OV (Walks in the Country. The First Primrose [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventh story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It ); 895] #Walks_Frost_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost | The first part of the Frost and Thaw sketch that was sometimes republished singl); 896] #Walks_Frost_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the third story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It wa); 897] #Walks_Hannah_Bint_OV (Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 898] #Walks_Hard_Summer_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VII. The Hard Summer [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-09 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 899] #Walks_Hard_Summer_OV (Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182); 900] #Walks_NoIX_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01 | This sketch was later published as The Visit in volume one of Our Village . In t); 901] #Walks_Nutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VIII. Nutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-11 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 902] #Walks_Nutting_OV (Walks in the Country. Nutting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-first story in volume one of Our Village in 1); 903] #Walks_Old_House_Aberleigh_OV (Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 904] #Walks_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Thaw | The brief second part of Frost and Thaw that was sometimes republished singly in); 905] #Walks_TheCopse_LM (Walks in the Country X. The Copse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-05 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in May 1824 as the tenth installment); 906] #Walks_TheCopse_OV (Walks in the Country. The Copse [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was first publishe); 907] #Walks_TheDell_OV (Walks in the Country. The Dell [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 908] #Walks_TheShaw_OV (Walks in the Country. The Shaw [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 909] #Walks_TheVisit_OV (Walks in the Country. The Visit [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-third story volume one of Our Village in 1824); 910] #Walks_TheWood_OV (Walks in the Country. The Wood [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It consists of the se); 911] #Walks_Violeting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. III. Violeting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 912] #Walks_Violeting_OV (Walks in the Country. Violeting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the tenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It); 913] #Walks_WoodCutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. Wood-Cutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch appeared in the May 1823 issue of the Lady's Magazine. Passages of W); 914] #Wallace_MHpoem (Wallace: or, The fight of Falkirk. A Metrical Romance | 1809); 915] #Wallace_play (Wallace: an historical tragedy in five acts | 1820 | Performed at Covent Garden in November 1820; William Macready performed the titl); 916] #WalpoleltrstoCole (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and others | 1818 | Full title: Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and o); 917] #WalpoletoMontagu (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole to George Montagu, Esq. from the year 1736, to the year 1770: Now First Published from the Originals in the Possession of the Editor | 1818 | A second edition appears in 1819.); 918] #Walsingham (Walsingham | 1797 | Full title: Walsingham, or the Pupil of Nature: A Domestic Story. Reprinted in 1); 919] #Walton_Lives (The Lives of Dr. John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Mr. Richard Hooker, Mr. George Herbert and Dr. Robert Sanderson. | Walton had written biographical sketches of Donne, Wotton, Hooker and Herbert wh); 920] #Wanderer (The Wanderer, a Poem | 1820 | Mitford mentions in her Journal that MacFarlane sent her his poem in her on Augu); 921] #Warbeck_Wolfstein_MH (Warbeck of Wolfstein | 1820); 922] #Wardle_Death_1810 (To G. L. Wardle, Esq., on the Death of His Child. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 923] #Warlock_Play (The Warlock of the Glen: A Melo-drama in Two Acts | 1820 | MRM saw this play in December 1820 at Covent Garden Theatre.); 924] #WashingtonEpic_TN (Washington; or Liberty Restored. A Poem in Ten Books | Epic poem about George Washington published in 1809. Only Baltimore editions now); 925] #Watch_1811 (The Watch. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted in Romanticism: An Anthology, ed. Duncan Wu.); 926] #WatlingtonH (Watlington Hill; A Poem | | First printed version of this long narrative poem.); 927] #WatlingtonH_1827 (Watlington Hill: A Descriptive Poem | 1827 | 1827 published version of long narrative poem, originally published separately i); 928] #Waverley (Waverley; or ’Tis Sixty Years Since | | Mitford mentions reading Waverley in her Journal in 1819 and 1820.); 929] #WaytoKeepHim (The Way to Keep Him. A Comedy in Five Acts | 1770 | Full title: The Way to Keep Him: a Comedy in five acts, as it is performed at th); 930] #WealthofNations (An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations | 1761); 931] #Wedding_Ring_DS_1827 (The Wedding Ring: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f); 932] #WestminsterAbbey_1811 (Westminster Abbey | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 933] #WestonGrove_1827 (Weston Grove: A Descriptive Poem [1827 version] | 1827 | Narrative poem); 934] #Wheat_Hoeing_OV (Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was later called); 935] #Wheel_Fortune_play (Wheel of Fortune | 1805 | Play first performed in 1795 and printed 1805.); 936] #WhiteCottage_AM (The White Cottage | 1817 | Full title: The White Cottage. A Tale.. Mitford rated it too dismal.); 937] #Whiteknights_Desc_TCH (A Descriptive Account of the Mansion and Gardens of White-Knights: A Seat of His Grace the Duke of Marlborough. By Mrs. Hofland. Illustrated with twenty-three engravings, from pictures taken on the spot by T.C. Hofland | 1819 | Printed by T.C. Hofland for the 6th Duke of Marlbourough; publisher and printer ); 938] #WhitsunEve_OV (Whitsun-Eve [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 939] #Widows_Dog_CS (The Widow's Dog | 1835); 940] #Wild_Oats (Wild Oats | 1791 | Play featuring naval characters, a complex marriage plot, and a fictional theatr); 941] #William_and_Hannah_BR (William and Hannah | 1835); 942] #Willow_1810 (The Willow. Translated from the French of J. J. Rousseau. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 943] #WinterEve_JH (Winter Evening's Tales | 1820 | 2 vols. Full title: Winter Evening's Tales, collected among the cottagers in the); 944] #WinterNts_ND (Winter Nights; Or, Fire-side Lucubrations | 1820); 945] #Winters_Tale_play (The Winter’s Tale | 1623 | Classed as a dark comedy or romance play, The Winter’s Tale was likely written a); 946] #WinterScenery_1810 (Winter Scenery. January, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 947] #WksPainting_JR (The Works of Jonathan Richardson | 1773 | Full title: The Works of Mr. Jonathan Richardson. Consisting of I. The theory of); 948] #WmHerbert_1810 (To the Hon. William Herbert | 1810 | 1810 poem; serves as dedication to the volume and appears before the Table of Co); 949] #WmTell_play (William Tell | 1825); 950] #Woman_MB (Woman, or Minor maxims | 1818 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Woman, or Minor maxims. A Sketch. Minerva Press.); 951] #WomanHater_play (The Woman Hater | 1607); 952] #Women_CM (Women: Or Pour et Contre. A Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she don't like it much--too dismal.In Journal Saturday 27 M); 953] #Wonders_NW (The Wonders of the Little World | 1678 | Full title: Wonders of the Little World; or, a General History of Man: displayin); 954] #Woodcutter_FT (The Woodcutter | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 955] #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_Crissy (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy, 1841] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1841 | This edition of Mitford's works omits the Preface to volume one of Our Village, ); 956] #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_CrissyMarkley (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy & Markley, 1844] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841 and Crissy&Markley, 1846] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1846 | Re-issue of the 1841 James Crissy edition. As with the earlier edition, this one); 957] #Works_of_MRM (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse; viz. Our Village, Belford Regis, Country Stories, Finden's Tableaux, Foscari, Julian, Rienzi, Charles the First | 1841 | Published only in Philadelphia and presumably not an edition authorized by Mitfo); 958] #WorksEngPoets_1810 (The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowpwer, with prefaces, biographical and critical | 1810 | ); 959] #Wreaths_1810 (The Wreaths. A Tale. Taken from the "Curiosities of Literature." Addressed to a Young Lady. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 960] #WrightvClement (Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement | 1819 | Full title: Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for certain libels publishe); 961] #WrittenAfterVisit_1827 (Written After a Visit From Some Friends [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 19 in the 1827 collection (page 313).); 962] #WrittenJuly1824_1827 (Written July, 1824 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 5 in the 1827 collection (page 298) .); 963] #WrittenOct1825_1827 (Written October, 1825 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 22 in the 1827 collection (page 316) . Also appeared in the 1827 Amulet a); 964] #WutheringHts (Wuthering Heights | 1847); 965] #Year_Day (A Year and a Day | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: A Year and a Day. A Novel. Written under the pseudonym Madam); 966] #YellowButterfly_1810 (To a Yellow Butterfly. April 8, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 967] #Young_Gipsy_OV (The Young Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 968] #Young_Market_Woman_BR (The Young Market Woman | 1835 | This story is a revised version of what was originally published in The Forget M); 969] #Young_Painter_BR (The Young Painter | 1835); 970] #Young_Sculptor_BR (The Young Sculptor | 1835); 971] #YoungPhil_CS (The Young Philosopher. A Novel | 1798 | Mitford rated it pretty but too dismal. Source: Journal.); 972] #Zaire_play (Zaíre | 1732); 973] #Zapolya (Zapolya | 1819 | Subtitled: A Dramatic Poem ] . . .] in humble imitation of The Winter's Tale of ); 974] #Zuma (Zuma, or the Tree of Health | 1818 | Full title: Zuma, or the Tree of Health. To which are added, the fair Pauline,--); 975] #AlterationsOfState (Alterations of State: Sacred Kingship in the English Reformation | 2002); 976] #BannedThtr_Findlater (Banned!: A Review of Theatrical Censorship in Britain | 1967); 977] #Calumniated_Rep (Calumniated Republicans and the Hero of Shelley's "Charles the First" | 2007); 978] #CensorshipEnglDrama (The Censorship of English Drama, 1824-1901 | 2010); 979] #coles_Thesis (William Allan Coles | 1956-08 | Coles’ doctoral dissertation presented to the Department of English at Harvard U); 980] #Cromwell_Soldier (Cromwell: Soldier | 2004); 981] #Lestrange_Letters (The Life of Mary Russell Mitford, Authoress of "Our Village," Etc, Related in a Selection from Her Letters to Her Friends | 1870); 982] #Needham_PapersRCL (Francis Needham | Francis Needham’s extensive and unpublished handwritten papers, which we estimat); 983] #OED (The Oxford English Dictionary Online | 2016 | Multi-volume descriptive dictionary of the English language, first published in ); 984] #PossibleScotlands (Possible Scotlands: Walter Scott and the Story of Tomorrow | 2005); 985] #Review_55Days (Review: 55 Days | 2012-10-25); 986] #RomDrama_Hoagwood (Romantic Drama and Historical Hermeneutics | 1998); 987] #ShelleyPB_ReimanEd (Shelley's Poetry and Prose | 2002 | Scholarly edition of Shelley's major works.); 988] #ShelleysLate (Shelley's Late Fragmentary Plays: 'Charles the First' and the 'Unfinished Drama' | 2009); 989] #Talking_Demon ('The Talking Demon': Liberty and Liberal Ideologies in the 1820s British Stage | 2006); 990] #Writing_Eng_Rep (Writing the English Republic: Poetry, Rhetoric, and Politics, 1627-60 | 1999); 991] #Apollo_Belvedere (Apollo Belvedere Pythian Apollo 120-150 A.D. | A marble sculpture from classical antiquity, believed to have been created aroun); 992] #Brocas_monument_Bramley; 993] #BrokenFiddle_WA (The Broken Fiddle William Allan circa 1821 Benjamin Robert Haydon described this painting to Mitford in a letter from Edinburgh in November 1821. Haydon wrote: I find Sir William Allan only in the town, he is painting a very clever picture of The Broken Fiddle. A wooden-legged sailor has broken his fiddle on the head of a young scamp for some mischievous trick; an old woman, his granddam, is shaking her fist at the sailor, who is enjoying the pain of the crying boy. . . . It promises to be a very clever thing indeed. The background in colour and effect is the best thing he has done., as excerpted in Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk, Vol. 2, p. 74 . The painting was frequently mentioned by 1820s periodical writers as one of Allan’s best. In 1822, Blackwood’s called it a piece of quite a different cast from anything he had formerly attempted. It is a highly humorous composition, and the glow of colouring is such as perhaps Wilkie himself never surpassed. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 11 (1822): p. 439 .); 994] #ChrstEJrslm_Haydon (Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem | One of Haydon’s three enormous paintings of biblical scenes, together with The J); 995] #EnragedMus_WH (The Enraged Musician William Hogarth 30 November 1741 This engraving depicts a scene in which a violin player leans out his window, annoyed by the cacophony of unmusical sounds coming from the street outside.); 996] #Gala_Richmond_TCH (A Gala at Richmond Hofland Unknown, circa 1821 | Mitford gives this as the title of a Hofland painting exhibited at Somerset Hous); 997] #Jerusalem_Crucifixion_TCH (Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion Hofland | A Hofland painting on a New Testament subject exhibited at the British Instituti); 998] #JudgmntSolomon_Haydon (The Judgment of Solomon 1814 | The earliest of the three enormous biblical paintings for which Haydon was known); 999] #Lazarus_Haydon (The Resurrection of Lazarus The Raising of Lazarus 1821-1823 | Painting of enormous dimensions exhibited in 1823 at Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly); 1000] #Richmond_TwickPk_TCH (Richmond from Twickenham Park circa 1821); 1001] #Te_Deum (Te Deum Traditional Latin Christian hymn of praise and thanksgiving, the conventional title is a short form of the opening lyrics, Te Deum Laudamus.); 1002] #Whereer_Handel (Where’er You Walk An aria sung by Jupiter from Handel’s 1743 opera Semele (HWV58).) #Ackermans_Juv_ForgetMeNot (Ackermann's Juvenile Forget Me Not | 1830—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic S) #Amulet (The Amulet; or Christian and Literary Remembrancer | 1826—1836 | Gift book/annual started in 1826. Mitford published yearly in this periodical be) #Anniversary_annual (The Anniversary | 1829 | Short-lived gift book/annual published in 1829. Mitford published the story Goin) #Anti-Jacobin (The Anti-Jacobin, or Weekly Examiner | 1797-11-20—1798-07-09 | Conserative Tory newspaper founded by George Canning whose short run of 36 issue) #Berkshire_Chron (Berkshire Chronicle | Newspaper founded in 1825, now known as the Reading Chronicle.) #Bijou_annual (The Bijou: An Annual of Literature and the Arts | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1828 and 1830. Mitford published ) #Blackwoods (Blackwood’s Magazine | 1817-04—1980 | Founded as a Tory magazine in opposition to the Whig Edinburgh Review.) #BritishCritic_per (British Critic, A New Review | Conservative periodical with High Church editorial views. Published monthly betw) #Cameo_annual (The Cameo: A Melange of Literature and the Arts, selected from the Bijou | Short-lived giftbook/annual from the early 1830s. Title pages are undated. Altho) #Christmas_Box (The Christmas Box: An Annual Present for Young Persons | 1829—1830 | Short-lived gift book/annual for children. Mitford published in this periodical ) #Comic_Offering (The Comic Offering, or Ladies' Melange of Literary Mirth | Literary humor annual edited by and for women founded by Smith, Elder, and co. M) #Courier_news (The Courier | 1804-04-20—1842-07-06 | London newspaper that ran daily except on Sundays from 1804 to 1842.) #EclecticRev (The Eclectic Review | Monthly periodical published between 1805 and 1868. Focusesd on long and short r) #Edinburgh_Tales (The Edinburgh Tales | 1845—1846 | Three-volume anthology of stories published in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine while u) #EdinburghMag1785to1816 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Published by Sibbald, 1785 to 1816, then published by Constable until 1826.) #EdinburghMag1817to1826 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Previously published by Sibbald, then published by Constable, 1817 to 1826.) #EdinburghRev_per (Edinburgh Review, second series | Quarterly political and literary review founded by Francis Jeffrey, Sydney Smith) #English_Annual (The English Annual | Short-lived annual from the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in 1838.) #EuroMag (European Magazine | Monthly periodical published from 1782 until 1826. Original title: European Maga) #Examiner (The Examiner | 1808—1886 | Weekly periodical launched by editor Leigh Hunt and his brother, the printer Joh) #Findens_Tableaux_annual (Finden's Tableaux | 1837—1843 | Finden's Tableaux was a lavishly illustrated gift book/annual produced between 1) #ForgetMeNot (Forget Me Not | 1822-11—1847 | Gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic Shoberl thro) #Friendships_Off (Friendship's Offering | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s by Lupton Relfe and then revived in the ) #Gem_annual (The Gem | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1829 and 1832, perhaps the succes) #John_Bull (John Bull | English periodical founded in 1820 and published between 1820 and 1825 and in a ) #Journal_BellesLettres (The Journal of Belles Lettres | American annual published between 1832 and 1842 Mitford was published in this pe) #Juv_Forget (The Juvenile Forget Me Not: A Christmas or New Year's Gift, or Birthday Present | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1837. Mitford published) #Juv_Keepsake (The Juvenile Keepsake | Gift book/annual for children. Mitford published her story The Two Magpies in th) #La_Belle_Assemblee (La Belle Assemblée, Or Bell's Court and Fashionable Magazine, Addressed Particularly to the Ladies | 1806—1832 | A general-interest miscellaneous periodical aimed at a female readership. Origin) #Ladys_Mag (The Lady's Magazine | 1770—1847 | A popular and influential monthly magazine for women that ran from 1756 until 18) #Ladys_Mag_Ser1 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, series one | 1770—1818 | Monthly magazine for women founded by bookseller and publisher John Coote and ed) #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v1-3 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, new series 2, vol. 1-3 | 1820—1822 | A continuation of The Lady's Magazine as a new series (series two), volumes 1 th) #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v4-10 (The Lady's Magazine; or Mirror of the Belle-Lettres, Fine Arts, Fashions, Music, Drama, &c., new series 2, vol. 4-10 | 1823—1829 | Many of Mitford's contributions to the magazine were to this series, a continuat) #Ladys_Monthly_Museum (Lady’s Monthly Museum; Or, Polite Repository of Amusement and Instruction | A monthly periodical running from 1798 to 1832.) #Laurel_annual (The Laurel: Fugitive Poetry of the XIXth century | 1830 | Literary annual published in 1830 and edited by Miss S. Lawrence. Mitford publis) #Letter_to_HM_1820 (An Englishwoman’s Letter to Mrs. Hannah More on the Present Crisis | | Anonymously published eighteen-page pamphlet on the Queen Caroline Affair. World) #Lit_Gazette (The Literary Gazette, and Journal of Belles Lettres, Arts, Sciences | Periodical founded by Henry Colburn, ran from 1817 to 1863. For details on the j) #Lit_Souvenir (The Literary Souvenir, or, Cabinet of Poetry and Romance | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s and 1830s and edited by Alaric Watts. Mi) #LondonMag (The London Magazine | 1820—1829 | An 18th-century periodical of this title (The London Magazine, or Gentleman’s Mo) #Marshalls_Christmas (Marshall's Christmas Box: A Juvenile Annual | 1828—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by William Marshall. Mitford published in th) #Metropolitan (The Metropolitan | 1831—1850 | A London monthly originally titled The Metropolitan: A Monthly Journal of Litera) #MonthlyMag (The Monthly Magazine | Monthly general-interest periodical. Published between 1796 and 1843. Founded by) #Museum_per (The Museum; or Record of Literature, Fine Arts, Antiquities, the Drama, &c. | 1822-04-27 | Weekly periodical edited by Peter Bayley and printed by John Valpy.) #New_Monthly_Mag (New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal | Periodical edited by Thomas Campbell and Cyrus Redding from 1821 to 1830, after ) #New_Years_Gift (The New Year's Gift and Juvenile Souvenir | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1836. Mitford published) #NewYork_Visiter (New York Visiter and Parlour Companion | Short-lived American periodical published between 1838 and 1840. An interview wi) #Observer (The Observer | Founded on December 4, 1791 by W.S. Bourne. It is the first Sunday newspaper in ) #Pamphleteer_per (The Pamphleteer | Published between 1813 and 1828. Full title: The Pamphleteer: Respectfully Dedic) #Panoramic_Misc (Panoramic Miscellany, and Review of Literature, Science, Arts, Inventions and Occurrences | 1826-01-31—1826-06-01 | Periodical edited by John Thelwall to which Mitford, signing as M, contributed t) #Pledge_Friendship (The Pledge of Friendship: A Christmas Present, and New Year's Gift | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1826 and 1828. Mitford published ) #Poetical_Album (The Poetical Album and Register of Modern Fugitive Poetry | 1828—1829 | Short-lived literary annual published between 1828 and 1829 and edited by Alaric) #Political_Register (Cobbett's Weekly Political Register | Weekly periodical issued by William Cobbett from 1802 to 1835. Founded as Tory a) #QuarterlyRev_per (Quarterly Review | 1809—1967 | Tory periodical founded by George Canning in 1809, published by John Murray. Wil) #ReadingMer_per (The Reading Mercury and Oxford Gazette, etc. | Newspaper of Reading, Berkshire. Founded as The Reading Mercury, or Weekly Enter) #Remember_Me (Remember Me: A Token of Christian Affection; consisting of entirely original pieces in prose and verse. | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s and 1840s. Mitford published in this per) #Remembrance_annual (Remembrance | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in) #Review_RaisingLaz (Mr. Haydon’s Raising of Lazarus | 1823-04-01 | Detailed discussion of the contents of Haydon’s painting, The Raising of Lazarus) #Royal_LadysMag (The Royal Lady's Magazine; and Archives of the Court of St. James | 1831—1835 | Mitford published in this periodical in 1832.) #Sheffield_Iris (The Iris | Newspaper of Sheffield, Yorkshire, to which Barbara Hofland contributed poems.) #Spectator (The Spectator | A daily periodical founded by Joseph Addison Richard Steele which was published ) #Stage (Letter by Philo-Dramaticus | Letter reprinted in the Observer on June 20, 1825 from Blackwoods. The letter is) #Tatler (The Tatler | A literary and society journal founded by Richard Steele which was published fro) #Times_news (The Times | Newspaper issued daily, begun in London in 1785 as The Daily Universal Register,) #Trueman_Clergy (Timothy Trueman’s Admonitions to the Clergy, Respecting Tithes: First Published in a Letter Inserted in the Statesman Newspaper, and Now Reprinted with Several Corrections and Additions, Particularly an Introduction | 1816 | Pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acquaintance Mr. Johnson.) #Trueman_Gehazi (The Curse of Gehazi, or, Leprosy of Corruption: Exemplified in a Narrative of the Life of Robert Watkins, alias Robert Turner Watkins, alias Bribery Bob, Who was Executed on the 30th of July Last, for the Robbery and Murder of Mr. Stephen Rodway, Late of Cricklade, in Whitshire | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua) #Trueman_Westminster (A Letter to the Independent Electors of Westminster, as it Appeared in the Independent Whig of Sunday, May 21, 1809 | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua) #Winters_Wreath (The Winter's Wreath | Gift book/annual published from the mid-1820s to 1832. Some issues subtitled, a ) #Abbot_WS (The Abbot | 1820 | Historical novel: One of Scott’s series of Tales from Benedictine Sources, The A) #Absent_Member_BR (The Absent Member | 1835 | This story was also published in the Amulet for 1835.) #Absentee (The Absentee | 1812) #Account_GeoMathews (Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews | 1819 | Full title: Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews: Wh) #AccountOfIndia (Description of the character, manners, and customs of the people of India : and of their institutions, religious and civils | 1818 | ) #Acct_Knox (Account of the captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, in the island of Ceylon | 1818 | Full title: Account of the Captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, ) #Acct_War1808 (Account of the War in Spain and Portugal, and in the South of France, from 1808, to 1814, inclusive | 1818 | She rated considered it a sad uncandid military book) #AcctDenmark1692 (An Account of Denmark in 1692 | 1694 | Full title: An Account of Denmark as it was in the year MDCXCII.) #Admiral_on_Shore_OV (An Admiral on Shore [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Advice_Julia (Advice to Julia: A Letter in Rhyme | 1820 | A poem that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on October 7 1820.) #Aeneid_CP (The Works of Virgil, in Latin and English. The original Text correctly printed from the most authentic Editions, collated for this Purpose. The Æneid Translated By the Rev. Mr. Christopher Pitt, The Eclogues and Georgics, with Notes on the Whole, By the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton. With several New Observations By Mr. Holdsworth, Mr. Spence, and Others. Also, A Dissertation on the Sixth Book of the Æneid, by Mr. Warburton. On the Shield of Æneas, by Mr. W. Whitehead. On the Character of Japis, by the late Dr. Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester. And, Three Essays on Pastoral, Didactic and Epic Poetry, by the Editor | 1753) #Aeneid_Dryden (The Aeneid | 1688 | Dryden’s translation of The Aeneid may be found in Miscellany Poems, in two part) #Aeneid_JB (The Æneid of Virgil, translated into blank verse by J. Beresford | 1794) #Aeneid_Virgil (The Aeneid | Latin epic poem written between 29 and 19 BC.) #Aeschylus_Potter (The Tragedies of Aeschylus | Translation of Aeschylus’s plays read by Mitford.) #Aesops_Fables_Croxall (Fables of Aesop and Others, Translated into English. With Instructive Applications; and a Cut Before Each Fable. | 1722—1728 | The most influential and frequently reprinted English translation of the Fables ) #Agamemnon_play (Agamemnon | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the first play of the Oresteia) #Age_Elizabeth (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth | 1820 | Mitford indicated that she read Hazlitt’s Lectures in her Journal on October 22,) #Aladdin_panto (Aladdin | There were many pantomimes under this name on the English stage, many combining ) #Alcestis_play (Alcestis | Athenian tragedy attributed to Euripides. First produced at the City Dionysia fe) #Alice_DS_1827 (Alice: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f) #All_For_Love_play (All for Love | 1678 | First performed in 1677 and published in 1678, based on Antony and Cleopatra.) #AllsWellTEW (All’s Well that Ends Well | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1604 and first printed in 1623.) #Altham (Altham and His Wife: A Domestic Tale | 1810 | 1 vol. Mitford calls it a pretty tale. Source: Journal) #America_Birkbeck (Notes on a Journey in America, from the Coast of Virginia to the Territory of Illinois | 1817 | Mitford likely read the second edition, published in London in 1818 by J. Ridgwa) #AmStories_Above10 (American Stories for Young People, Intended for Children above Ten Years of Age | 1832) #AmStories_Under10 (American Stories for Little Boys and Girls, Intended for Children under Ten Years of Age | 1831) #Anecdotes_WSeward (Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons | 1804 | 4 vols. Full title: Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons: Chiefly of the Last and ) #AnecdotesTo1700_JM (Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasion to the Year 1700 | 1811 | Full title: Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasi) #Another_Glance_OV (Another Glance at Our Village | 1886—1888 | Alternative title assigned to A Parting Glance at Our Village in Walter Scott Pu) #Antigone_MRM_1827 (Antigone: A Portrait in Verse | 1827 | 1827 verse portrait based on Antigone.) #Antigone_play (Antigone) #Antiquary (The Antiquary) #AntiquitatesCurio (Antiquitates Curiosae: the etymology of many remarkable old sayings, proverbs, & singular customs | 1819) #Antony_Cleopatra (Antony and Cleopatra | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1607 and first printed in 1623.) #Arabian_Tales (Arabian Tales; or, A Continuation of the Arabian Nights Entertainments, consisting of stories related by the Sultana of the Indies, newly tr[anslated] from the original Arabic into French by Dom Chavis and Cazotte; and tr[anslated] from the French into English, by Robert Heron | 1792 | Mitford was likely familiar with this 1792 English translation of the Thousand a) #As_You_Like_It_play (As You Like It | 1623 | First performed around 1599 and first printed 1623.) #Athalie_play (Athalie | 1691 | One of two plays written by Jean Racine (along with Esther), for the students at) #Atherton (Atherton, and Other Tales | 1854) #Aunt_Deborah_CS (Aunt Deborah | 1835) #Aunt_Martha_OV (Aunt Martha [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-second story in volume one of Our Village in ) #AuthAcct_FrRev (Authentic Account of the French Revolution | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it interesting. Source: Journal.) #AutumnRhine (An Autumn Near the Rhine | 1818 | Full title: An Autumn Near the Rhine; Or Sketches of Courts, Society, Scenery, &) #BaronsDa_FT (The Baron's Daughter | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Beacon_FT (The Beacon | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Beau_Fletch (The Works of Beaumont and Fletcher, in Fourteen Volumes: With an Introduction and Explanatory Notes | 1812 | ) #BeautifulWoman_1827 (On a Beautiful Woman [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 7 in the 1827 collection (page 300) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Month) #Beauty_MRM (Beauty: An Ode. | 1811 | Poem first collected in 1811 Poems, mentioned in a 13 February 1821 letter from ) #Beauty_of_Village_CS (The Beauty of the Village | 1835 | This story also appeared in the Friendship's Offering for 1835".) #Bees_Fable (The Fable of the Bees, or, Private vices, public benefits: containing several discourses to demonstrate that human frailties, during the degeneracy of mankind, may be turn’d to the advantage of the civil society, and made to supply the place of moral virtues. | 1714) #BeggarGirl (The Beggar Girl and her Benefactors | 1790 | 5 vols. Minerva Press. Mitford rated it as famous.) #Belford_Races_BR (Belford Races | 1835) #Belford_Regis (Belford Regis; or, Sketches of a Country Town | 1835) #Belinda_ME (Belinda | 1801) #Belles_Ballroom1_Will_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. I - The Will | 1835 | This story was orginally published in the Forget Me Not for 1834 with the title ) #Belles_Ballroom2_Matchmaking_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. II - Matchmaking Match-Making | 1835 | This story was published, in a slightly different version, in the Friendship's O) #Belles_Ballroom3_SilverArrow_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. III - The Silver Arrow | 1835 | This story also appeared as The Silver Arrow in the English Annual for 1836.) #Belles_Ballroom_BR (Belles of the Ballroom | 1835 | A series of stories within Mitford's later book of prose sketches, Belford Regis) #BelovedMotherBirthday_1810 (To my Beloved Mother, On Her Birth-Day, June 15, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Bertha_1811 (Bertha. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Bertram_CM (Bertram; or, The Castle of St. Aldobrand: a tragedy, in five acts | 1816) #BessyBell_1811 (Bessy Bell and Mary Gray. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Bible (Christian Bible | The sacred scriptures of Christianity consisting of the Old and New Testament.) #Bibletrans_Bellamy (The Holy Bible Newly Translated from the Original Hebrew: with Notes Critical and Explanatory | 1818 | Published by subscription in 1818. Originally published in three volumes in abou) #Bio_Note_OV_JMDent (Biographical Note [Our Village, J.M. Dent, 1900+ edition]) #Bio_Preface_OV_Caldwell (Biographical Preface {Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d., 1910s?]) #Bio_Preface_VilTales (Biographical Preface [to Village Tales and Sketches, Routledge, 1880] | 1881) #Bio_SketchMRM_Works_Crissy (Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy edition, 1841; Crissy & Markley, 1846]) #BioMem_PrCharlotte (Biographical Memoir of the Public and Private Life of the Much Lamented Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales and Saxe-Coburg | 1817 | Full title: A biographical memoir of the public and private life of the much lam) #BirdCatcher_OV (The Bird-Catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Black_Velvet_Bag_LM (The Black Velvet Bag [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-07 | This sketch was first published in the July 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. I) #Black_Velvet_Bag_OV (The Black Velvet Bag [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Blanch (Blanch: A Poem in Four Cantos | 1827) #BlankPaperBook_1827 (Written in a Blank-Paper Book Given to the Author by a Friend [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 1 in the 1827 collection (page 293) . Also appeared in the 1821 New Month) #BlindMansStory_1811 (The Blind Man's Story. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Bluebeard_GC (Bluebeard, or Female Curiosity: a Dramatic Romance in Three Acts | 1798) #Boarding_School_Rec_English_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. III. The English Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12-31 | This sketch was issued as No. III in the Boarding School Recollections series th) #Boarding_School_Rec_French_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. I. The French Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-10-31 | This sketch appeared as No. 1 in the Boarding School Recollections series in The) #Boarding_School_Rec_LM (Early Recollections [subseries published in Lady's Magazine] Boarding School Recollections. No. I. The French Teacher Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows Boarding School Recollections. No. III. The English Teacher | An occasional series of sketches by Mitford for The Lady's Magazine. Some of the) #Boarding_School_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_LM (Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows | 1822-11 | This sketch appeared as No. II in the Boarding School Recollections series in Th) #Bonduca_play (Bonduca | First performed around 1613, first printed in 1647.) #BoR (Bill of Rights | 1689 | One of the basic instruments of the British constitution, the English Bill of Ri) #BowlesPamphletWar_1820 (A reply to the charges brought by the reviewer of Spence's Anecdotes in the Quarterly review for October 1820 against the last editor of Pope's works, and author of A letter to Mr. Campbell on The invariable principles of poetry | 1820 | Bowles' riposte of 1820 in the midst of a pamphlet war over Alexander Pope’s wri) #Bramley_Maying_LM (Bramley Maying [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Bramley_Maying_OV (Bramley Maying [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I) #Branford (Branford | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it pretty good.) #Bridal_Eve_DS_1827 (Bridal Eve: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f) #Bride_FT (The Bride | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Bride_of_Lammermoor_WS (The Bride of Lammermoor | 1819 | Part of Tales of my Landlord, third series. Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes ) #Buccaneer_FT (The Buccaneer | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #BurkeWks_Rivington (The Works of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke | 1801—1823 | The Rivingtons published a comprehensive edition of Burke's works and correspond) #BustFox_1810 (On a Bust of Fox. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Byron_6thPoems (The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. Vol. 6 of 6 | 1818 | Full title: The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. In Six Volumes. Vol. V) #Cain_play (Cain: A Mystery | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Sardanapalus.) #Calamities (Calamities of Authors | 1812 | Full title: Calamities of Authors: including some inquiries respecting their mor) #Camilla_FB (Camilla, or a Picture of Young Lady | 1796) #CanonsCriticism (The canons of criticism, and glossary, being a supplement to Mr. Warburton's edition of Shakespear. | 1765 | Mitford mentions reading Edwards' Canons of Criticism in her Journal on 12 June ) #CanterburyTales (The Canterbury Tales | 1400 | Collection of 23 tales and a prologue frame story, written over a period of year) #Captive_DS_1827 (The Captive: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #CaptivityCaptKnox (Account of the Captivity of Robert Knox and Other Englishmen, in the Island of Ceylon: And of the Captain’s Miraculous Escape and Return to England in September 1680, After Detention on the Island of Nineteen Years and a Half | 1818) #CaribCh (The Carib Chief: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | ) #Carpenters_Daughter_BR (The Carpenter's Daughter | 1835 | This story was first published in the Friendship's Offering for 1834.) #Cartel_FT (The Cartel | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #CarysDante (The Vision; or, Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise | 1814 | Printed for the author.) #Cast_Signal_FT (Castile. The Signal | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Castle_in_Air_OV (A Castle in the Air [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Cecilia_FB (Cecilia; or Memoirs of an Heiress | 1782) #Cenci_play (The Cenci: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | Percy Bysshe Shelley's only completed stage play was written in 1819, informed b) #CharlesI_MRMplay (Charles the First; An Historical Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1834) #CharlesV (The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V | 1769) #Chas_Grandison_novel (The history of Sir Charles Grandison: In a series of letters published from the originals, by the editor of Pamela and Clarissa. | 1753) #ChasI_GCtoJG1825 (George Colman letter to James Graham | 1825-09-29 | Letter from George Colman to James Graham, Duke of Montrose, regarding the decis) #ChasI_GCtoMRM1825 (George Colman letter to Mary Russell Mitford | 1825-10-10 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, notifying her of the decision) #ChasI_JGtoGC1825 (James Graham letter to George Colman | 1825-09-25 | Letter from James Graham, Duke of Montrose to George Colman, regarding the decis) #ChasI_MRMtoGC1825 (Mary Russell Mitford letter to George Colman | 1825-12-18 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, regarding the decision to ref) #ChasI_Warrant (Death Warrant of Charles Stuart | 1649-01-29 | The warrant for the execution of Charles I for treason, signed on January 29, 16) #Chaucer_Wks_Martins (Poetical Works of Geoffrey Chaucer | 1782 | Collected poetical works, including the Canterbury Tales, in 14 volumes, publish) #Cheerfulness_1810 (To Cheerfulness. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #ChildeHaroldsPil (Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage | Published in parts between 1812 and 1818.) #Children_of_the_Village_Routledge (Children of the Village Dora Creswell Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1880 | An illustrated collection of Mitford's Our Village stories, largely but not enti) #Children_of_Village_OV (Children of the Village [Our Village subseries] Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1830—1832 | The title of a subseries within the Our Village books that ran through volumes f) #Children_Vil_Amy_Lloyd_OV (Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been publishe) #Children_Vil_FosterMother_OV (Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Children_Vil_Harry_Lewington_OV (Children of the Village. Harry Lewington [Our Village version] Harry Lewington and his Dog [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu) #Children_Vil_Pride_Shall_Have_Fall_OV (Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with a few revisions, in volume four of Our Village in 183) #Children_Vil_TheMagpies_OV (Children of the Village. The Magpies [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Children_Vil_TheRobins_OV (Children of the Village. The Robins [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu) #Children_Vil_Two_Dolls_OV (Children of the Village. The Two Dolls [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Children_Vil_Young_Master_Ben_OV (Children of the Village. Young Master Ben [Our Village version] Young Master Ben [Comic Offering version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #China_Jug_OV (The China Jug [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with some revision, in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Choephorae_Aes_play (Choephoræ | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the second play of the Oresteia) #Christina (Christina, The Maid of the South Seas; A Poem | 1811) #Christmas_Amusements1_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. 1 [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished w) #Christmas_Amusements2_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. II [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. Portions of it (Char) #Christmas_Amusements3_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. III [Our Village version] | 1832 | This story appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. A portion of it, incl) #Christmas_Amusements4_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. IV [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Christmas_Amusements5_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. V [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Christmas_Amusements6_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. VI [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Christmas_Amusements_OV (Christmas Amusements [Our Village subseries] Christmas Amusements, No. I Christmas Amusements, No. II Christmas Amusements, No. III Christmas Amusements, No. IV Christmas Amusements, No. V Christmas Amusements, No. VI | 1832 | The title of a subseries of sketches that appeared in volume five of Our Village) #Christmas_Party_OV (A Christmas Party [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #ChronHist_Arctic (A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions | 1818 | Full title: A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions; Undertak) #Cid_play (The Cid | 1637) #Cinna_play (Cinna | 1643) #CircNarr_Russia (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia | 1814 | 2 vols. Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia: embell) #Cistineae (Cistineae: the Natural Order of Cistus, or Rock-Rose; Illustrated by Coloured Figures & Descriptions of All the Distinct Species, and the Most Prominent Varieties, that could be at Present produced in the Gardens of Great Britain; With the Best Directions for Their Cultivation and Propagation | 1825—1830 | ) #City_Wives_play (The City Wives’ Confederacy | A comedic play by Sir John Vanbrugh based on Florent Carton de Dancourt’s Les bo) #Clarissa (Clarissa, or, The history of a young lady : comprehending the most important concerns of private life: and particularly shewing, the distresses that may attend the misconduct both of parents and children, in relation to marriage | 1748) #ClarkesTravelsScand (Travels in Various Countries of Europe, Asia and Africa. Part the third, section the first: Scandinavia | 1819 | Clarke began publishing a series of travel accounts in 1811 under the series tit) #ClassicalTour_Hoare (A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily | 1819 | Full title: A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily: tending to illustrate som) #Claudias_Dr (Claudia’s Dream | One of Mitford’s dramatic sketches, appeared in Lady’s Magazine September 30, 18) #CoA (the Code of Alfred | 0893 | This law book, or Doom-book, is attributed to King Alfred. In the text, Alfred’s) #Coeur_de_Lion_poem (Coeur de Lion; or the Third Crusade. A Poem in 16 books. | 1822) #Coll_PolTracts (A Collection of Political Tracts | 1754 | Full title: A Collection of Political Tracts: By the author of the Dissertation ) #Collectanea (Collectanea Curiosa, or Miscellaneous Tracts: Relating to the History and Antiquities of England and Ireland, the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and a Variety of Other Subjects | 1781) #ComicDramas_ME (Comic Dramas, in Three Acts | 1817 | Contains three plays: Love and Law; The Two Guardians; and The Rose, Thistle and) #Compl_Angler (The Compleat Angler, or, The Contemplative Man’s Recreation: Being a Discourse of Rivers, and Fish-ponds, and Fish and Fishing: Not Unworthy the Perusal of Most Anglers | 1653 | First published in 1653, then expanded and republished in further editions in 16) #Confessions_OpiumEater_nonfict (Confessions of an English Opium-Eater) #Consumption_1811 (Ode to Consumption. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted as a selection in Benjamin Suggitt Nayler's 18) #Corinne_deS (Corinne, ou, L’Italie | 1807) #Coriolanus_play (Coriolanus | 1623 | Believed to have been written between 1605 and 1610, first printed) #Cottage_Names_OV (Cottage Names [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Country_Apothecary_OV (A Country Apothecary [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub) #Country_Barber_OV (A Country Barber [Our Village version] The Last of the Barbers [Literary Souvenir version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub) #Country_Cricket_Match_LM (A Country Cricket Match [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-06) #Country_Cricket_Match_OV (A Country Cricket Match [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182) #Country_Excursions_BR (Country Excursions | 1835) #Country_Lodgings_CS (Country Lodgings | 1835) #Country_Neighbours (Tales of Fancy: Country Neighbors; or, The Secret | 1816 | Country Neighbors makes up volumes two and three of the three-volume work. As sh) #Country_Pictures_OV (Country Pictures [alternative title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version] | The sketch entitled Our Village was sometimes retitled Country Pictures in some ) #Country_Stories (Country Stories | 1835) #Cousin_Mary_LM (Cousin Mary [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04) #Cousin_Mary_OV (Cousin Mary [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the ninth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It) #Cranford (Cranford | 1853) #Cribbage_Players_OV (The Cribbage Players. A Country Dialogue [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #CrimTrials_Porteous (Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-Lothian | 1818 | Full title: Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-L) #Critic_play (The Critic: or, a Tragedy Rehearsed | A burlesque satire on theatrical production and performance, first performed in ) #CritProse_Dryden (The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden | 1800 | Full title: The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden, Now First) #Cunigonda_DS_1827 (Cunigonda's Vow: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #Curate_St_Nicholas_BR (The Curate of St. Nicholas | 1835 | A version of this story was published as Our Rector in the English Annual for 18) #Cyllenius_epic (The Travels of Cyllenius: A Poem, in 66 cantos | 1795 | First published in 1795 and privately printed by Charles Dickinson himself. Peri) #Cymbeline_play (Cymbeline | 1623 | First performed around 1611 and first printed in 1623.) #Daniells (Rural Sports | Printed in numerous editions between 1801-1817.) #Deaf_Dumb_play (Deaf and Dumb) #DeafasPost_play (Deaf as a Post (Drury Lane, 1823) | a one-act farce) #Decline_Fall (The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) #Dedication_to_Father_OV1 (Dedication to her father [of Our Village] | In late editions of Our Village, Mitford added this dedication to her father. No) #Delphine (Delphine | 1802 | Mitford rated it not good and much too dismal.) #DeRance (De Rancé: a Poem | 1815) #Desc_NSWales (A Description of the Colony of New South Wales | 1819 | Full title: A Statistical, Historical, and Political Description of the Colony o) #DescCat_Louvre (A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the Louvre | 1817 | Full title: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the) #Diary_Dodington (The Diary of the late George Bubb Dodington | 1784 | Full title: The Diary of the Late George Bubb Dodington, Baron of Melcombe Regis) #Diary_Invalid (The Diary of an Invalid | 1820 | Full title: The Diary of an Invalid; being the journal of a tour in pursuit of h) #Discipline (Discipline: A Novel | 1814 | First edition published anonymously.) #Display_JT (Display | 1815 | Full title: Display: A Tale. For Young People.) #Dissenting_Minister_BR (The Dissenting Minister | 1835) #DoctorCasden_LM (Doctor Casden | 1824-06 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in June 1824. It was re-titled for v) #DoctorTubb_OV (Doctor Tubb [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Don_Juan_poem (Don Juan | Published in parts between 1820 and 1824.) #Don_Quixote_novel (El ingenioso hidalgo don Quijote de la Mancha | Published in two volumes in 1605 and 1615) #Don_Sebastian_play (Don Sebastian) #DonningtonCastle_1827 (On Visiting Donnington Castle [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 18 in the 1827 collection (pages 311-12). Also appeared in the 1821 New M) #Dora_Creswell_OV (Dora Creswell [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It also appeared as) #Douglas_play (Douglas: A Tragedy | 1757 | First performed in 1756in Edinburgh, followed by a performance in London in 1757) #Dramatic_Works_of_MRM (The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford | 1854) #DramaticScenes (Dramatic Scenes, Sonnets, and Other Poems | 1827) #Dudley (Dudley | 1819 | 3 volumes. by Miss O'Keeffe.) #Early_Rec_Caroline_Cleveland_OV (Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #Early_Rec_Cobbler_Over_Way_OV (Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Early_Rec_English_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The English Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Early_Rec_French_Emigrants_OV (Early Recollections. French Emigrants [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch originally appeared in the February 29, 1824 issue of The Lady's Mag) #Early_Rec_French_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The French Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It originally appeare) #Early_Rec_General_and_Lady_OV (Early Recollections. The General and his Lady [Our Village version] The General and His Lady: A Sketch [Literary Souvenir version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Early_Rec_My_Godfather_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published) #Early_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_OV (Early Recollections. My School-Fellows | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Early_Rec_MyGodfathers_Manoeuvering_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Early_Rec_OV (Early Recollections [Our Village subseries] Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Early Recollections. The English Teacher Early Recollections. French Emigrants Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Early Recollections. The French Teacher Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuverings Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman | 1826—1832 | The title of an Our Village subseries, Early Recollections first ran occasionall) #Early_Rec_Tom_Hopkins_OV (Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins [Our Village version] Tom Hopkins [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was published pre) #Early_Rec_Widow_Gentlewoman_OV (Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished i) #EditorIntro_OV_DentEveryman (Editor's Introduction [Dent Everyman edition]) #EditorIntro_OV_FolioSoc (Our Village, Folio Society, 1996) #EditorIntro_OV_Macmillan ( | This introduction by Anne Thackeray Ritchie was influential in establishing Mitf) #EditorIntro_OV_OUP_pb (Editor's Introduction [Oxford University Press, pb]) #EditorIntro_OV_Penguin (Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987]) #EditorIntro_OV_SampsonLowMSR_BC (Our Village [Sampson Low, Martson, Seale & Rivington edition, 1882] | This introduction appeared in the 1882 Sampson Low, Martson & and Rivington, and) #Ellen_OV (Ellen [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. ) #Ellesmere (Ellesmere | Author and date unidentified.) #Emily_DS (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Originally appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505. Later repri) #Emily_DS_1827 (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505 . Late) #Emma_JA (Emma: A Novel | 1819) #Enc_Metr (Encyclopedia Metropolitana; or, Universal Dictionary of Knowledge (30 vols., 1817-1845)) #Endymion (Endymion) #Eng_KingsWd_FT (England. The King's Ward | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #EnglefieldHouse_1827 (Englefield House [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 10 in the 1827 collection (page 303) .) #Epilogue_Orestes_TNT (Epilogue to Orestes by Euripides | Talfourd wrote an Epilogue for a performance of Orestes by Euripides . Later pri) #Epistle_Friend_1810 (Epistle to a Friend. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #EpitaphOnMary_1811 (Epitaph on Mary, the Wife of George Mitford, Esq. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #EskdaleHerdboy (The Eskdale Herd-Boy | 1819 | Full title: The Eskdale Herd-Boy, a Scottish Tale for the Instruction and Amusem) #Essays_of_Elia_nonfict (The Essays of Elia) #Eunice (Eunice | 1809) #Euro_Settlements_in_Am (An Account of the European Settlements in America, in six parts | 1757) #Evelina_FB (Evelina: Or, The History of a Young Lady’s Entrance Into the World | 1778 | First edition published anonymously.) #EveningHour_1827 (Sweet is the balmy evening hour | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line. Also appeared in the 1827 Pledg) #EveningPrimrose_1810 (To the Evening Primrose. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #EveningsRichest_1827 (Evening's richest colours glowing | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #FaerieQu_ES (The Faerie Queene | ) #Fair_Rosamund_DS_1827 (Fair Rosamund: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #FairEleanor_1811 (Fair Eleanor: A Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #FaithfulShepherdess_JF (The Faithful Shepherdess | Likely first performed in 1608 and first appeared in print in 1609.) #Fall_Jerusalem_HM (The Fall of Jerusalem | 1820 | Full title: The Fall of Jerusalem: A Dramatic Poem.) #FallofRobespierre (The Fall of Robespierre: An Historic Drama | 1794 | Three-act historical drama collaboratively written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge an) #Fannys_Fairings_OV (Fanny's Fairings [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub) #Father_Bocking_1810 (To my Father, on his Return from Bocking. May 29, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #FavoriteBower_1810 (Written in a Favorite Bower, Previous to Leaving Home, May 14, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem refers to Mitford's home Bertram House and is dated May 14, 1809. This) #Fawn_DS_1827 (The Fawn: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #Fiesco_MRMplay (Fiesco | Mitford’s first attempt to write a full-length tragedy, never performed or print) #Fiesco_play (Die Verschwörung des Fiesco zu Genua; or Fiesco’s Conspiracy at Genoa) #FindensT_1838 (Findens' Tableaux: A Series of Picturesque Scenes of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1837 | 1838 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed five selections.) #FindensT_1839 (Findens' Tableaux of the Affections; A series of Picturesque Illustrations of the Womanly Virtues | 1838 | 1839 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed four selections.) #FindensT_1840 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXL | 1839 | 1840 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.) #FindensT_1841 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXLI | 1840 | 1841 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.) #FindensT_1843 (Finden's Tableaux of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1842 | A two-volume anthology of previously-published stories and poems from Finden's T) #Fingal_Ossian (Fingal: An Ancient Epic Poem, in Six Books: Together with Several Other Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic Language, by James Macpherson. | 1762 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.) #Fisherman_in_Married_State_OV (The Fisherman in his Married State [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It is a second part ) #FishingSeat_1827 (The Fishing-Seat, Whiteknights [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 14 in the 1827 collection (page 307) . Also appeared in the 1827 Literary) #Flirtation_Extraordinary_BR (Flirtation Extraordinary | 1835 | This story was also published in the English Annual for 1837 with the title A Se) #Flora_Fest (Festival of Flora | 1818 | ) #Florence_Macarthy_SO (Florence Macarthy: An Irish Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she was very much amused by it. Later, she writes that she ) #ForgetMeNot_1827 (The Forget-Me-Not [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 3 in the 1827 collection (page 295) .) #Foscari_MRMplay (Foscari: A Tragedy | 1826) #Fragments_Ossian (Fragments of Ancient Poetry Collected in the Highlands of Scotland, and Translated from the Galic or Erse Language | 1760 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.) #Frags_Dumas (Fragments des oeuvres d'Alexandre Dumas choisis à l'usage de la jeunesse par Miss Mitford | 1846) #Freshwater_Fisherman_OV (The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It also appeared in ) #FriendBirthday_1827 (To a Friend on Her Birthday [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 15 in the 1827 collection (page 308) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont) #FriendsAlbum_1827 (Written in a Friend's Album [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 17 in the 1827 collection (page 310) . Also appeared in Marshall's Christ) #FriendToLisbon_1827 (On the Departure of a Friend to Lisbon for the Recovery of Her Health [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 21 in the 1827 collection (page 315) .) #FudgeFamilyParis (The Fudge Family in Paris | 1818) #GammerGurton (Gammer Gurton’s Needle | Comic play written during the 1550s, considered one of the first comedies in Eng) #Gaston_deBlondeville (Gaston de Blondeville | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep) #Gaston_novel (Gaston de Blondeville) #GaySummerMorn_1827 ('Tis a gay summer morn, and the sunbeams dance | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #George3_CourtFam (George III, his court, and family | 1820) #Geraniaceae (Geraniaceae: The Natural Order of Gerania, Illustrated by Coloured Figures and Descriptions; Comprising the Numerous and Beautiful Mule-varieties Cultivated in the Gardens of Great Britain, with Directions for Their Treatment | 1820—1830 | Printed in 5 volumes between 1820 and 1830.) #GhostStories_OV (Ghost Stories [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Gleaner_FT (The Gleaner | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Glenarvon_fict (Glenarvon) #Glenfergus_fict (Glenfergus. In Three Volumes | 1820) #GlowWorm_1810 (To the Glow-Worm. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Going_to_Races_OV (Going to the Races [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu) #Grace_Neville_OV (Grace Neville [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was previously p) #Great_Farmhouse_LM (A Great Farmhouse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-02 | This sketch was collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Great_Farmhouse_OV (A Great Farmhouse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It or) #Greek_Plays_BR (The Greek Plays | 1835) #Ground_Ash_CS (The Ground Ash | 1835) #GulliversTr_JS (Jonathan Swift | 1726 | Amended 1735) #Guy_Mannering (Guy Mannering) #Hacho (Hacho; or, the Spell of St. Wilten | 1819 | Narrative poem in imitation of Scott, written while the author was at Cambridge.) #HalidonHill (Halidon Hill; A Dramatic Sketch from Scottish History | 1822) #Hamlet_play (Hamlet | 1603 | First performed around 1602 and first printed in 1603.) #Hannah_LM (Hannah [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village in 1824.) #Hannah_OV (Hannah [Our Village version] | 1824 | Hannahappeared as the second story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It was ori) #HaroldEx (Harold the Exile | 1819 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously and with no publisher listed. Considered to be ) #Harry_L_Talking_Gent_LM (Harry L., or The Talking Gentleman [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-08 | This sketch appeared in the August 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. It was lat) #HavardChasI_play (The Tragedy of Charles I | 1747) #HayCarrying_OV (Hay-Carrying [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was first publis) #Haydon_Corresp (Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk | ) #Haymakers_OV (The Haymakers. A Country Story [Our Village Version[ | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu) #Haymaking_OV (Haymaking [alternate title assigned to Hay-Carrying in some later editions of Our Village]) #Hazlitt_LecComic (Lectures on the English Comic Writers) #Hazlitt_LecDrama (Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth) #HeadlongHall (Headlong Hall | 1816 | Mitford rated it as famous.) #HearingTalfourd_1827 (On Hearing Mr. Talfourd Plead in the Assize-Hall at Reading, On His First Circuit, March 1821 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 13 in the 1827 collection (page 306) .) #Heart_of_Mid (The Heart of Midlothian | 1822) #Heiress_MRM (The Heiress | Projected novel by Mary Russell Mitford, apparently never completed. Coles posit) #Helen_play (Helen) #Henry_Talbot_DS_1827 (Henry Talbot: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #HenryIVpt1_play (Henry IV, part one | First printed in 1598; likely in performance before that date.) #HenryIVpt2_play (Henry IV, part two | 1600) #HenryV_play (Henry V) #HenryVIII_play (Henry VIII) #Heraline_LMH (Heraline; or, Opposite Proceedings | 1821 | 4 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entry of 9 August 9 18) #HermitInLondon (The Hermit in London | 1819 | Published anonymously. 5 volumes. Full title: The Hermit In London, Or, Sketches) #Hester_BR ( | 1835) #Hist_Crusades_CM (The History of the Crusades | 1820 | Full title: The History of the Crusades, for the recovery and possession of the ) #Hist_JSpinner (The History of Jenny Spinner | 1800 | Full title: The History of Jenny Spinner, the Hertfordshire Ghost. Written by he) #Hist_ParisianMass (The History of the Parisian Massacre | 1810 | Full title: The History of the Parisian Massacre; Wherein all the minute circums) #HistAcctAfrica_JL (Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late J. Leyden | 1817 | Full title: Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late) #HistEdRichII_Howard (History of the Reigns of Edward and Richard II | 1690 | Published near the end of his life, this play involved Sir Robert, a royalist sy) #HistEngland_Hume (The History of England | 1754—1761 | Hume wrote the six volumes of this monumental history in reverse chronological o) #History_Burnet (Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time | 1818 | Full title: Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time from the restoration of King) #History_Municipal_Church_St_Lawrence (A History of the Municipal Church of St. Lawrence, Reading | 1883 publication used by Needham to establish local histories and identities of ) #HistWIndies_BE (History of the West Indies | 1798 | 5 volumes. Full title: The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British West In) #HoflandsJerusalem_1827 (On Mr. Hofland's Picture of Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 2 in the 1827 collection (page 294) . Also appeared in the 1826 Amulet as) #Holcroft_Mems (Memoirs of the Late Thomas Holcroft, Written by Himself and Continued to the Time of His Death | 1816) #Honeymoon_play (The Honeymoon) #Honor_OCallaghan_CS (Honor O'Callaghan | 1835) #HopG_FT (Hop-Gathering | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Hopping_Bob_OV (Hopping Bob [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Horace_play (Horace | 1640) #HoundandHorn_1827 (With hound and horn and huntsman's call | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #Hudibras_SB (Hudibras | First published in three parts in 1663, 1664 and 1678, then as a single edition ) #HumanLife_SR (Human Life: A Poem | 1819) #Humphrey_Clinker_fict (The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker | 1771) #Hypocrite (The Hypocrite | A satirical version of Moliere’splay, Tartuffe by Bickerstaff.) #Il_Pensoroso (Il Pensoroso | 1645 | Written 1632, together with L' Allegro.) #Iliad (The Iliad | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.) #Illinois_Birkbeck (Letters from Illinois: Illustrated by a Map of the United States, Shewing Mr. Birkbeck’s Journey from Norfolk to Illinois and a Map of English Prairie and the Adjacent Country by John Melish | 1818 | Mitford likely read this edition, published in London; editions also appeared in) #Illus_LitHist (Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century | 1818 | Full title: Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century, Con) #Imitated_Italian_1810 (Imitated from the Italian. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Impromptu_Whitbread_1810 (Impromptu, On Hearing Mr. Whitbread Declare, On Lord Melville's Trial, That He Fondly Trusted his Name Would Descend with Honor to Posterity. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #Independence (Independence | Author and date unidentified.) #Independence_1827 (Independence | 1827 | 1827 narrative poem.) #India_JournalResidence_Graham (Maria Graham | 1812 | Another edition was published in 1813 in Edinburgh by A. Constable and Company, ) #Inez_deCastro_MRMplay (Inez de Castro; A Tragedy in Five Acts | ) #InfantileLove_1811 (Infantile Love. | 1811 | 1811 poem. A portion of this poem appears as an epigraph in Poems by Eliza Gabri) #Inferno_Dante (Inferno | 1472 | The Inferno is the first part of Dante Alighieri’s 14th-century epic poem %h3 Di) #Inquisitive_Gent_OV (The Inquisitive Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #InsaneWorld (The Insane World | 1818 | Full title: The Insane World; or, a Week in London. A Satire. Mitford dismissed ) #IntendedRemoval_1827 (On an Intended Removal From a Favourite Residence. November, 1820 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 20 in the 1827 collection (page 314) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont) #IntNarr_Bruce (An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Abyssinia | 1790 | Full title: An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Ab) #Intro_DW (Introduction | 1854 | Introduction, first published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not) #Intro_Farewell_to_OV_v5 (Introduction. Farewell to Our Village | 1832 | This sketch appeared as the introduction to the fifth and final volume of Our Vi) #Introduction_ExtractsLetters_OV_v3 (Introduction [to Our Village, volume 3] | 1828 | This essay appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828.) #Introductory_Letter_to_Miss_W_OV (Introductory Letter, to Miss W. [Our Village version] | 1830 | This appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village, by way of introduction. The l) #InvariablePrin_WLB (The Invariable Principles of Poetry, in a Letter Addressed to Thomas Campbell, Esq.; Occasioned by Some Critical Observations in his Specimens of British Poets, Particularly Relating to the Poetical Character of Pope. | | Part of a controversy over the significance poetry of Alexander Pope in the earl) #Ion_Euripides (Ion | -0414—-0412 | The ancient Greek play on which Thomas Noon Talfourd based his political tragedy) #Ion_TNTplay (Ion) #Irish_Haymaker_BR (The Irish Haymaker | 1835) #Isabella_poem (Isabella, or the Pot of Basil | 1820 | Keats's narrative poem is adapted from the tale of Isabella and Lorenzo from Gio) #Italian_AR (The Italian | 1797 | Full title: The Italian, or the Confessional of the Black Penitents. A Romance.) #ItalianTrans_ChasD (Italian Translations | 1819 | Unpublished manuscript translations of works in Italian. Mitford reviewed the ma) #Ivanhoe (Ivanhoe) #Jack_Hatch_OV (Jack Hatch [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published) #Jesse_Cliffe_CS (Jesse Cliffe | 1835 | This story was also published in The Library of Fiction; or Family Story Teller ) #Jessy_Lucas_OV (Jessy Lucas [Our Village version] Jessy of Kibe's Farm [Bijou version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #JoannasProphecy_1810 (Joanna's Prophecy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #JohnBull_play (John Bull the Englishman’s Fireside, a Comedy in five acts. | 1805) #JohnGospel_NewTest (The Gospel of John | Fourth Book of the New Testament of the Christian Bible, presumably (and contest) #Johnson_Lives (Lives of the English Poets | 1783) #Journal_Greenland (Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the years 1770 to 1778 | 1818 | Full title: Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the) #Journal_India1817 (Journal of a Route Across India | 1819 | Full title: Journal of a Route Across India, Through Egypt, to England, in the L) #Journal_Soldier71st (A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st | 1819 | Full title: A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st, or Glasgow Regiment, Highland Li) #Julian_MRMplay (Julian; a Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823) #Julius_Caesar_play (Julius Caesar | 1599 | Shakespeare's play about the assassination of Julius Caesar.) #JuniusLtrs (The Letters of Junius | 1772 | Collection of letters written pseudonymously between 1769 and 1772 and colleccte) #Kehama (The Curse of Kehama: A Poem in Two Volumes | 1810) #Kenilworth_WS (Kenilworth | 1821) #King_Harwood_BR (King Harwood | 1835) #King_John_play (The Life and Death of King John | Likely written in the mid-1590s; not published until it appeared in the First Fo) #King_John_Valpy (King John, an Historical Tragedy, Altered from Shakespeare, as it was Acted at Reading School for the Subscription to the Naval Pillar, to be Erected in Honor of the Naval Victories of the Present War | 1800) #King_Lear_play (King Lear) #KingAnecd (Political and Literary Anecdotes of His Own Times. | According to the title page, a memoir of Dr. William King, written in his sevent) #KingCoal (King Coal's Levée | 1819 | Full title: King Coal's Levee, Or Geological Etiquette, With Explanatory Notes; ) #KingsPg_FT (The King's Page | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Knights_Swan (Knights of the Swan | 1796 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Knights of the Swan: or, the court of Charlemagne: a ) #Lallegro (John Milton | 1645 | Poem found in Milton’s 1645 Poems of Mr. John Milton both English and Latin, Com) #Lamb_Chas_NewStyleActing (Charles Lamb) #Lamb_Chas_Works (Charles Lamb | ) #Lament_Tasso (Lament of Tasso) #Laodamia_WW (Laodamia | 1815) #Last_Letters_Jac_Ortis (The Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis | 1802 | Epistolary novel read by Mitford who describes it in her Journal on 15 June 1820) #LeavingPicture_1827 (On Leaving a Favourite Picture [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 16 in the 1827 collection (page 309) . Appeared in the 1821 New Monthly M) #LecComic_WHaz (Lectures on the English Comic Writers, delivered at the Surry Institution | 1819 | Spelled Surry on title page.) #LecDramatic_WHaz (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth, Delivered at the Surry Institution | 1820) #LecPoetry_WHaz (Lectures on the English Poets, delivered at the Surrey Institution | 1819) #Lects_WmLawrence (Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and the Natural History of Man | 1819 | Full title: Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and t) #LectsHistLit_Schlegel (Lectures on the History of Literature: Ancient and Modern | 1819) #Lectures_Dramatic (A course of lectures on dramatic art and literature | 1815 | Translation of Schlegel's Vorlesungen über dramatische Kunst und Litteratur, fi) #Lectures_JOpie (Lectures on Painting | 1809 | Full title: Lectures on Painting, Delivered at the Royal Academy of Arts: with a) #Lectures_Paint_HF (Lectures on Painting: Delivered at the Royal Academy, March, 1801. | 1801) #LegendGoodWomen (The Legend of Good Women | A collection of legends believed to be composed during the 1380s.) #Legends_B (Metrical Legends of Exalted Characters | 1821 | ) #LeightonPr (Leighton Priory | Author and date unidentified.) #Letters_Hearne_Aubrey (Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: To Which are Added, Hearne’s Journeys to Reading, and to Whaddon Hall, the Seat of Browne Willis, Esq., and Lives of Eminent Men by John Aubrey, Esq., the Whole Now First Published from the Originals | 1813) #Letters_NItaly (Letters from the North of Italy | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Letters from the North of Italy: Addressed to Henry Hallam, ) #Letters_to_Heber (Letters to R. Heber, Esq., containing critical remarks on the series of novels beginning with Waverley and an attempt to ascertain their author | 1821) #LIEO_Poems (Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems | 1820 | Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, published in July 1820, ) #Life_Burke_RB (The Life of Burke | 1800 | Full title: The Life of Edmund Burke: Comprehending an Impartial Account of his ) #Life_DukeofMarl_WC (Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough: With His Original Correspondence; Collected from the Family Records at Blenheim, and Other Authentic Sources. Illustrated with Portraits, Maps, and Military Plans. | 1818) #Life_LadyRussell (Some Account of the Life of Rachael Wriothesley, Lady Russell, by the editor of Madam Du Deffand’s letters. | 1819 | Source: HathiTrust) #Life_of_Johnson (Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. | 1791 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D., Comprehending an Accoun) #Life_Wesley (The Life of Wesley | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Life of Wesley; and the Rise and Progress of Methodis) #Life_WmRussell (The Life of William, Lord Russell | 1820 | Full title: The Life of William, Lord Russell; with some account of the times in) #LifeRichard2 (The Life and Reign of King Richard the Second, by a Person of Quality | 1681) #Lights_Shadows (Lights and Shadows of American Life | 1832) #LilyBells_1827 (The lily bells are wet with dew | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #Lit_Pocket_Bk (The Literary Pocket Book, or Companion for the Lover of Art and Nature | Literary almanac edited by Leigh Hunt that includes original poems by P. Shelley) #Little_Miss_Wren_OV (Little Miss Wren [Our Village version] Little Miss Wren: a Sketch [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Little_Rachel_OV (Little Rachel [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Lives_HaydnMoz (The Lives of Haydn and Mozart | 1818 | Written by Marie-Henri Beyle, better known as Stendahl, under the pseudonym L. A) #London_Visitor_CS (The London Visitor | 1835) #Lost_Dahlia_CS (The Lost Dahlia | 1835) #Lost_Found_OV (Lost and Found [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Lost_Keys_OV (The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #Lost_Won_OV (Lost and Won [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be) #LostPearl_FT (Ceylon. The Lost Pearl | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Louisa_OV (Louisa [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #LoveSickMaid_1811 (The Love-Sick Maid; An Imitation of the Writers of the Seventeenth Century. [1811 version] | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Ltrs_Cont_JW (Letters from the Continent | 1819 | Full title: Letters from the Continent During the Months of October, November, a) #Lucy_LM (Lucy [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-09 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Lucy_OV (Lucy [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the sixth sketch in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It) #Lucy_Revisited_LM (Lucy Re-visited [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-08 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in August 1824. It was re-titled for) #Macbeth_play (Macbeth) #Mademoiselle_Therese_OV (Mademoiselle Therese [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #Mademoiselle_Tournon (Mademoiselle de Tournon | 1820 | ) #Mahomet_play (Mahomet | 1741) #Maids_Tragedy_play (The Maid’s Tragedy) #Manfred (Manfred) #ManinMoon_Hone (The Man in the Moon | 1820 | Full title: The Man in the Moon, A Speech from the Throne to the Senate of Lunat) #Manners (Manners: A Novel | 1817 | 3 vols. Written under the pseudonym Madame Panache. Mitford rated it a pretty th) #MansfieldPk (Mansfield Park | 1814 | 3 volumes. Full title: Mansfield Park: A Novel. Published as by the Author of Pr) #Marianne_OV (Marianne [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #MariaWinningCup_1810 (On Maria's Winning the Cup, At the Ilsley Coursing Meeting. November 9, 1808. Inscribed to W. Cobbett, Esq. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #MarinersTale_1811 (The Mariner's Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Marino_Faliero (Marino Faliero) #Mark_Bridgman_BR (Mark Bridgman | 1835) #Marmion_WS (Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field | 1808) #Marriage_SF (Marriage: A Novel | 1818 | Mitford records that she liked it very much; she also says that it made me laugh) #Masque_Seasons_DS_1827 (Masque of the Seasons: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #Materials_WB (Materials for Thinking | 1806) #MaternalAffection_1811 (Maternal Affection. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Matthew_Shore_OV (Matthew Shore [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Mazeppa_By (Mazeppa, a Poem. | 1819 | Mitford records that she liked it very much.) #Measure_Measure_play (William Shakespeare | 1623 | Comedy likely written in 1603 or 1604, first known to be published in the First ) #Medecine_esprit (La Médecine de l’esprit | 1753) #Melincourt (Melincourt | 1817 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.) #Melmoth_CM (Melmoth the Wanderer: A Tale | 1820) #Memoirs_of_the_life_of_Colonel_Hutchinson (Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson | 1806 | Lady Lucy Hutchinson composed the Memoirs sometime between the date of her husba) #Memory_John_Moore_1810 (To The Memory of Sir John Moore. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Mems_AnneBoleyn (Memoirs of the Life of Anne Boleyn, Queen of Henry VIII. By Miss Benger. | 1818 | 2 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entries of March 25, 2) #Mems_Conde (Memoirs of the Life of the Great Condé | 1807 | Translated into English from the French by Fanny Holcroft. Mitford called them n) #Mems_Curran (Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the Right Honourable John Philpot Curran | 1817 | Full title: Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the ) #Mems_ElizHamilton (Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, with a selectio) #Mems_Evelyn (Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writing of John Evelyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writings of John Evelyn, Esq. ) #Mems_Huet (Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranches | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranche) #Mems_Martyn (Memoirs of the Rev. Henry Martyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoir of the Rev. Henry Martyn, B.D. late fellow of St. John's Coll) #Mems_Montrose (Memoirs of the Most Renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs of the most renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose. Tran) #Mems_Napoleon1815 (Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1820 | Mitford rated it rather dull but then also called it a most interesting book.) #Mems_RLEdgeworth (Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth, Esq. begun by himsel) #Mems_Sidney_TZ (Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Sir Philip Sidney | 1808 | Mitford rated it as stupid.) #Mems_Temple (Mémoires Particuliers de la Captivité de la Famille Royale de la Tour de Temple | 1817 | Full title: Mémoires particuliers, formant avec l'ouvrage de M. Hue et le Journa) #Mems_Vaux (Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life of James Hardy Vaux | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Volume 1: Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life ) #Mems_WilhelminaofPrussia (Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina | 1812 | Full title: Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina: princess royal of Prussia, m) #MemsQE1 (Memoirs of the Court of Elizabeth, Queen of England | 1818 | 2 volumes.) #Merchant_of_Venice_play (The Merchant of Venice) #Merope_play (Merope) #Merry_Wives_play (The Merry Wives of Windsor | 1602 | First printed in 1602; believed to have been written prior to 1597.) #Metamorphoses (Metamorphōseōn librī | 0008 | First translated into English by William Caxton in 1480.) #Methought_sonnet23 (Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint | 1673 | Milton's sonnet later designated 23, Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint, som) #MidsummerNtsD (A Midsummer Night's Dream) #Milton_PoemsI (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1645 | Milton's first published collection of poems.) #Milton_PoemsII (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1673) #MiltonWksLife_CS (The Prose Works of John Milton: with a Life of the Author | 1806 | Mitford rated it very good.) #Minstrelsy_WS (Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border: Consisting of Historical and Romantic Ballads, Collected in the Southern Counties of Scotland; with a Few of Modern Date, Founded upon Local Tradition | 1802) #MiscPoems_Dryden (Miscellany Poems, in two parts. Containing new translations of Virgil’s Eclogues, Ovid’s Love-elegies, several parts of Virgil’s Æneids, Lucretius, Theocritus, Horace, &c. With several original poems, never before printed. | 1688) #Miseries_JB (The Miseries of Human Life, Or the Last Groans of Timothy Testy and Samuel Sensitive; with a few supplementary sighs from Mrs. Testy. With which are now for the first time Interspersed, Varieties, Incidental to the Principal Matter, In Prose and Verse. In Nine Additional Dialogues, as Overheard by James Beresford, A.M. Fellow of Merton-College, Oxford | 1807) #MiserMarried (The Miser Married: A Novel | 1813 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it a clever thing.) #Miss_Philly_Filkin_CS (Miss Philly Filkin, the China Woman | 1835) #Mission_Ashantee (Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee | 1819 | Full title: Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee: with a statistical accou) #Missionary_SO (The Missionary: An Indian Tale | 1811 | ) #MissMurray_1810 (To the Hon. Miss Murray, with Miss Rowden's "Poetical Introduction to Botany." | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Mod_Antiques_LM (Modern Antiques [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-03 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Mod_Antiques_OV (Modern Antiques [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I) #MoleCatcher_OV (The Mole-catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Monastery (The Monastery | As Mitford reads, she rates it not very good, not so good as some of his Novels ) #Montorio_CM (The Fatal Revenge; or, the Family of Montorio | 1807) #Moonlight_Adventure_OV (A Moonlight Adventure [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Moore_ViewItaly (A View of Society and Manners in Italy: with Anecdotes relating to some Eminent Characters | ) #MoralTales_ME (Moral Tales for Young People | 1801 | In 3 volumes. Includes: Forester, The Prussian Vase, The Knapsack, The Good Aunt) #Mordaunt (Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Countries | 1800 | Full title: Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Coun) #More_of_OurVillage_LM (More of Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-12 | This sketch was published in The Lady's Magazine in December 1824. It was re-tit) #Morland (Morland | Author and date unidentified.) #Morning_Ramble_OV (A Morning Ramble | Subtitle of the Our Village, third volume story, Wheat Hoeing, that was adopted ) #MossyMs (Manuscript tribute to Mossy | Manuscript tribute to Mossy, written after his death.) #MossyPoem (Manuscript poem to Mossy | Manuscript poem to Mossy, written after his death.) #MotherSleeping_1827 (To My Mother Sleeping [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 6 in the 1827 collection (page 299) .) #Mr_Jos_Hanson_CS (Mr. Joseph Hanson, the Haberdasher | 1835) #MRM_Bio_Selected_OV_Blackie (Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?]) #Mrs_Hollis_BR (Mrs. Hollis, the Fruiterer | 1835) #Mrs_Mosse_OV (Mrs. Mosse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the twentieth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.) #Mrs_Tompkins_BR (Mrs. Tompkins, the Cheesemonger | 1835) #Much_Ado_play (Much Ado About Nothing) #MungoPark_1810 (Lines, Suggested by the Uncertain Fate of Mungo Park, the Celebrated African Traveller. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #My_Godmothers_OV (My Godmothers [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #MyGarden_MRM (My Garden: A Nineteenth-Century Writer on her English Cottage Garden | 1990) #MysteriousWife (The Mysterious Wife: a novel | 1797 | 4 volumes. Minerva Press. Published under the pseudonym Gabrielli.) #Mystery_TG (Mystery, or Forty Years Ago: A Novel | 1820 | 3 vols. Mitford considered it not very good.) #Napoleon_memoir_nonfict (Mémoires pour servir à l’histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1819—1820 | Two volume publication: the first volume was published in 1819 and the second in) #NapoleonPeint (Napoleon Peint Par Lui-même. Extraits du Véritable Manuscrit de Napoleon Bonaparte, par un Amércain | 1818 | ) #Narr_Algiersin1816 (A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816 | 1819 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816, under the) #Narr_Campaign_Saxony (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 1813 | 1820 | Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 18) #Narr_EgyptCataracts (Narrative of a Journey in Egypt and the Country Beyond the Cataracts | 1817) #Narr_SAmPatriots (Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Join the South American Patriots | 1818 | Full title: Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Jo) #Narr_Senegal (Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816 | 1817 | Full title: Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816; Undertaken by Order of the) #Narrative_Eqypt_RW (A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt | 1800 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt. Under Sir Ralph Abercrombie.) #NarrativePoems (Narrative Poems on the Female Character in the Various Relations of Human Life | 1813) #Nat_Calendar (A Naturalist's Calandar: with Observations in Various Branches of Natural History | 1795 | This book, published posthumously, gives precise accounts of the actions of anim) #Nat_Hist_Selborne (The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne | 1789 | This influential book of nature writing is ostensibly formed from 110 letters ad) #NaturalisHist (Naturalis Historiæ | 0077—0079 | Encyclopedic work of thirty-seven books, organized in ten volumes. Source: LBT) #NearRuinedFarm_1811 (Stanzas Written Near a Ruined Farm. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #New_Married_Couple_OV (A New Married Couple [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #NewTestament_Bible (The New Testament | The second half of the Christian Bible, containing scriptures composed in Greek ) #NewWhigGuide (The New Whig Guide | 1819 | Authorship attributed to Viscount Henry John Temple Palmerston John Wilson Croke) #NewYearsDay_1827 (New Year's Day. 1819 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 11 in the 1827 collection (page 304) .) #NightmareAbbey (Nightmare Abbey | 1818 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.) #NightMay_1810 (The Night of May. To Miss W-- | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #NoFiction (No Fiction | 1820 | Full title: No Fiction: a narrative founded on recent and interesting facts. Mit) #Northanger_Abbey (Northanger Abbey | 1817 | First issued together with Persuasion in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Persuasio) #Note_OVBlackwoodsEd (Note [to Our Village, Blackwoods Educational Series edition, 1884] | 1884 | Introductory note to the Blackwood's Educational Series edition of Our Village.) #Obs_CauseEffect (Observations on the Nature and Tendency of the Doctrine of Mr. Hume, concerning the relation of cause and effect | 1806) #Obs_Landscape (Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening | 1818 | Full title: Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening: Incl) #ODonnel_SO (O’Donnel: A National Tale | 1814) #Odyssey (The Odyssey | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.) #Oedipus_play (Oedipus Tyrranus | Mitford tends to refer to this play by its Greek title, Oedipus Tyrranus.) #Old_Bachelor_OV (An Old Bachelor [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the sixteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824) #Old_David_Dykes_BR (Old David Dykes | 1835) #Old_Emigre_BR (The Old Emigre | 1835) #Old_Gipsy_OV (The Old Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Old_Master_Green_OV (Old Master Green. A Village Sketch. [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #Old_Mortality (Old Mortality) #OldManor_CS (Old Manor House | 1793 | ) #OldTestament_Bible (The Old Testament | The collection of ancient Hebrew scriptures comprising the first half of the Chr) #Olive_Hathaway_OV (Olive Hathaway [Our Village version] Olive Hathaway: a Village Sketch [Pledge of Friendship version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #OnRdngBalldWW_MRMpoem (On Reading a Ballad of Wordsworth | 1822-08-31) #Orestes_PB (Orestes in Argos; a Tragedy in Five Acts, by the late Peter Bayley, Esq. | 1825 | After his sudden death in 1823, Peter Bayley’s wife arranged to have his work pe) #Orestes_play (Orestes | -0408) #Orig_Miniature (The Original of the Miniature. A Novel. | 1816 | 4 volumes. Printed at the Minerva Press.) #Ormond_novel (Harrington, A Tale, and Ormond, A Tale. In Three Volumes. Vol.I | 1817) #Othello_play (Othello) #Otto (Otto of Wittelsbach: A Tragedy | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep) #Otto_Babo (Otto von Wittelsbach | 1783 | First performed in 1782. German tragedy based on the life of Otto II of Wittelsb) #Our_Maying_OV (Our Maying | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in .) #Our_Village1st_ed (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. [Volume I.] [volume one] | 1824 | The first edition, first volume of Our Village appeared without a volume number ) #Our_Village2nd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume II. [volume two] | 1826) #OurVillage_3rd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume III. [volume three] | 1828) #OurVillage_4th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume IV. [volume four] | 1830) #OurVillage_5th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume V. [volume five] | 1832) #OurVillage_BelfordsClarke (Our Village [Belfords Clarke 1880 edition] Editor Introduction [Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, Belfords Clarke editions] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1880 | Edition reprinted from the 1879 illustrated edition published by Sampson Low, Ma) #OurVillage_Bell (Our Village, New edition, second series [George Bell and Sons, first published 1848]The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1877 | Re-issue of the 1848 Henry G. Bohn edition after George Bell & Sons had bought i) #OurVillage_BlackwoodsEd (Our Village [Blackwoods Educational Series, 1884] | 1884 | A selected edition of Our Village stories for the juvenile market. It reprints t) #OurVillage_Bohn (Our Village, Henry G. Bohn, New Edition, First Series The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1848 | A two-volume edition of Our Village stories that reprints most titles from the s) #OurVillage_Caldwell (Our Village [Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and) #OurVillage_CountryPictures_WalterScott (Our Village: Country Pictures [Walter Scott edition, 1884, 1888] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village story] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Another Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh A Morning Ramble [alternate title of Wheat Hoeing Whitsun-Eve Haymaking [alternate title of Hay-Carrying Our Maying Lost and Found Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Harry Lewington A Castle in the Air Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls A Visit to Richmond Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1886—1888 | An illustrated edition of selected sketches from Our Village. The contents are o) #OurVillage_DentEveryman (Our Village [Dent Everyman edition, 1936, 1951] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Dent Everyman series edition, 1936, 1951] MRM's Dedication to her Father Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1936—1951 | A much-republished selected edition of Our Village stories, published by Dent in) #OurVillage_FolioSoc (Our Village [Folio Society, 1996] Editor's Introduction, Our Village, Folio Society, 1996 Dedication to her father Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velveet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1997 | Based on the volume published by George G. Harrap in 1947, illustrated by Shirle) #OurVillage_Hurst (OurVillage [Hurst edition, 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and) #OurVillage_ISIS (Our Village [ISIS Clear Type Classics, 1992] Country Pictures Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1992 | Selected large-print hardcover edition of Our Village stories. The edition compi) #OurVillage_JMDent (Temple Classics | 1900—1902—1906—1930—1935 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches that went through multiple editions in ) #OurVillage_Macmillan (Our Village, 1 volume, Macmillan edition, 1893 Editor Introduction [Our Village, Macmillan edition, 1893] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village (story)] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copose Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1893 | This selected edition of the Our Village stories is illustrated with black and w) #OurVillage_OUP_pb (Our Village [Oxford University Press edition, 1982] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Oxford University Press pb edition, 1982] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. A farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1982 | Selected paperback edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illustrated 194) #OurVillage_Penguin (Our Village [Penguin edition, 1987] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987| Our Village [story, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor the Talking Gentleman Walks in the Country. Nutting A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy A New Married Couple A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Lost and Won Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races A Castle in the Air Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1987 | Selected edition of Our Village stories, drawn largely from the first four volum) #OurVillage_PrenticeHall (Our Village [Prentice Hall 1986 edition] Our Village [story, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy A Christmas Party Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Lost and Found Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf The Haymakers | 1986 | A selected edition of sketches from Our Village, based on the edition originally) #OurVillage_SampsonLowMSR (Our Village. Illustrated. New and cheaper edition. [Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, 1882] Editor's Introduction [to Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington edition, 1882] Our Village [story] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1882 | This edition includes only the Walks in the Country stories. It contains numerou) #OurVillage_story (Our Village | 1821 | This refers to the draft sketch of the story whose title became eponymous with M) #OurVillage_story_LM (Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12 | This sketch became the first and standard introductory story to volume one of Ou) #OurVillage_story_OV (Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | The sketch entitled Our Village appeared as the first sketch in the Our Village ) #OurVillage_TicknorReadFields (Our Village [story] | 1853 | This edition re-prints virtually all of the Our Village stories, with the except) #OurVillage_Unit (Our Village [Unit Library edition, 1902] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village, sketch [Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood Early Recollections. The English Teacher Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland | 1902 | A selected edition of stories from Our Village. It reprints virtually the whole ) #OurVillage_WhiteLion (Our Village [White Lion edition, 1976] Publisher's Note and Introduction [Our Village, White Lion edition, 1976] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1976 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illlustrated 1947 George ) #OV ( | All editions of Our Village as a collection of related sketches and stories, eve) #OV_Harrap_1947 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1947] | 1947 | This 1947 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes) #OV_Macmillan_1893 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1893] | 1893 | This 1893 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes) #PaintersDa_DS_1827 (The Painter's Daughter: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #PaintersDa_DS_LM (The Artist: A Dramatic Sketch | 1822 | First published in The Lady's Magazine, new series 2, volume 3 (1822) under this) #ParadiseLost (John Milton | ) #Parisina (Parisina | 1816) #Parting_Glance_OV (A Parting Glance at Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch was the twenty-fourth and final story to appear in volume one of Our) #Parvenus (Les Parvenus; ou, Les Aventures de Julien Delmours | 1819) #Pattys_New_Hat_OV (Patty's New Hat [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been previous) #Pen_Sword_1810 (The Pen and the Sword. Inscribed to the Rt. Hon. R. B. Sheridan. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Pendennis_WT (The History of Pendennis: His Fortunes and Misfortunes, His Friends and His Greatest Enemy | 1849) #Peoples_Charter (People's Charter | 1838 | The formal declaration of the Chartist movement, which the Chartists strove to h) #Percival (Percival: or, Nature Vindicated: a Novel. | 1801 | Mitford called it a stupid old Novel. Source: Journal.) #Percy_Reliques (Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, consisting of Old Heroic Ballads, Songs, and other Pieces of our Earlier Poets, Together with Some of Later Date | 1765) #Peregrine_Pickle (The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, In Which are Included Memoirs of a Lady of Quality | 1751) #Persuasion (Persuasion | 1817 | First issued together with Northanger Abbey in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Per) #Peter_Jenkins_BR (Peter Jenkins, the Poulterer | 1835) #PeterBell_JHR (Peter Bell: A Lyrical Ballad | ) #PeterBell_WW (Peter Bell. A Tale in Verse. | 1817 | Mitford reports that she liked it and the parody by J. H. Reynolds very much. So) #Peters_Letters_novel (Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk | | Mitford rated it very good. In journal entry Saturday 4 September 1819 .) #Petrarque_deG (Pétrarque et Laura | 1819) #Phedre_play (Phèdre | 1677 | A play retelling the plot of the ancient Greek Hyppolytus by Euripedes, concentr) #Philaster_play (Philaster | 1620 | First performed before 1611, first printed in 1620.) #Philoctetes_play (Philoctetes) #PictTour_FrSw (A Picturesque Tour Through France, Switzerland, on the Banks of the Rhine, and Through Part of the Netherlands in the Year 1816 | 1817 | Mitford rated it as stupid. Unsigned, author unknown.) #Pilgrim_Cross (The Pilgrim of the Cross | 1805 | 4 vols. Full title: The Pilgrim of the Cross: or, the Chronicles of Christabelle) #Pirate_novel (The Pirate | 1822 | ) #Pizarro_play (Pizarro) #Pl_Friendship (The Pleasures of Friendship: A Poem, in two parts | 1810 | Long poem, first published in 1810 and reprinted in 1812 and 1818.) #PO_BerkshireDir (Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, and Oxfordshire; with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | 1847—1854 | Text and page images of the 1854 edition may be accessed through the University ) #PO_Directory_Berkshire (The Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | A series of directories of local gentry and tradespeople in the counties of the ) #Poems1645_Milton (John Milton | 1645) #Poems_1st_ed_MRM (Poems | 1810 | 1 volume.) #Poems_2nd_ed_MRM (Poems: Second Edition with Considerable Additions | 1811 | 2 volumes.) #Poems_2vols_WW (Poems by William Wordsworth [...] in Two Volumes | 1815 | 2 volumes. Full title: Poems by William Wordsworth: Including Lyrical Ballads, a) #PoemsOdes_Valpy1804 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. To Which is Added Some Account of the Lives of Rev. Mr. Benwell and Rev. Dr. Butt | 1804) #PoemsOdes_Valpy1826 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. Second edition. | 1826) #PopetoArbuthnot (An Epistle from Mr. Pope to Dr. Arbuthnot (1734)) #PopularTales_ME (Popular Tales | 1804 | In 3 volumes. Volume 1 includes: Lame Jervas, The Will, The Limerick Gloves, Out) #Portrait_Blanch_1811 (A Portrait. [from Blanch, an Unfinished Poem.] | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Portugal_1811 (Portugal. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #PR_JLeyden (The Poetical Remains of the Late Dr. John Leyden, with Memoirs of his Life, by the Rev. James Morton. | Source: HathiTrust) #Pratt_1810 (To Mr. Pratt. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #Prayer_Souls_Desire (Prayer is the Soul's Sincere Desire | 1818 | ) #Preface_OV_v1 (Preface [to Our Village, volume one] | 1824) #Preface_OV_v2 (Preface [to Our Village, volume two] | 1826) #Preface_OV_v3 (Preface [to Our Village, volume three] | 1828) #Preface_OV_v4 (Preface [to Our Village, volume four] | 1830) #Prelude_WW (The Prelude, or, Growth of a Poet's Mind: An Autobiographical Poem | 1850 | Autobiographical narrative poem, originally intended to introduce a poetic work ) #Pride_and_Prejudice (Pride and Prejudice: A Novel | 1813) #PrioryTales_H (Tales of the Priory | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading these tales in her Journal entries of July 1820, findin) #Prisoner_Chillon (Prisoner of Chillon) #PrivateCorr_BF (The Private Correspondence of Benjamin Franklin | 1817 | Full title: The private correspondence of Benjamin Franklin [ . . .]: comprising) #PrivLife_Misc_JN (Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father | 1818 | Full title: Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father. To which are added miscell) #Prologue_ReadingSchool_1810 (Prologue, Intended to Have Been Spoken Before the First Part of Henry the Fourth, Acted by the Gentlemen of the Reading School Meeting, October 23, 1809. Inscribed to the Rev. Dr. Valpy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Prom_Chained (Prometheus Chained | One of R. Potter’s eighteenth-century translations of Aeschylus’s plays, from hi) #PromBound_Aesch (Prometheus Bound | The authorship of this influential ancient Greek tragedy was classically attribu) #ProudL_FT (The Proud Ladye. A Chapter from the Chronicles of Adlersberg. | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Pub_Note_Intro_WhiteLion (Publisher's Note and Introduction) #Quakers_EL (The Quakers: A Tale | 1817) #Queen_of_the_Meadow_OV (The Queen of the Meadow [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #QueenhooH (Queenhoo Hall, A Romance | 1808 | 3 volumes. Published with Ancient Times, a drama as volume 4.) #QueensWake (The Queen’s Wake: a Legendary Poem | 1813 | A long poem, first published in 1813, purporting to be a collection of poems and) #Quiet_Gentlewoman_OV (A Quiet Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #RatCatcher_OV (The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu) #Raymond (Raymond | Author and date unidentified.) #RecluseScotland (The Recluse of the Appenines; or the Automaton Chief. A Romance. | 1820 | Read by Mitford, as recorded in her Journal in September 1820.) #Recoll_Reign_GeoIII (Recollections and Reflections, Personal and Political, as Connected with Public Affairs, During the Reign of George III | 1822) #Recollections (Recollections of a Literary Life; or, Books, Places, and People | 1852 | London edition in three volumes; New York edition in two volumes.) #Remarkable_Character_of_Old_School_LM (A Remarkable Character of the Old School [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01-31 | This sketch was published in the January 31, 1824 issue of The Lady's Magazine. ) #Remarks_HistEng (Remarks on the History of England | 1743 | Full title: Remarks on the History of England: From the Minutes of Humphry Oldca) #Remarks_Italy (Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, During an Excursion in Italy, in the Years 1802 and 1803. | 1816 | Mitford records she was charmed with it in her journal entry of Monday 15 Februa) #Remarks_scepticism (Remarks on Scepticism | 1819 | Full title: Remarks on Scepticism especially as it is connected with the subject) #Residuary_Legatee_OV (The Residuary Legatee. A True Story [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe) #ReturnFair_FT (The Return from the Fair | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Revenge_play (The Revenge: a Tragedy | First acted in 1721.) #RevisitingSchool_1810 (On Revisiting the School Where I was Educated. Addressed to Mrs. Rowden, of Hans Place. | 1810 | 1810 poem addressed to Mitford's friend and former teacher Frances Rowden, refer) #RevoltofIslam (The Revolt of Islam: A Poem, in Twelve Cantos | 1816 | The second published version of a poem that Percy Bysshe Shelley originally titl) #Reynolds_LitWks (The Literary Works of Sir Joshua Reynolds | 1819 | Full title: The Literary Works Of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Knight. Late President Of) #Rhododaphne (Rhododaphne: Or, The Thessalian Spell: A Poem | 1818) #RichardIII_play (The Life and Death of Richard the Third | Dramatizes King Richard III’s usurpation of the throne of England. The date of c) #Richelieu_play (Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy. A Play in Five Acts | 1839 | Loosely based on the historical Cardinal Richelieu; title role originated by Wil) #Rienzi (Rienzi; a Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1828 | There appears to be no printed edition of Rienzi authorized by Mitford upon its ) #Rienzi_EBL (Rienzi, The Last of the Roman Tribunes | 1835 | Edward Bulwer-Lytton's novel; a 1835 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienz) #Rienzi_Wagner (Rienzi, der Letzte der Tribunen | 1842 | Richard Wagner's opera; an 1842 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienzi, th) #Rival_Sisters (The Rival Sisters, a Poem in Three Cantos | 1813) #Rivals_RBS (The Rivals: A Comedy | First performed in 1776 at Covent Garden Theatre. Upon reading the play, Mitford) #RobinsonCrusoe_DD (The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner" | 1719 | Full title: The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of Yo) #Rome_ThreeMonths_Graham (Three Months Passed in the Mountains East of Rome: during the year 1819 | | Illustrated with engravings. Source: Google Books and WorldCAT. Mitford mentions) #Romeo_Juliet (Romeo and Juliet | 1597 | Shakespeare's tragedy, first published in 1597 in a quarto edition that is missi) #Rosamund_Story_of_Plague_BR (Rosamund. A Story of the Plague | 1835) #Rosedale_OV (Rosedale [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village .) #RoundheadsDa_FT (The Roundhead's Daughter | 1839 | A short story by Mitford set during the English Republican Era and the Restorati) #Rule_a_Wife_play (Rule a Wife and Have a Wife | Play was first performed in 1624 and first printed in 1640) #RusticT_FT (The Rustic Toilet | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Ruth_OT (Book of Ruth | Book of the Old Testament, considered a historical book in the canon of the the ) #Sacrifice_Isabel (The Sacrifice Of Isabel: A Poem. | 1816 | Mitford rated it an elegant Poem.) #Sad_Shepherd_BJ (The Sad Shepherd: Or, A Tale of Robin Hood, a Fragment | Appeared in this form in 1783, edited by Francis Godolphin Waldron and Peter Wha) #Sadak_Kalasrade (Sadak and Kalasrade; or, The Waters of Oblivion. A Romantic Opera in Two Acts | 1835 | Title page indicates Printed for the proprietor by S.G. Fairbrother, Lyceum Prin) #Sailors_Wedding_BR (The Sailor's Wedding | 1835 | This story was also published in English Annual for 1835.) #Sardanapalus_play (Sardanapalus: A Tragedy | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Cain.) #Sc_SirAllan_FT (Scotland. Sir Allan and His Dog | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Scenery_1810 (Sonnet, On Being Requested to Write on Scottish Scenery. | 1810 | 1810 sonnet. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerabl) #SeaSide_Recollections_OV (Sea-side Recollections [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #SecretCell_1811 (The Secret Cell. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Selected_Stories_from_OV_Blackie (Selected Stories from Our Village [Blackie and Sons, Ltd., n.d., 1920s?] Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?] Hannah Lucy Cousin Mary Ellen A Village Beau The Vicar's Maid The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Grace Neville Olive Hathaway A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines The Village Schoolmistress Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Mole-Catcher Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint The China Jug The Election The Two Sisters Hopping Bob the Incendiary. A Country Tale The Cousins The Residuary Legatee Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland A Moonlight Adventure | 1919-12-31—1929-12-31 | This edition of Our Village selections appears to have been published for the ju) #Self_Control (Self Control: A Novel | 1811 | First edition published anonymously.) #Sense_S (Sense and Sensibility | 1811 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously as by a Lady. Mitford rated it very good.) #Sermons_Chalmers (Sermons preached in the Tron Church, Glasgow | 1819 | Likely the new sermons that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on 2 July 18) #Sermons_RRussell (Manuscript sermons | Unpublished manuscript sermons by Mitford's grandfather. Mitford owns a copy, wh) #Shakespeare_Times_nonfict (Shakespeare and His Times: Including the Biography of the Poet; Criticisms on his Genius and Writings; A New Chronology of the Plays; A Disquisition on the Object of His Sonnets; And a History of the Manners, Customs, and Amusements, Superstitions, Poetry, and Elegant Literature of His Age | 1817 | Mitford considered it good materials badly used. In journal entry Sunday 19th Ma) #Sicilian_MM (The Sicilian | 1798 | Minerva Press.) #Siege_DS_1827 (The Siege | 1827 | Dramatic sketch which appeared in Lady's Magazine of September 30, 1822:462-66 a) #Silchester_1811 (Silchester. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Simple_Story (A Simple Story | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading this novel in her Journal on October 16, 1820.) #Sintram_Comp (Sintram and His Companions: A Romance | ) #Sir_Fr_Darrell (Sir Francis Darrell; or, the Vortex. A Novel | ) #SirPFrancisDenied (Sir Philip Francis denied!: a letter addressed to the British nation | 1817 | James Wilmot's niece Olivia Wilmot Serres claims that her uncle wrote The Letter) #Sketch_FriendsFam (A Sketch of my Friend's Family | 1817 | Full title: A Sketch of my Friend's Family: intended to suggest some practical h) #SketchBook_WI (The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. | 1819) #Sketches_France (Sketches descriptive of Italy, in the years 1816 and 1817; with a brief account of travels in various parts of France and Switzerland, in the same years. | 1820 | Mitford may have read this in the summer of 1820.) #Sketches_of_America (Sketches of America: a Narrative of a Journey of Five Thousand Miles Through the Eastern and Western States of America; Contained in Eight Reports Addressed to the Thirty-nine English Families by whom the Author was Deputed, in June 1817, to Ascertain Whether Any, and What Part of the United States Would be Suitable for Their Residence. With Remarks on Mr. Birkbeck’s Notes and Letters | 1818 | The work’s subtitle refers to to Morris Birkbeck’s Notes on a Journey in America) #SoldierBoy (Soldier Boy | Author and date unidentified.) #Song_FairestThings_1811 (Song. ["The fairest things are those which live"] | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Specimen_Nat_poem (The Monks and the Giants: Prospectus and Specimen of an Intended National Work; Intended to Comprise the Most Interesting Particulars Relating to King Arthur and his Round Table, by William and Robert Whistlecraft of Stow-Market, in Suffolk, Harness and Collar Makers | 1818 | An ottava rima burlesque written by John Hookham Frere under the nom de plume Wi) #Specimens_BritPoets (Specimens of the British Poets | 1819 | 7 vols. The Essay on English Poetry which prefaces this collection, forms part o) #Specimens_Dramatic_Poets (Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, Who Lived About the Time of Shakespeare. With Notes | 1808) #Speeches_Windham (Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Windham | 1812 | 3 volumes. Full title: Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Wi) #SpencesAnec (Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters of Books and Men. Collected from the Conversation of Mr. Pope, and Other Eminent Persons of His Time | 1820 | Spence’s Anecdotes were collected and published posthumously in 1820 by Edmund M) #St_Botany (Poetical Introduction to the Study of Botany (1801)) #Stephen_Lane_BR (Stephen Lane, the Butcher | 1835) #StMagdaleneAM (The Fast of St. Magdalen: A Romance | ) #StolenL_FT (The Stolen Letter | 1840 | A poem by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of National ) #Stories_AmLife (Stories of American Life; by American Writers | 1830) #StoryWoods_FT (A Story of the Woods | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Stranger_play (The Stranger) #Sun_Set_MRM (Sun-Set. | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1811 Poems, mentioned in a ) #Suppers_and_Balls_BR (Suppers and Balls | 1835) #Surgeons_Courtship_BR (The Surgeon's Courtship | 1835 | This story was previously published in The Royal Lady's Magazine, and Archives o) #Sybille_1810 (Sybille. A Northumbrian Tale. | 1810 | 1810 narrative poem. Mitford's introductory argument indicates that she wrote th) #TaleOf2Cities (A Tale of Two Cities | 1859) #Tales_Heart (Tales of the heart | 1820 | ) #TalesHall_GC (Tales of the Hall | 1819 | 2 vols. Verse. Last work published in his lifetime.) #TalesofFancy_Shipwreck (Tales of Fancy: The Shipwreck | 1816 | The Shipwreck makes up volume one of the three-volume work. The remaining volume) #TalesofmyLandord_3rd (Tales of my Landlord, 3rd series | 1819 | 4 volumes. The Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes one and two and Legend of Mon) #TalesofWHS (Tales of Wonder, of Humour, and of Sentiment; Original and Translated | 1818 | 2 vols. Volume 1 contains Zelis, The Weathercock, The Magic Dollar Volume 2 cont) #Talking_Gentleman_OV (The Talking Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the nineteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182) #Talking_Lady_LM (The Talking Lady [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Talking_Lady_OV (The Talking Lady [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eleventh story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.) #Tartuffe (Tartuffe | Controversial play by the French author Molière. The title character poses as a ) #Temora_Ossian (Temora, an Ancient Epic Poem, in Eight Books: Together with Several Other Epic Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic language, by James Macpherson. | 1763 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.) #Tempest_play (The Tempest) #Tenants_of_Beechgrove_OV (The Tenants of Beechgrove [Our Village version] The Lady of Beechgrove | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the second story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. I) #TenYearsatTripoli (Miss Tully | 1816 | Mitford may have read the third edition, published in 1819.) #TestofLove (The Testament of Love | In Mitford’s time, believed to be the work of Chaucer. Now attributed to Thomas ) #Th_d_Gr (Théâtre des Grecs) #ThaddeusofWarsaw (Thaddeus of Warsaw | 1803 | ) #The_Election_OV (The Election [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was first publish) #The_Town_BR (The Town | 1835) #The_Two_Foscari (The Two Foscari: A Tragedy | 1821 | A historical blank verse tragedy by Lord Byron that tells the story of Doge Fosc) #TheChalkpit_OV (The Chalk-Pit [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It has previously b) #TheCousins_OV (The Cousins [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe) #TheIncendiary_OV (The Incendiary. A Country Tale [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in the fifth and final volume of Our Village in 1832. It wa) #TheRunaway_OV (The Runaway [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #TheTambourine_BR (The Tambourine | 1835) #TheVillage (The Village [alternate title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version | Alternative title assigned to the sketch, Our Village, in the 1884 Blackwood's E) #ThreeMusketeers (The Three Musketeers | 1846 | First published in serial form in the French newspaper Le Siècle between March a) #ToHenryRichardson_1827 (To Mr. Henry Richardson. On His Performance of Admetus in the Alcestis of Euripides as Represented in the Original Greek at Reading School [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 4 in the 1827 collection (pages 296-97) .) #Tom_Cordery_LM (Tom Cordery [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Tom_Cordery_OV (Tom Cordery [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824) #ToMay_1810 (To May. 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #TomCrib (Tom Crib’s Memorial to Congress | 1819) #ToMissPorden_1827 (To Miss Porden: On Her Poem of COEUR DE LION [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 8 in the 1827 collection (page 301) . Also appeared in the August 17, 182) #TomJones_HF (The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling | 1749) #ToMrHaydon_Nature_1827 (To Mr. Haydon, On a Study From Nature [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 9 in the 1827 collection (page 302) . Also appeared in the July 19, 1817 ) #TomThumb_Fielding (Scriblerus Secundus | 1730 | First performed outside the Haymarket Theatre in September 1730.) #TomThumb_OHaraAdpt (Kane O’Hara | Comic opera adapation of Henry Fielding’s Tom Thumb . Roach’s edition of 1811 fe) #Touchy_Lady_OV (The Touchy Lady [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Tour_Alet (A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse | 1816 | Full title: A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse by Dom Claude Lancelot, Auth) #Tour_Normandy (Account of a Tour in Normandy | 1820) #Town_v_Country_CS (Town versus Country | 1835) #TraitsNature (Traits of Nature | 1812 | 5 volumes.) #Travels_Acerbi (Travels through Sweden, Finland, and Lapland to the North Cape, in the Years 1798 and 1799. | 1802) #Travels_Belzoni (Narrative of the Operations and Recent Discoveries within the Pyramids, Temples, Tombs, and Excavations, in Egypt and Nucia | 1821 | Mitford mentions reading this in her Journal on September 29, 1821.) #Travels_NGermany (Travels in the North of Germany | 1820 | Full title: Travels in the North of Germany: Describing the Present State of the) #Travels_Nile (Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771 1772, and 1773 | 1790) #Travels_Nubia (Travels in Nubia | 1819 | Published by the Association for Promoting the Discovery for the Interior Parts ) #Travels_TheoDucas (Travels of Theodore Ducas | 1822 | Full title: The Travels of Theodore Ducas of Candia in Various Countries in Euro) #TwelfthNight_Shkspr (Twelfth Night | 1601 | A late dark romantic comedy in Shakespeare’s oeuvre, with first recorded product) #Two_N_Kinsmen (Two Noble Kinsmen | Tragicomedy likely first performed around 1613 and first printed in 1634; genera) #Two_Sisters_OV (Two Sisters [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be) #Two_Valentines_OV (The Two Valentines [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #TwoHoflandLandscapes_1827 (On Two of Mr. Hofland's Landscapes [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 12 in the 1827 collection (page 305) .) #TwoPapers (Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and an Essay [ . . . ] attributed to the Editor of the Ex-m-n-r | Satire aimed at Leigh Hunt. Full title: Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and a) #TwopennyPost (Intercepted Letters, or, the Twopenny Post-bag | 1813) #Undine (Undine: A Romance, translated from the German | Mitford would likely have been familiar with the 1818 translation by George Soan) #Valerius_novel (Valerius: A Roman Story | ) #Vampyre (The Vampyre: A Tale | 1819 | ) #Venice_Preserved_play (Venice Preserv’d | 1683 | First performed in 1683 and printed soon thereafter. Frequently re-staged until ) #Verses_with_Primroses_1810 (Verses, Sent with Some Primroses to a Young Lady, who had Promised us a Visit Early in the Spring. Feb. 7, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #VeryWoman_play (A Very Woman; or the Prince of Tarent | Authorship and date contested.) #Vespers_of_Palermo (The Vespers of Palermo: A Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823) #Vicar_Wakefield (The Vicar of Wakefield: A Tale. Supposed to be Written by Himself | 1766) #Vicars_Maid_OV (The Vicar's Maid [Our Village version] The Vicar's Maid: A Village Story [Amulet version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published) #Vicissitudes (Vicissitudes | Author and date unidentified. May be On the Origin and Vicissitudes of Literatur) #VictoryOfBarrosa_1811 (On the Victory of Barrosa. To Mrs. Taylor, of Hartley Court, Near Reading, Mother of Colonel Norcott. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #View_Europe (View of the State of Europe during the Middle Ages | 1818 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it good.) #Village_Beau_OV (A Village Beau [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventeenth story in volume one of Our Village in 18) #Village_Schoolmistress_OV (The Village Schoolmistress [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #Village_Tales_and_Sketches (Village Tales and Sketches Biographical Preface [Village Tales and Sketches, Nimmo edition, 1881] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Titled here A Morning Ramble] A Village Schoolmistress Whitsun-Eve Our Maying Dora Creswell Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother The Lost Keys [Retitled here "the Lost Key"] | 1881 | Edited collection of Our Village sketches, consisting mostly but not exclusively) #VillageA_FT (The Village Amanuensis | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Virginius_play (Virginius) #Visit_LaTrappe (A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe, in 1817 | 1818 | Full title: A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817 With Notes Taken Durin) #Visit_Paris (A Visit To Paris in 1814: Being a Review of the Moral, Political, Intellectual, and Social Condition of the French Capital | 2nd edition, corrected and with a new preface referring to late events, publishe) #Visit_to_Lucy_OV (A Visit to Lucy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. ) #Visit_to_Richmond_OV (A Visit to Richmond [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Vivian (Vivian | 1812) #VoiceofPraise_MRM (The Voice of Praise | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1810 Poems, mentioned in a ) #Voyage_PolarExp (A Voyage of Discovery, Made Under the Orders of the Admiralty, in his Majesty's ships Isabella and Alexander for the purpose of exploring Baffin's Bay, and Enquiring into the possibility of a North-West Passage. | 1819) #VoyagePG_WH (A Voyage up the Persian Gulf, and a Journey Overland from India to England, in 1817 | 1819 | ) #Wager_FT (Florence. The Wager | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Walk_Switz1816 (A Walk Through Switzerland in September 1816 | 1818) #Walk_Through_Village_OV (A Walk Through the Village [Our Village version] | 1826 | This was the first sketch to appear in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Walks_Country_LM (Walks in the Country [Lady's Magazine subseries versions] The Copse The Hard Summer Nutting Violeting Number IX Wood-Cutting | | Title given to the popular series of sketches written by Mitford for The Lady's ) #Walks_Country_OV (Walks in the Country [Our Village subseries versions] The Copse The Cowslip Ball The Dell The Fall of the Leaf The First Primrose Frost and Thaw Hannah Bint The Hard Summer Nutting The Old House at Aberleigh The Shaw Violeting The Visit The Wood | 1824—1830 | A popular subseries within Our Village, republished or adapted from the periodic) #Walks_Cowslip_Ball_OV (Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the thirteenth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. ) #Walks_Fall_of_Leaf_OV (Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1830 | This sketch appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village in 1830.) #Walks_First_Primrose_OV (Walks in the Country. The First Primrose [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventh story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It ) #Walks_Frost_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost | The first part of the Frost and Thaw sketch that was sometimes republished singl) #Walks_Frost_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the third story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It wa) #Walks_Hannah_Bint_OV (Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Walks_Hard_Summer_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VII. The Hard Summer [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-09 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Walks_Hard_Summer_OV (Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182) #Walks_NoIX_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01 | This sketch was later published as The Visit in volume one of Our Village . In t) #Walks_Nutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VIII. Nutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-11 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Walks_Nutting_OV (Walks in the Country. Nutting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-first story in volume one of Our Village in 1) #Walks_Old_House_Aberleigh_OV (Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Walks_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Thaw | The brief second part of Frost and Thaw that was sometimes republished singly in) #Walks_TheCopse_LM (Walks in the Country X. The Copse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-05 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in May 1824 as the tenth installment) #Walks_TheCopse_OV (Walks in the Country. The Copse [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was first publishe) #Walks_TheDell_OV (Walks in the Country. The Dell [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Walks_TheShaw_OV (Walks in the Country. The Shaw [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Walks_TheVisit_OV (Walks in the Country. The Visit [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-third story volume one of Our Village in 1824) #Walks_TheWood_OV (Walks in the Country. The Wood [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It consists of the se) #Walks_Violeting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. III. Violeting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Walks_Violeting_OV (Walks in the Country. Violeting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the tenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It) #Walks_WoodCutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. Wood-Cutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch appeared in the May 1823 issue of the Lady's Magazine. Passages of W) #Wallace_MHpoem (Wallace: or, The fight of Falkirk. A Metrical Romance | 1809) #Wallace_play (Wallace: an historical tragedy in five acts | 1820 | Performed at Covent Garden in November 1820; William Macready performed the titl) #WalpoleltrstoCole (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and others | 1818 | Full title: Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and o) #WalpoletoMontagu (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole to George Montagu, Esq. from the year 1736, to the year 1770: Now First Published from the Originals in the Possession of the Editor | 1818 | A second edition appears in 1819.) #Walsingham (Walsingham | 1797 | Full title: Walsingham, or the Pupil of Nature: A Domestic Story. Reprinted in 1) #Walton_Lives (The Lives of Dr. John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Mr. Richard Hooker, Mr. George Herbert and Dr. Robert Sanderson. | Walton had written biographical sketches of Donne, Wotton, Hooker and Herbert wh) #Wanderer (The Wanderer, a Poem | 1820 | Mitford mentions in her Journal that MacFarlane sent her his poem in her on Augu) #Warbeck_Wolfstein_MH (Warbeck of Wolfstein | 1820) #Wardle_Death_1810 (To G. L. Wardle, Esq., on the Death of His Child. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #Warlock_Play (The Warlock of the Glen: A Melo-drama in Two Acts | 1820 | MRM saw this play in December 1820 at Covent Garden Theatre.) #WashingtonEpic_TN (Washington; or Liberty Restored. A Poem in Ten Books | Epic poem about George Washington published in 1809. Only Baltimore editions now) #Watch_1811 (The Watch. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted in Romanticism: An Anthology, ed. Duncan Wu.) #WatlingtonH (Watlington Hill; A Poem | | First printed version of this long narrative poem.) #WatlingtonH_1827 (Watlington Hill: A Descriptive Poem | 1827 | 1827 published version of long narrative poem, originally published separately i) #Waverley (Waverley; or ’Tis Sixty Years Since | | Mitford mentions reading Waverley in her Journal in 1819 and 1820.) #WaytoKeepHim (The Way to Keep Him. A Comedy in Five Acts | 1770 | Full title: The Way to Keep Him: a Comedy in five acts, as it is performed at th) #WealthofNations (An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations | 1761) #Wedding_Ring_DS_1827 (The Wedding Ring: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f) #WestminsterAbbey_1811 (Westminster Abbey | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #WestonGrove_1827 (Weston Grove: A Descriptive Poem [1827 version] | 1827 | Narrative poem) #Wheat_Hoeing_OV (Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was later called) #Wheel_Fortune_play (Wheel of Fortune | 1805 | Play first performed in 1795 and printed 1805.) #WhiteCottage_AM (The White Cottage | 1817 | Full title: The White Cottage. A Tale.. Mitford rated it too dismal.) #Whiteknights_Desc_TCH (A Descriptive Account of the Mansion and Gardens of White-Knights: A Seat of His Grace the Duke of Marlborough. By Mrs. Hofland. Illustrated with twenty-three engravings, from pictures taken on the spot by T.C. Hofland | 1819 | Printed by T.C. Hofland for the 6th Duke of Marlbourough; publisher and printer ) #WhitsunEve_OV (Whitsun-Eve [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Widows_Dog_CS (The Widow's Dog | 1835) #Wild_Oats (Wild Oats | 1791 | Play featuring naval characters, a complex marriage plot, and a fictional theatr) #William_and_Hannah_BR (William and Hannah | 1835) #Willow_1810 (The Willow. Translated from the French of J. J. Rousseau. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #WinterEve_JH (Winter Evening's Tales | 1820 | 2 vols. Full title: Winter Evening's Tales, collected among the cottagers in the) #WinterNts_ND (Winter Nights; Or, Fire-side Lucubrations | 1820) #Winters_Tale_play (The Winter’s Tale | 1623 | Classed as a dark comedy or romance play, The Winter’s Tale was likely written a) #WinterScenery_1810 (Winter Scenery. January, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #WksPainting_JR (The Works of Jonathan Richardson | 1773 | Full title: The Works of Mr. Jonathan Richardson. Consisting of I. The theory of) #WmHerbert_1810 (To the Hon. William Herbert | 1810 | 1810 poem; serves as dedication to the volume and appears before the Table of Co) #WmTell_play (William Tell | 1825) #Woman_MB (Woman, or Minor maxims | 1818 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Woman, or Minor maxims. A Sketch. Minerva Press.) #WomanHater_play (The Woman Hater | 1607) #Women_CM (Women: Or Pour et Contre. A Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she don't like it much--too dismal.In Journal Saturday 27 M) #Wonders_NW (The Wonders of the Little World | 1678 | Full title: Wonders of the Little World; or, a General History of Man: displayin) #Woodcutter_FT (The Woodcutter | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_Crissy (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy, 1841] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1841 | This edition of Mitford's works omits the Preface to volume one of Our Village, ) #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_CrissyMarkley (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy & Markley, 1844] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841 and Crissy&Markley, 1846] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1846 | Re-issue of the 1841 James Crissy edition. As with the earlier edition, this one) #Works_of_MRM (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse; viz. Our Village, Belford Regis, Country Stories, Finden's Tableaux, Foscari, Julian, Rienzi, Charles the First | 1841 | Published only in Philadelphia and presumably not an edition authorized by Mitfo) #WorksEngPoets_1810 (The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowpwer, with prefaces, biographical and critical | 1810 | ) #Wreaths_1810 (The Wreaths. A Tale. Taken from the "Curiosities of Literature." Addressed to a Young Lady. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #WrightvClement (Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement | 1819 | Full title: Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for certain libels publishe) #WrittenAfterVisit_1827 (Written After a Visit From Some Friends [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 19 in the 1827 collection (page 313).) #WrittenJuly1824_1827 (Written July, 1824 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 5 in the 1827 collection (page 298) .) #WrittenOct1825_1827 (Written October, 1825 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 22 in the 1827 collection (page 316) . Also appeared in the 1827 Amulet a) #WutheringHts (Wuthering Heights | 1847) #Year_Day (A Year and a Day | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: A Year and a Day. A Novel. Written under the pseudonym Madam) #YellowButterfly_1810 (To a Yellow Butterfly. April 8, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Young_Gipsy_OV (The Young Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Young_Market_Woman_BR (The Young Market Woman | 1835 | This story is a revised version of what was originally published in The Forget M) #Young_Painter_BR (The Young Painter | 1835) #Young_Sculptor_BR (The Young Sculptor | 1835) #YoungPhil_CS (The Young Philosopher. A Novel | 1798 | Mitford rated it pretty but too dismal. Source: Journal.) #Zaire_play (Zaíre | 1732) #Zapolya (Zapolya | 1819 | Subtitled: A Dramatic Poem ] . . .] in humble imitation of The Winter's Tale of ) #Zuma (Zuma, or the Tree of Health | 1818 | Full title: Zuma, or the Tree of Health. To which are added, the fair Pauline,--) #AlterationsOfState (Alterations of State: Sacred Kingship in the English Reformation | 2002) #BannedThtr_Findlater (Banned!: A Review of Theatrical Censorship in Britain | 1967) #Calumniated_Rep (Calumniated Republicans and the Hero of Shelley's "Charles the First" | 2007) #CensorshipEnglDrama (The Censorship of English Drama, 1824-1901 | 2010) #coles_Thesis (William Allan Coles | 1956-08 | Coles’ doctoral dissertation presented to the Department of English at Harvard U) #Cromwell_Soldier (Cromwell: Soldier | 2004) #Lestrange_Letters (The Life of Mary Russell Mitford, Authoress of "Our Village," Etc, Related in a Selection from Her Letters to Her Friends | 1870) #Needham_PapersRCL (Francis Needham | Francis Needham’s extensive and unpublished handwritten papers, which we estimat) #OED (The Oxford English Dictionary Online | 2016 | Multi-volume descriptive dictionary of the English language, first published in ) #PossibleScotlands (Possible Scotlands: Walter Scott and the Story of Tomorrow | 2005) #Review_55Days (Review: 55 Days | 2012-10-25) #RomDrama_Hoagwood (Romantic Drama and Historical Hermeneutics | 1998) #ShelleyPB_ReimanEd (Shelley's Poetry and Prose | 2002 | Scholarly edition of Shelley's major works.) #ShelleysLate (Shelley's Late Fragmentary Plays: 'Charles the First' and the 'Unfinished Drama' | 2009) #Talking_Demon ('The Talking Demon': Liberty and Liberal Ideologies in the 1820s British Stage | 2006) #Writing_Eng_Rep (Writing the English Republic: Poetry, Rhetoric, and Politics, 1627-60 | 1999) #Apollo_Belvedere (Apollo Belvedere Pythian Apollo 120-150 A.D. | A marble sculpture from classical antiquity, believed to have been created aroun) #Brocas_monument_Bramley #BrokenFiddle_WA (The Broken Fiddle William Allan circa 1821 Benjamin Robert Haydon described this painting to Mitford in a letter from Edinburgh in November 1821. Haydon wrote: I find Sir William Allan only in the town, he is painting a very clever picture of The Broken Fiddle. A wooden-legged sailor has broken his fiddle on the head of a young scamp for some mischievous trick; an old woman, his granddam, is shaking her fist at the sailor, who is enjoying the pain of the crying boy. . . . It promises to be a very clever thing indeed. The background in colour and effect is the best thing he has done., as excerpted in Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk, Vol. 2, p. 74 . The painting was frequently mentioned by 1820s periodical writers as one of Allan’s best. In 1822, Blackwood’s called it a piece of quite a different cast from anything he had formerly attempted. It is a highly humorous composition, and the glow of colouring is such as perhaps Wilkie himself never surpassed. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 11 (1822): p. 439 .) #ChrstEJrslm_Haydon (Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem | One of Haydon’s three enormous paintings of biblical scenes, together with The J) #EnragedMus_WH (The Enraged Musician William Hogarth 30 November 1741 This engraving depicts a scene in which a violin player leans out his window, annoyed by the cacophony of unmusical sounds coming from the street outside.) #Gala_Richmond_TCH (A Gala at Richmond Hofland Unknown, circa 1821 | Mitford gives this as the title of a Hofland painting exhibited at Somerset Hous) #Jerusalem_Crucifixion_TCH (Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion Hofland | A Hofland painting on a New Testament subject exhibited at the British Instituti) #JudgmntSolomon_Haydon (The Judgment of Solomon 1814 | The earliest of the three enormous biblical paintings for which Haydon was known) #Lazarus_Haydon (The Resurrection of Lazarus The Raising of Lazarus 1821-1823 | Painting of enormous dimensions exhibited in 1823 at Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly) #Richmond_TwickPk_TCH (Richmond from Twickenham Park circa 1821) #Te_Deum (Te Deum Traditional Latin Christian hymn of praise and thanksgiving, the conventional title is a short form of the opening lyrics, Te Deum Laudamus.) #Whereer_Handel (Where’er You Walk An aria sung by Jupiter from Handel’s 1743 opera Semele (HWV58).) indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. indicates the bibliographic level for a title, that is, whether it identifies an article, book, journal, series, or unpublished material. a (analytic) the title applies to an analytic item, such as an article, poem, or other work published as part of a larger item. m (monographic) the title applies to a monograph such as a book or other item considered to be a distinct publication, including single volumes of multi-volume works j (journal) the title applies to any serial or periodical publication such as a journal, magazine, or newspaper s (series) the title applies to a series of otherwise distinct publications such as a collection u (unpublished) the title applies to any unpublished material (including theses and dissertations unless published by a commercial press) contains the formalized descriptive title for a meeting or conference, for use in a bibliographic description for an item derived from such a meeting, or as a heading or preamble to publications emanating from it. [3.12.2.2. Titles, Authors, and Editors] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. groups information relating to the publication or distribution of a bibliographic item. [3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information] (publisher) provides the name of the organization responsible for the publication or distribution of a bibliographic item. [3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information 2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc.] (scope of bibliographic reference) defines the scope of a bibliographic reference, for example as a list of page numbers, or a named subdivision of a larger work. [3.12.2.5. Scopes and Ranges in Bibliographic Citations] (cited range) defines the range of cited content, often represented by pages or other units [3.12.2.5. Scopes and Ranges in Bibliographic Citations] (publication place) contains the name of the place where a bibliographic item was published. [3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information] (bibliographic citation) contains a loosely-structured bibliographic citation of which the sub-components may or may not be explicitly tagged. [3.12.1. Methods of Encoding Bibliographic References and Lists of References 2.2.7. The Source Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] Suggested values include: 1] #Ackermans_Juv_ForgetMeNot (Ackermann's Juvenile Forget Me Not | 1830—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic S); 2] #Amulet (The Amulet; or Christian and Literary Remembrancer | 1826—1836 | Gift book/annual started in 1826. Mitford published yearly in this periodical be); 3] #Anniversary_annual (The Anniversary | 1829 | Short-lived gift book/annual published in 1829. Mitford published the story Goin); 4] #Anti-Jacobin (The Anti-Jacobin, or Weekly Examiner | 1797-11-20—1798-07-09 | Conserative Tory newspaper founded by George Canning whose short run of 36 issue); 5] #Berkshire_Chron (Berkshire Chronicle | Newspaper founded in 1825, now known as the Reading Chronicle.); 6] #Bijou_annual (The Bijou: An Annual of Literature and the Arts | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1828 and 1830. Mitford published ); 7] #Blackwoods (Blackwood’s Magazine | 1817-04—1980 | Founded as a Tory magazine in opposition to the Whig Edinburgh Review.); 8] #BritishCritic_per (British Critic, A New Review | Conservative periodical with High Church editorial views. Published monthly betw); 9] #Cameo_annual (The Cameo: A Melange of Literature and the Arts, selected from the Bijou | Short-lived giftbook/annual from the early 1830s. Title pages are undated. Altho); 10] #Christmas_Box (The Christmas Box: An Annual Present for Young Persons | 1829—1830 | Short-lived gift book/annual for children. Mitford published in this periodical ); 11] #Comic_Offering (The Comic Offering, or Ladies' Melange of Literary Mirth | Literary humor annual edited by and for women founded by Smith, Elder, and co. M); 12] #Courier_news (The Courier | 1804-04-20—1842-07-06 | London newspaper that ran daily except on Sundays from 1804 to 1842.); 13] #EclecticRev (The Eclectic Review | Monthly periodical published between 1805 and 1868. Focusesd on long and short r); 14] #Edinburgh_Tales (The Edinburgh Tales | 1845—1846 | Three-volume anthology of stories published in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine while u); 15] #EdinburghMag1785to1816 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Published by Sibbald, 1785 to 1816, then published by Constable until 1826.); 16] #EdinburghMag1817to1826 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Previously published by Sibbald, then published by Constable, 1817 to 1826.); 17] #EdinburghRev_per (Edinburgh Review, second series | Quarterly political and literary review founded by Francis Jeffrey, Sydney Smith); 18] #English_Annual (The English Annual | Short-lived annual from the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in 1838.); 19] #EuroMag (European Magazine | Monthly periodical published from 1782 until 1826. Original title: European Maga); 20] #Examiner (The Examiner | 1808—1886 | Weekly periodical launched by editor Leigh Hunt and his brother, the printer Joh); 21] #Findens_Tableaux_annual (Finden's Tableaux | 1837—1843 | Finden's Tableaux was a lavishly illustrated gift book/annual produced between 1); 22] #ForgetMeNot (Forget Me Not | 1822-11—1847 | Gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic Shoberl thro); 23] #Friendships_Off (Friendship's Offering | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s by Lupton Relfe and then revived in the ); 24] #Gem_annual (The Gem | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1829 and 1832, perhaps the succes); 25] #John_Bull (John Bull | English periodical founded in 1820 and published between 1820 and 1825 and in a ); 26] #Journal_BellesLettres (The Journal of Belles Lettres | American annual published between 1832 and 1842 Mitford was published in this pe); 27] #Juv_Forget (The Juvenile Forget Me Not: A Christmas or New Year's Gift, or Birthday Present | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1837. Mitford published); 28] #Juv_Keepsake (The Juvenile Keepsake | Gift book/annual for children. Mitford published her story The Two Magpies in th); 29] #La_Belle_Assemblee (La Belle Assemblée, Or Bell's Court and Fashionable Magazine, Addressed Particularly to the Ladies | 1806—1832 | A general-interest miscellaneous periodical aimed at a female readership. Origin); 30] #Ladys_Mag (The Lady's Magazine | 1770—1847 | A popular and influential monthly magazine for women that ran from 1756 until 18); 31] #Ladys_Mag_Ser1 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, series one | 1770—1818 | Monthly magazine for women founded by bookseller and publisher John Coote and ed); 32] #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v1-3 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, new series 2, vol. 1-3 | 1820—1822 | A continuation of The Lady's Magazine as a new series (series two), volumes 1 th); 33] #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v4-10 (The Lady's Magazine; or Mirror of the Belle-Lettres, Fine Arts, Fashions, Music, Drama, &c., new series 2, vol. 4-10 | 1823—1829 | Many of Mitford's contributions to the magazine were to this series, a continuat); 34] #Ladys_Monthly_Museum (Lady’s Monthly Museum; Or, Polite Repository of Amusement and Instruction | A monthly periodical running from 1798 to 1832.); 35] #Laurel_annual (The Laurel: Fugitive Poetry of the XIXth century | 1830 | Literary annual published in 1830 and edited by Miss S. Lawrence. Mitford publis); 36] #Letter_to_HM_1820 (An Englishwoman’s Letter to Mrs. Hannah More on the Present Crisis | | Anonymously published eighteen-page pamphlet on the Queen Caroline Affair. World); 37] #Lit_Gazette (The Literary Gazette, and Journal of Belles Lettres, Arts, Sciences | Periodical founded by Henry Colburn, ran from 1817 to 1863. For details on the j); 38] #Lit_Souvenir (The Literary Souvenir, or, Cabinet of Poetry and Romance | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s and 1830s and edited by Alaric Watts. Mi); 39] #LondonMag (The London Magazine | 1820—1829 | An 18th-century periodical of this title (The London Magazine, or Gentleman’s Mo); 40] #Marshalls_Christmas (Marshall's Christmas Box: A Juvenile Annual | 1828—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by William Marshall. Mitford published in th); 41] #Metropolitan (The Metropolitan | 1831—1850 | A London monthly originally titled The Metropolitan: A Monthly Journal of Litera); 42] #MonthlyMag (The Monthly Magazine | Monthly general-interest periodical. Published between 1796 and 1843. Founded by); 43] #Museum_per (The Museum; or Record of Literature, Fine Arts, Antiquities, the Drama, &c. | 1822-04-27 | Weekly periodical edited by Peter Bayley and printed by John Valpy.); 44] #New_Monthly_Mag (New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal | Periodical edited by Thomas Campbell and Cyrus Redding from 1821 to 1830, after ); 45] #New_Years_Gift (The New Year's Gift and Juvenile Souvenir | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1836. Mitford published); 46] #NewYork_Visiter (New York Visiter and Parlour Companion | Short-lived American periodical published between 1838 and 1840. An interview wi); 47] #Observer (The Observer | Founded on December 4, 1791 by W.S. Bourne. It is the first Sunday newspaper in ); 48] #Pamphleteer_per (The Pamphleteer | Published between 1813 and 1828. Full title: The Pamphleteer: Respectfully Dedic); 49] #Panoramic_Misc (Panoramic Miscellany, and Review of Literature, Science, Arts, Inventions and Occurrences | 1826-01-31—1826-06-01 | Periodical edited by John Thelwall to which Mitford, signing as M, contributed t); 50] #Pledge_Friendship (The Pledge of Friendship: A Christmas Present, and New Year's Gift | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1826 and 1828. Mitford published ); 51] #Poetical_Album (The Poetical Album and Register of Modern Fugitive Poetry | 1828—1829 | Short-lived literary annual published between 1828 and 1829 and edited by Alaric); 52] #Political_Register (Cobbett's Weekly Political Register | Weekly periodical issued by William Cobbett from 1802 to 1835. Founded as Tory a); 53] #QuarterlyRev_per (Quarterly Review | 1809—1967 | Tory periodical founded by George Canning in 1809, published by John Murray. Wil); 54] #ReadingMer_per (The Reading Mercury and Oxford Gazette, etc. | Newspaper of Reading, Berkshire. Founded as The Reading Mercury, or Weekly Enter); 55] #Remember_Me (Remember Me: A Token of Christian Affection; consisting of entirely original pieces in prose and verse. | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s and 1840s. Mitford published in this per); 56] #Remembrance_annual (Remembrance | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in); 57] #Review_RaisingLaz (Mr. Haydon’s Raising of Lazarus | 1823-04-01 | Detailed discussion of the contents of Haydon’s painting, The Raising of Lazarus); 58] #Royal_LadysMag (The Royal Lady's Magazine; and Archives of the Court of St. James | 1831—1835 | Mitford published in this periodical in 1832.); 59] #Sheffield_Iris (The Iris | Newspaper of Sheffield, Yorkshire, to which Barbara Hofland contributed poems.); 60] #Spectator (The Spectator | A daily periodical founded by Joseph Addison Richard Steele which was published ); 61] #Stage (Letter by Philo-Dramaticus | Letter reprinted in the Observer on June 20, 1825 from Blackwoods. The letter is); 62] #Tatler (The Tatler | A literary and society journal founded by Richard Steele which was published fro); 63] #Times_news (The Times | Newspaper issued daily, begun in London in 1785 as The Daily Universal Register,); 64] #Trueman_Clergy (Timothy Trueman’s Admonitions to the Clergy, Respecting Tithes: First Published in a Letter Inserted in the Statesman Newspaper, and Now Reprinted with Several Corrections and Additions, Particularly an Introduction | 1816 | Pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acquaintance Mr. Johnson.); 65] #Trueman_Gehazi (The Curse of Gehazi, or, Leprosy of Corruption: Exemplified in a Narrative of the Life of Robert Watkins, alias Robert Turner Watkins, alias Bribery Bob, Who was Executed on the 30th of July Last, for the Robbery and Murder of Mr. Stephen Rodway, Late of Cricklade, in Whitshire | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua); 66] #Trueman_Westminster (A Letter to the Independent Electors of Westminster, as it Appeared in the Independent Whig of Sunday, May 21, 1809 | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua); 67] #Winters_Wreath (The Winter's Wreath | Gift book/annual published from the mid-1820s to 1832. Some issues subtitled, a ); 68] #Abbot_WS (The Abbot | 1820 | Historical novel: One of Scott’s series of Tales from Benedictine Sources, The A); 69] #Absent_Member_BR (The Absent Member | 1835 | This story was also published in the Amulet for 1835.); 70] #Absentee (The Absentee | 1812); 71] #Account_GeoMathews (Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews | 1819 | Full title: Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews: Wh); 72] #AccountOfIndia (Description of the character, manners, and customs of the people of India : and of their institutions, religious and civils | 1818 | ); 73] #Acct_Knox (Account of the captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, in the island of Ceylon | 1818 | Full title: Account of the Captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, ); 74] #Acct_War1808 (Account of the War in Spain and Portugal, and in the South of France, from 1808, to 1814, inclusive | 1818 | She rated considered it a sad uncandid military book); 75] #AcctDenmark1692 (An Account of Denmark in 1692 | 1694 | Full title: An Account of Denmark as it was in the year MDCXCII.); 76] #Admiral_on_Shore_OV (An Admiral on Shore [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 77] #Advice_Julia (Advice to Julia: A Letter in Rhyme | 1820 | A poem that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on October 7 1820.); 78] #Aeneid_CP (The Works of Virgil, in Latin and English. The original Text correctly printed from the most authentic Editions, collated for this Purpose. The Æneid Translated By the Rev. Mr. Christopher Pitt, The Eclogues and Georgics, with Notes on the Whole, By the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton. With several New Observations By Mr. Holdsworth, Mr. Spence, and Others. Also, A Dissertation on the Sixth Book of the Æneid, by Mr. Warburton. On the Shield of Æneas, by Mr. W. Whitehead. On the Character of Japis, by the late Dr. Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester. And, Three Essays on Pastoral, Didactic and Epic Poetry, by the Editor | 1753); 79] #Aeneid_Dryden (The Aeneid | 1688 | Dryden’s translation of The Aeneid may be found in Miscellany Poems, in two part); 80] #Aeneid_JB (The Æneid of Virgil, translated into blank verse by J. Beresford | 1794); 81] #Aeneid_Virgil (The Aeneid | Latin epic poem written between 29 and 19 BC.); 82] #Aeschylus_Potter (The Tragedies of Aeschylus | Translation of Aeschylus’s plays read by Mitford.); 83] #Aesops_Fables_Croxall (Fables of Aesop and Others, Translated into English. With Instructive Applications; and a Cut Before Each Fable. | 1722—1728 | The most influential and frequently reprinted English translation of the Fables ); 84] #Agamemnon_play (Agamemnon | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the first play of the Oresteia); 85] #Age_Elizabeth (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth | 1820 | Mitford indicated that she read Hazlitt’s Lectures in her Journal on October 22,); 86] #Aladdin_panto (Aladdin | There were many pantomimes under this name on the English stage, many combining ); 87] #Alcestis_play (Alcestis | Athenian tragedy attributed to Euripides. First produced at the City Dionysia fe); 88] #Alice_DS_1827 (Alice: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f); 89] #All_For_Love_play (All for Love | 1678 | First performed in 1677 and published in 1678, based on Antony and Cleopatra.); 90] #AllsWellTEW (All’s Well that Ends Well | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1604 and first printed in 1623.); 91] #Altham (Altham and His Wife: A Domestic Tale | 1810 | 1 vol. Mitford calls it a pretty tale. Source: Journal); 92] #America_Birkbeck (Notes on a Journey in America, from the Coast of Virginia to the Territory of Illinois | 1817 | Mitford likely read the second edition, published in London in 1818 by J. Ridgwa); 93] #AmStories_Above10 (American Stories for Young People, Intended for Children above Ten Years of Age | 1832); 94] #AmStories_Under10 (American Stories for Little Boys and Girls, Intended for Children under Ten Years of Age | 1831); 95] #Anecdotes_WSeward (Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons | 1804 | 4 vols. Full title: Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons: Chiefly of the Last and ); 96] #AnecdotesTo1700_JM (Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasion to the Year 1700 | 1811 | Full title: Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasi); 97] #Another_Glance_OV (Another Glance at Our Village | 1886—1888 | Alternative title assigned to A Parting Glance at Our Village in Walter Scott Pu); 98] #Antigone_MRM_1827 (Antigone: A Portrait in Verse | 1827 | 1827 verse portrait based on Antigone.); 99] #Antigone_play (Antigone); 100] #Antiquary (The Antiquary); 101] #AntiquitatesCurio (Antiquitates Curiosae: the etymology of many remarkable old sayings, proverbs, & singular customs | 1819); 102] #Antony_Cleopatra (Antony and Cleopatra | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1607 and first printed in 1623.); 103] #Arabian_Tales (Arabian Tales; or, A Continuation of the Arabian Nights Entertainments, consisting of stories related by the Sultana of the Indies, newly tr[anslated] from the original Arabic into French by Dom Chavis and Cazotte; and tr[anslated] from the French into English, by Robert Heron | 1792 | Mitford was likely familiar with this 1792 English translation of the Thousand a); 104] #As_You_Like_It_play (As You Like It | 1623 | First performed around 1599 and first printed 1623.); 105] #Athalie_play (Athalie | 1691 | One of two plays written by Jean Racine (along with Esther), for the students at); 106] #Atherton (Atherton, and Other Tales | 1854); 107] #Aunt_Deborah_CS (Aunt Deborah | 1835); 108] #Aunt_Martha_OV (Aunt Martha [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-second story in volume one of Our Village in ); 109] #AuthAcct_FrRev (Authentic Account of the French Revolution | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it interesting. Source: Journal.); 110] #AutumnRhine (An Autumn Near the Rhine | 1818 | Full title: An Autumn Near the Rhine; Or Sketches of Courts, Society, Scenery, &); 111] #BaronsDa_FT (The Baron's Daughter | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 112] #Beacon_FT (The Beacon | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 113] #Beau_Fletch (The Works of Beaumont and Fletcher, in Fourteen Volumes: With an Introduction and Explanatory Notes | 1812 | ); 114] #BeautifulWoman_1827 (On a Beautiful Woman [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 7 in the 1827 collection (page 300) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Month); 115] #Beauty_MRM (Beauty: An Ode. | 1811 | Poem first collected in 1811 Poems, mentioned in a 13 February 1821 letter from ); 116] #Beauty_of_Village_CS (The Beauty of the Village | 1835 | This story also appeared in the Friendship's Offering for 1835".); 117] #Bees_Fable (The Fable of the Bees, or, Private vices, public benefits: containing several discourses to demonstrate that human frailties, during the degeneracy of mankind, may be turn’d to the advantage of the civil society, and made to supply the place of moral virtues. | 1714); 118] #BeggarGirl (The Beggar Girl and her Benefactors | 1790 | 5 vols. Minerva Press. Mitford rated it as famous.); 119] #Belford_Races_BR (Belford Races | 1835); 120] #Belford_Regis (Belford Regis; or, Sketches of a Country Town | 1835); 121] #Belinda_ME (Belinda | 1801); 122] #Belles_Ballroom1_Will_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. I - The Will | 1835 | This story was orginally published in the Forget Me Not for 1834 with the title ); 123] #Belles_Ballroom2_Matchmaking_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. II - Matchmaking Match-Making | 1835 | This story was published, in a slightly different version, in the Friendship's O); 124] #Belles_Ballroom3_SilverArrow_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. III - The Silver Arrow | 1835 | This story also appeared as The Silver Arrow in the English Annual for 1836.); 125] #Belles_Ballroom_BR (Belles of the Ballroom | 1835 | A series of stories within Mitford's later book of prose sketches, Belford Regis); 126] #BelovedMotherBirthday_1810 (To my Beloved Mother, On Her Birth-Day, June 15, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 127] #Bertha_1811 (Bertha. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 128] #Bertram_CM (Bertram; or, The Castle of St. Aldobrand: a tragedy, in five acts | 1816); 129] #BessyBell_1811 (Bessy Bell and Mary Gray. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 130] #Bible (Christian Bible | The sacred scriptures of Christianity consisting of the Old and New Testament.); 131] #Bibletrans_Bellamy (The Holy Bible Newly Translated from the Original Hebrew: with Notes Critical and Explanatory | 1818 | Published by subscription in 1818. Originally published in three volumes in abou); 132] #Bio_Note_OV_JMDent (Biographical Note [Our Village, J.M. Dent, 1900+ edition]); 133] #Bio_Preface_OV_Caldwell (Biographical Preface {Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d., 1910s?]); 134] #Bio_Preface_VilTales (Biographical Preface [to Village Tales and Sketches, Routledge, 1880] | 1881); 135] #Bio_SketchMRM_Works_Crissy (Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy edition, 1841; Crissy & Markley, 1846]); 136] #BioMem_PrCharlotte (Biographical Memoir of the Public and Private Life of the Much Lamented Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales and Saxe-Coburg | 1817 | Full title: A biographical memoir of the public and private life of the much lam); 137] #BirdCatcher_OV (The Bird-Catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 138] #Black_Velvet_Bag_LM (The Black Velvet Bag [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-07 | This sketch was first published in the July 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. I); 139] #Black_Velvet_Bag_OV (The Black Velvet Bag [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 140] #Blanch (Blanch: A Poem in Four Cantos | 1827); 141] #BlankPaperBook_1827 (Written in a Blank-Paper Book Given to the Author by a Friend [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 1 in the 1827 collection (page 293) . Also appeared in the 1821 New Month); 142] #BlindMansStory_1811 (The Blind Man's Story. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 143] #Bluebeard_GC (Bluebeard, or Female Curiosity: a Dramatic Romance in Three Acts | 1798); 144] #Boarding_School_Rec_English_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. III. The English Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12-31 | This sketch was issued as No. III in the Boarding School Recollections series th); 145] #Boarding_School_Rec_French_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. I. The French Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-10-31 | This sketch appeared as No. 1 in the Boarding School Recollections series in The); 146] #Boarding_School_Rec_LM (Early Recollections [subseries published in Lady's Magazine] Boarding School Recollections. No. I. The French Teacher Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows Boarding School Recollections. No. III. The English Teacher | An occasional series of sketches by Mitford for The Lady's Magazine. Some of the); 147] #Boarding_School_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_LM (Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows | 1822-11 | This sketch appeared as No. II in the Boarding School Recollections series in Th); 148] #Bonduca_play (Bonduca | First performed around 1613, first printed in 1647.); 149] #BoR (Bill of Rights | 1689 | One of the basic instruments of the British constitution, the English Bill of Ri); 150] #BowlesPamphletWar_1820 (A reply to the charges brought by the reviewer of Spence's Anecdotes in the Quarterly review for October 1820 against the last editor of Pope's works, and author of A letter to Mr. Campbell on The invariable principles of poetry | 1820 | Bowles' riposte of 1820 in the midst of a pamphlet war over Alexander Pope’s wri); 151] #Bramley_Maying_LM (Bramley Maying [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 152] #Bramley_Maying_OV (Bramley Maying [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I); 153] #Branford (Branford | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it pretty good.); 154] #Bridal_Eve_DS_1827 (Bridal Eve: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f); 155] #Bride_FT (The Bride | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 156] #Bride_of_Lammermoor_WS (The Bride of Lammermoor | 1819 | Part of Tales of my Landlord, third series. Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes ); 157] #Buccaneer_FT (The Buccaneer | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 158] #BurkeWks_Rivington (The Works of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke | 1801—1823 | The Rivingtons published a comprehensive edition of Burke's works and correspond); 159] #BustFox_1810 (On a Bust of Fox. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 160] #Byron_6thPoems (The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. Vol. 6 of 6 | 1818 | Full title: The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. In Six Volumes. Vol. V); 161] #Cain_play (Cain: A Mystery | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Sardanapalus.); 162] #Calamities (Calamities of Authors | 1812 | Full title: Calamities of Authors: including some inquiries respecting their mor); 163] #Camilla_FB (Camilla, or a Picture of Young Lady | 1796); 164] #CanonsCriticism (The canons of criticism, and glossary, being a supplement to Mr. Warburton's edition of Shakespear. | 1765 | Mitford mentions reading Edwards' Canons of Criticism in her Journal on 12 June ); 165] #CanterburyTales (The Canterbury Tales | 1400 | Collection of 23 tales and a prologue frame story, written over a period of year); 166] #Captive_DS_1827 (The Captive: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 167] #CaptivityCaptKnox (Account of the Captivity of Robert Knox and Other Englishmen, in the Island of Ceylon: And of the Captain’s Miraculous Escape and Return to England in September 1680, After Detention on the Island of Nineteen Years and a Half | 1818); 168] #CaribCh (The Carib Chief: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | ); 169] #Carpenters_Daughter_BR (The Carpenter's Daughter | 1835 | This story was first published in the Friendship's Offering for 1834.); 170] #Cartel_FT (The Cartel | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 171] #CarysDante (The Vision; or, Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise | 1814 | Printed for the author.); 172] #Cast_Signal_FT (Castile. The Signal | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 173] #Castle_in_Air_OV (A Castle in the Air [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 174] #Cecilia_FB (Cecilia; or Memoirs of an Heiress | 1782); 175] #Cenci_play (The Cenci: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | Percy Bysshe Shelley's only completed stage play was written in 1819, informed b); 176] #CharlesI_MRMplay (Charles the First; An Historical Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1834); 177] #CharlesV (The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V | 1769); 178] #Chas_Grandison_novel (The history of Sir Charles Grandison: In a series of letters published from the originals, by the editor of Pamela and Clarissa. | 1753); 179] #ChasI_GCtoJG1825 (George Colman letter to James Graham | 1825-09-29 | Letter from George Colman to James Graham, Duke of Montrose, regarding the decis); 180] #ChasI_GCtoMRM1825 (George Colman letter to Mary Russell Mitford | 1825-10-10 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, notifying her of the decision); 181] #ChasI_JGtoGC1825 (James Graham letter to George Colman | 1825-09-25 | Letter from James Graham, Duke of Montrose to George Colman, regarding the decis); 182] #ChasI_MRMtoGC1825 (Mary Russell Mitford letter to George Colman | 1825-12-18 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, regarding the decision to ref); 183] #ChasI_Warrant (Death Warrant of Charles Stuart | 1649-01-29 | The warrant for the execution of Charles I for treason, signed on January 29, 16); 184] #Chaucer_Wks_Martins (Poetical Works of Geoffrey Chaucer | 1782 | Collected poetical works, including the Canterbury Tales, in 14 volumes, publish); 185] #Cheerfulness_1810 (To Cheerfulness. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 186] #ChildeHaroldsPil (Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage | Published in parts between 1812 and 1818.); 187] #Children_of_the_Village_Routledge (Children of the Village Dora Creswell Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1880 | An illustrated collection of Mitford's Our Village stories, largely but not enti); 188] #Children_of_Village_OV (Children of the Village [Our Village subseries] Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1830—1832 | The title of a subseries within the Our Village books that ran through volumes f); 189] #Children_Vil_Amy_Lloyd_OV (Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been publishe); 190] #Children_Vil_FosterMother_OV (Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 191] #Children_Vil_Harry_Lewington_OV (Children of the Village. Harry Lewington [Our Village version] Harry Lewington and his Dog [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu); 192] #Children_Vil_Pride_Shall_Have_Fall_OV (Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with a few revisions, in volume four of Our Village in 183); 193] #Children_Vil_TheMagpies_OV (Children of the Village. The Magpies [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 194] #Children_Vil_TheRobins_OV (Children of the Village. The Robins [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu); 195] #Children_Vil_Two_Dolls_OV (Children of the Village. The Two Dolls [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 196] #Children_Vil_Young_Master_Ben_OV (Children of the Village. Young Master Ben [Our Village version] Young Master Ben [Comic Offering version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 197] #China_Jug_OV (The China Jug [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with some revision, in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 198] #Choephorae_Aes_play (Choephoræ | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the second play of the Oresteia); 199] #Christina (Christina, The Maid of the South Seas; A Poem | 1811); 200] #Christmas_Amusements1_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. 1 [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished w); 201] #Christmas_Amusements2_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. II [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. Portions of it (Char); 202] #Christmas_Amusements3_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. III [Our Village version] | 1832 | This story appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. A portion of it, incl); 203] #Christmas_Amusements4_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. IV [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 204] #Christmas_Amusements5_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. V [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 205] #Christmas_Amusements6_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. VI [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 206] #Christmas_Amusements_OV (Christmas Amusements [Our Village subseries] Christmas Amusements, No. I Christmas Amusements, No. II Christmas Amusements, No. III Christmas Amusements, No. IV Christmas Amusements, No. V Christmas Amusements, No. VI | 1832 | The title of a subseries of sketches that appeared in volume five of Our Village); 207] #Christmas_Party_OV (A Christmas Party [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 208] #ChronHist_Arctic (A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions | 1818 | Full title: A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions; Undertak); 209] #Cid_play (The Cid | 1637); 210] #Cinna_play (Cinna | 1643); 211] #CircNarr_Russia (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia | 1814 | 2 vols. Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia: embell); 212] #Cistineae (Cistineae: the Natural Order of Cistus, or Rock-Rose; Illustrated by Coloured Figures & Descriptions of All the Distinct Species, and the Most Prominent Varieties, that could be at Present produced in the Gardens of Great Britain; With the Best Directions for Their Cultivation and Propagation | 1825—1830 | ); 213] #City_Wives_play (The City Wives’ Confederacy | A comedic play by Sir John Vanbrugh based on Florent Carton de Dancourt’s Les bo); 214] #Clarissa (Clarissa, or, The history of a young lady : comprehending the most important concerns of private life: and particularly shewing, the distresses that may attend the misconduct both of parents and children, in relation to marriage | 1748); 215] #ClarkesTravelsScand (Travels in Various Countries of Europe, Asia and Africa. Part the third, section the first: Scandinavia | 1819 | Clarke began publishing a series of travel accounts in 1811 under the series tit); 216] #ClassicalTour_Hoare (A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily | 1819 | Full title: A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily: tending to illustrate som); 217] #Claudias_Dr (Claudia’s Dream | One of Mitford’s dramatic sketches, appeared in Lady’s Magazine September 30, 18); 218] #CoA (the Code of Alfred | 0893 | This law book, or Doom-book, is attributed to King Alfred. In the text, Alfred’s); 219] #Coeur_de_Lion_poem (Coeur de Lion; or the Third Crusade. A Poem in 16 books. | 1822); 220] #Coll_PolTracts (A Collection of Political Tracts | 1754 | Full title: A Collection of Political Tracts: By the author of the Dissertation ); 221] #Collectanea (Collectanea Curiosa, or Miscellaneous Tracts: Relating to the History and Antiquities of England and Ireland, the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and a Variety of Other Subjects | 1781); 222] #ComicDramas_ME (Comic Dramas, in Three Acts | 1817 | Contains three plays: Love and Law; The Two Guardians; and The Rose, Thistle and); 223] #Compl_Angler (The Compleat Angler, or, The Contemplative Man’s Recreation: Being a Discourse of Rivers, and Fish-ponds, and Fish and Fishing: Not Unworthy the Perusal of Most Anglers | 1653 | First published in 1653, then expanded and republished in further editions in 16); 224] #Confessions_OpiumEater_nonfict (Confessions of an English Opium-Eater); 225] #Consumption_1811 (Ode to Consumption. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted as a selection in Benjamin Suggitt Nayler's 18); 226] #Corinne_deS (Corinne, ou, L’Italie | 1807); 227] #Coriolanus_play (Coriolanus | 1623 | Believed to have been written between 1605 and 1610, first printed); 228] #Cottage_Names_OV (Cottage Names [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 229] #Country_Apothecary_OV (A Country Apothecary [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub); 230] #Country_Barber_OV (A Country Barber [Our Village version] The Last of the Barbers [Literary Souvenir version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub); 231] #Country_Cricket_Match_LM (A Country Cricket Match [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-06); 232] #Country_Cricket_Match_OV (A Country Cricket Match [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182); 233] #Country_Excursions_BR (Country Excursions | 1835); 234] #Country_Lodgings_CS (Country Lodgings | 1835); 235] #Country_Neighbours (Tales of Fancy: Country Neighbors; or, The Secret | 1816 | Country Neighbors makes up volumes two and three of the three-volume work. As sh); 236] #Country_Pictures_OV (Country Pictures [alternative title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version] | The sketch entitled Our Village was sometimes retitled Country Pictures in some ); 237] #Country_Stories (Country Stories | 1835); 238] #Cousin_Mary_LM (Cousin Mary [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04); 239] #Cousin_Mary_OV (Cousin Mary [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the ninth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It); 240] #Cranford (Cranford | 1853); 241] #Cribbage_Players_OV (The Cribbage Players. A Country Dialogue [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 242] #CrimTrials_Porteous (Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-Lothian | 1818 | Full title: Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-L); 243] #Critic_play (The Critic: or, a Tragedy Rehearsed | A burlesque satire on theatrical production and performance, first performed in ); 244] #CritProse_Dryden (The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden | 1800 | Full title: The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden, Now First); 245] #Cunigonda_DS_1827 (Cunigonda's Vow: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 246] #Curate_St_Nicholas_BR (The Curate of St. Nicholas | 1835 | A version of this story was published as Our Rector in the English Annual for 18); 247] #Cyllenius_epic (The Travels of Cyllenius: A Poem, in 66 cantos | 1795 | First published in 1795 and privately printed by Charles Dickinson himself. Peri); 248] #Cymbeline_play (Cymbeline | 1623 | First performed around 1611 and first printed in 1623.); 249] #Daniells (Rural Sports | Printed in numerous editions between 1801-1817.); 250] #Deaf_Dumb_play (Deaf and Dumb); 251] #DeafasPost_play (Deaf as a Post (Drury Lane, 1823) | a one-act farce); 252] #Decline_Fall (The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire); 253] #Dedication_to_Father_OV1 (Dedication to her father [of Our Village] | In late editions of Our Village, Mitford added this dedication to her father. No); 254] #Delphine (Delphine | 1802 | Mitford rated it not good and much too dismal.); 255] #DeRance (De Rancé: a Poem | 1815); 256] #Desc_NSWales (A Description of the Colony of New South Wales | 1819 | Full title: A Statistical, Historical, and Political Description of the Colony o); 257] #DescCat_Louvre (A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the Louvre | 1817 | Full title: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the); 258] #Diary_Dodington (The Diary of the late George Bubb Dodington | 1784 | Full title: The Diary of the Late George Bubb Dodington, Baron of Melcombe Regis); 259] #Diary_Invalid (The Diary of an Invalid | 1820 | Full title: The Diary of an Invalid; being the journal of a tour in pursuit of h); 260] #Discipline (Discipline: A Novel | 1814 | First edition published anonymously.); 261] #Display_JT (Display | 1815 | Full title: Display: A Tale. For Young People.); 262] #Dissenting_Minister_BR (The Dissenting Minister | 1835); 263] #DoctorCasden_LM (Doctor Casden | 1824-06 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in June 1824. It was re-titled for v); 264] #DoctorTubb_OV (Doctor Tubb [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 265] #Don_Juan_poem (Don Juan | Published in parts between 1820 and 1824.); 266] #Don_Quixote_novel (El ingenioso hidalgo don Quijote de la Mancha | Published in two volumes in 1605 and 1615); 267] #Don_Sebastian_play (Don Sebastian); 268] #DonningtonCastle_1827 (On Visiting Donnington Castle [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 18 in the 1827 collection (pages 311-12). Also appeared in the 1821 New M); 269] #Dora_Creswell_OV (Dora Creswell [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It also appeared as); 270] #Douglas_play (Douglas: A Tragedy | 1757 | First performed in 1756in Edinburgh, followed by a performance in London in 1757); 271] #Dramatic_Works_of_MRM (The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford | 1854); 272] #DramaticScenes (Dramatic Scenes, Sonnets, and Other Poems | 1827); 273] #Dudley (Dudley | 1819 | 3 volumes. by Miss O'Keeffe.); 274] #Early_Rec_Caroline_Cleveland_OV (Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 275] #Early_Rec_Cobbler_Over_Way_OV (Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 276] #Early_Rec_English_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The English Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 277] #Early_Rec_French_Emigrants_OV (Early Recollections. French Emigrants [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch originally appeared in the February 29, 1824 issue of The Lady's Mag); 278] #Early_Rec_French_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The French Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It originally appeare); 279] #Early_Rec_General_and_Lady_OV (Early Recollections. The General and his Lady [Our Village version] The General and His Lady: A Sketch [Literary Souvenir version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 280] #Early_Rec_My_Godfather_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published); 281] #Early_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_OV (Early Recollections. My School-Fellows | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub); 282] #Early_Rec_MyGodfathers_Manoeuvering_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 283] #Early_Rec_OV (Early Recollections [Our Village subseries] Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Early Recollections. The English Teacher Early Recollections. French Emigrants Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Early Recollections. The French Teacher Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuverings Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman | 1826—1832 | The title of an Our Village subseries, Early Recollections first ran occasionall); 284] #Early_Rec_Tom_Hopkins_OV (Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins [Our Village version] Tom Hopkins [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was published pre); 285] #Early_Rec_Widow_Gentlewoman_OV (Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished i); 286] #EditorIntro_OV_DentEveryman (Editor's Introduction [Dent Everyman edition]); 287] #EditorIntro_OV_FolioSoc (Our Village, Folio Society, 1996); 288] #EditorIntro_OV_Macmillan ( | This introduction by Anne Thackeray Ritchie was influential in establishing Mitf); 289] #EditorIntro_OV_OUP_pb (Editor's Introduction [Oxford University Press, pb]); 290] #EditorIntro_OV_Penguin (Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987]); 291] #EditorIntro_OV_SampsonLowMSR_BC (Our Village [Sampson Low, Martson, Seale & Rivington edition, 1882] | This introduction appeared in the 1882 Sampson Low, Martson & and Rivington, and); 292] #Ellen_OV (Ellen [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. ); 293] #Ellesmere (Ellesmere | Author and date unidentified.); 294] #Emily_DS (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Originally appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505. Later repri); 295] #Emily_DS_1827 (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505 . Late); 296] #Emma_JA (Emma: A Novel | 1819); 297] #Enc_Metr (Encyclopedia Metropolitana; or, Universal Dictionary of Knowledge (30 vols., 1817-1845)); 298] #Endymion (Endymion); 299] #Eng_KingsWd_FT (England. The King's Ward | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 300] #EnglefieldHouse_1827 (Englefield House [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 10 in the 1827 collection (page 303) .); 301] #Epilogue_Orestes_TNT (Epilogue to Orestes by Euripides | Talfourd wrote an Epilogue for a performance of Orestes by Euripides . Later pri); 302] #Epistle_Friend_1810 (Epistle to a Friend. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 303] #EpitaphOnMary_1811 (Epitaph on Mary, the Wife of George Mitford, Esq. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 304] #EskdaleHerdboy (The Eskdale Herd-Boy | 1819 | Full title: The Eskdale Herd-Boy, a Scottish Tale for the Instruction and Amusem); 305] #Essays_of_Elia_nonfict (The Essays of Elia); 306] #Eunice (Eunice | 1809); 307] #Euro_Settlements_in_Am (An Account of the European Settlements in America, in six parts | 1757); 308] #Evelina_FB (Evelina: Or, The History of a Young Lady’s Entrance Into the World | 1778 | First edition published anonymously.); 309] #EveningHour_1827 (Sweet is the balmy evening hour | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line. Also appeared in the 1827 Pledg); 310] #EveningPrimrose_1810 (To the Evening Primrose. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 311] #EveningsRichest_1827 (Evening's richest colours glowing | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 312] #FaerieQu_ES (The Faerie Queene | ); 313] #Fair_Rosamund_DS_1827 (Fair Rosamund: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 314] #FairEleanor_1811 (Fair Eleanor: A Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 315] #FaithfulShepherdess_JF (The Faithful Shepherdess | Likely first performed in 1608 and first appeared in print in 1609.); 316] #Fall_Jerusalem_HM (The Fall of Jerusalem | 1820 | Full title: The Fall of Jerusalem: A Dramatic Poem.); 317] #FallofRobespierre (The Fall of Robespierre: An Historic Drama | 1794 | Three-act historical drama collaboratively written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge an); 318] #Fannys_Fairings_OV (Fanny's Fairings [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub); 319] #Father_Bocking_1810 (To my Father, on his Return from Bocking. May 29, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 320] #FavoriteBower_1810 (Written in a Favorite Bower, Previous to Leaving Home, May 14, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem refers to Mitford's home Bertram House and is dated May 14, 1809. This); 321] #Fawn_DS_1827 (The Fawn: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 322] #Fiesco_MRMplay (Fiesco | Mitford’s first attempt to write a full-length tragedy, never performed or print); 323] #Fiesco_play (Die Verschwörung des Fiesco zu Genua; or Fiesco’s Conspiracy at Genoa); 324] #FindensT_1838 (Findens' Tableaux: A Series of Picturesque Scenes of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1837 | 1838 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed five selections.); 325] #FindensT_1839 (Findens' Tableaux of the Affections; A series of Picturesque Illustrations of the Womanly Virtues | 1838 | 1839 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed four selections.); 326] #FindensT_1840 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXL | 1839 | 1840 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.); 327] #FindensT_1841 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXLI | 1840 | 1841 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.); 328] #FindensT_1843 (Finden's Tableaux of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1842 | A two-volume anthology of previously-published stories and poems from Finden's T); 329] #Fingal_Ossian (Fingal: An Ancient Epic Poem, in Six Books: Together with Several Other Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic Language, by James Macpherson. | 1762 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.); 330] #Fisherman_in_Married_State_OV (The Fisherman in his Married State [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It is a second part ); 331] #FishingSeat_1827 (The Fishing-Seat, Whiteknights [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 14 in the 1827 collection (page 307) . Also appeared in the 1827 Literary); 332] #Flirtation_Extraordinary_BR (Flirtation Extraordinary | 1835 | This story was also published in the English Annual for 1837 with the title A Se); 333] #Flora_Fest (Festival of Flora | 1818 | ); 334] #Florence_Macarthy_SO (Florence Macarthy: An Irish Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she was very much amused by it. Later, she writes that she ); 335] #ForgetMeNot_1827 (The Forget-Me-Not [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 3 in the 1827 collection (page 295) .); 336] #Foscari_MRMplay (Foscari: A Tragedy | 1826); 337] #Fragments_Ossian (Fragments of Ancient Poetry Collected in the Highlands of Scotland, and Translated from the Galic or Erse Language | 1760 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.); 338] #Frags_Dumas (Fragments des oeuvres d'Alexandre Dumas choisis à l'usage de la jeunesse par Miss Mitford | 1846); 339] #Freshwater_Fisherman_OV (The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It also appeared in ); 340] #FriendBirthday_1827 (To a Friend on Her Birthday [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 15 in the 1827 collection (page 308) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont); 341] #FriendsAlbum_1827 (Written in a Friend's Album [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 17 in the 1827 collection (page 310) . Also appeared in Marshall's Christ); 342] #FriendToLisbon_1827 (On the Departure of a Friend to Lisbon for the Recovery of Her Health [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 21 in the 1827 collection (page 315) .); 343] #FudgeFamilyParis (The Fudge Family in Paris | 1818); 344] #GammerGurton (Gammer Gurton’s Needle | Comic play written during the 1550s, considered one of the first comedies in Eng); 345] #Gaston_deBlondeville (Gaston de Blondeville | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep); 346] #Gaston_novel (Gaston de Blondeville); 347] #GaySummerMorn_1827 ('Tis a gay summer morn, and the sunbeams dance | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 348] #George3_CourtFam (George III, his court, and family | 1820); 349] #Geraniaceae (Geraniaceae: The Natural Order of Gerania, Illustrated by Coloured Figures and Descriptions; Comprising the Numerous and Beautiful Mule-varieties Cultivated in the Gardens of Great Britain, with Directions for Their Treatment | 1820—1830 | Printed in 5 volumes between 1820 and 1830.); 350] #GhostStories_OV (Ghost Stories [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 351] #Gleaner_FT (The Gleaner | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 352] #Glenarvon_fict (Glenarvon); 353] #Glenfergus_fict (Glenfergus. In Three Volumes | 1820); 354] #GlowWorm_1810 (To the Glow-Worm. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 355] #Going_to_Races_OV (Going to the Races [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu); 356] #Grace_Neville_OV (Grace Neville [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was previously p); 357] #Great_Farmhouse_LM (A Great Farmhouse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-02 | This sketch was collected in volume one of Our Village .); 358] #Great_Farmhouse_OV (A Great Farmhouse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It or); 359] #Greek_Plays_BR (The Greek Plays | 1835); 360] #Ground_Ash_CS (The Ground Ash | 1835); 361] #GulliversTr_JS (Jonathan Swift | 1726 | Amended 1735); 362] #Guy_Mannering (Guy Mannering); 363] #Hacho (Hacho; or, the Spell of St. Wilten | 1819 | Narrative poem in imitation of Scott, written while the author was at Cambridge.); 364] #HalidonHill (Halidon Hill; A Dramatic Sketch from Scottish History | 1822); 365] #Hamlet_play (Hamlet | 1603 | First performed around 1602 and first printed in 1603.); 366] #Hannah_LM (Hannah [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village in 1824.); 367] #Hannah_OV (Hannah [Our Village version] | 1824 | Hannahappeared as the second story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It was ori); 368] #HaroldEx (Harold the Exile | 1819 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously and with no publisher listed. Considered to be ); 369] #Harry_L_Talking_Gent_LM (Harry L., or The Talking Gentleman [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-08 | This sketch appeared in the August 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. It was lat); 370] #HavardChasI_play (The Tragedy of Charles I | 1747); 371] #HayCarrying_OV (Hay-Carrying [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was first publis); 372] #Haydon_Corresp (Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk | ); 373] #Haymakers_OV (The Haymakers. A Country Story [Our Village Version[ | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu); 374] #Haymaking_OV (Haymaking [alternate title assigned to Hay-Carrying in some later editions of Our Village]); 375] #Hazlitt_LecComic (Lectures on the English Comic Writers); 376] #Hazlitt_LecDrama (Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth); 377] #HeadlongHall (Headlong Hall | 1816 | Mitford rated it as famous.); 378] #HearingTalfourd_1827 (On Hearing Mr. Talfourd Plead in the Assize-Hall at Reading, On His First Circuit, March 1821 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 13 in the 1827 collection (page 306) .); 379] #Heart_of_Mid (The Heart of Midlothian | 1822); 380] #Heiress_MRM (The Heiress | Projected novel by Mary Russell Mitford, apparently never completed. Coles posit); 381] #Helen_play (Helen); 382] #Henry_Talbot_DS_1827 (Henry Talbot: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 383] #HenryIVpt1_play (Henry IV, part one | First printed in 1598; likely in performance before that date.); 384] #HenryIVpt2_play (Henry IV, part two | 1600); 385] #HenryV_play (Henry V); 386] #HenryVIII_play (Henry VIII); 387] #Heraline_LMH (Heraline; or, Opposite Proceedings | 1821 | 4 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entry of 9 August 9 18); 388] #HermitInLondon (The Hermit in London | 1819 | Published anonymously. 5 volumes. Full title: The Hermit In London, Or, Sketches); 389] #Hester_BR ( | 1835); 390] #Hist_Crusades_CM (The History of the Crusades | 1820 | Full title: The History of the Crusades, for the recovery and possession of the ); 391] #Hist_JSpinner (The History of Jenny Spinner | 1800 | Full title: The History of Jenny Spinner, the Hertfordshire Ghost. Written by he); 392] #Hist_ParisianMass (The History of the Parisian Massacre | 1810 | Full title: The History of the Parisian Massacre; Wherein all the minute circums); 393] #HistAcctAfrica_JL (Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late J. Leyden | 1817 | Full title: Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late); 394] #HistEdRichII_Howard (History of the Reigns of Edward and Richard II | 1690 | Published near the end of his life, this play involved Sir Robert, a royalist sy); 395] #HistEngland_Hume (The History of England | 1754—1761 | Hume wrote the six volumes of this monumental history in reverse chronological o); 396] #History_Burnet (Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time | 1818 | Full title: Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time from the restoration of King); 397] #History_Municipal_Church_St_Lawrence (A History of the Municipal Church of St. Lawrence, Reading | 1883 publication used by Needham to establish local histories and identities of ); 398] #HistWIndies_BE (History of the West Indies | 1798 | 5 volumes. Full title: The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British West In); 399] #HoflandsJerusalem_1827 (On Mr. Hofland's Picture of Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 2 in the 1827 collection (page 294) . Also appeared in the 1826 Amulet as); 400] #Holcroft_Mems (Memoirs of the Late Thomas Holcroft, Written by Himself and Continued to the Time of His Death | 1816); 401] #Honeymoon_play (The Honeymoon); 402] #Honor_OCallaghan_CS (Honor O'Callaghan | 1835); 403] #HopG_FT (Hop-Gathering | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 404] #Hopping_Bob_OV (Hopping Bob [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 405] #Horace_play (Horace | 1640); 406] #HoundandHorn_1827 (With hound and horn and huntsman's call | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 407] #Hudibras_SB (Hudibras | First published in three parts in 1663, 1664 and 1678, then as a single edition ); 408] #HumanLife_SR (Human Life: A Poem | 1819); 409] #Humphrey_Clinker_fict (The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker | 1771); 410] #Hypocrite (The Hypocrite | A satirical version of Moliere’splay, Tartuffe by Bickerstaff.); 411] #Il_Pensoroso (Il Pensoroso | 1645 | Written 1632, together with L' Allegro.); 412] #Iliad (The Iliad | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.); 413] #Illinois_Birkbeck (Letters from Illinois: Illustrated by a Map of the United States, Shewing Mr. Birkbeck’s Journey from Norfolk to Illinois and a Map of English Prairie and the Adjacent Country by John Melish | 1818 | Mitford likely read this edition, published in London; editions also appeared in); 414] #Illus_LitHist (Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century | 1818 | Full title: Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century, Con); 415] #Imitated_Italian_1810 (Imitated from the Italian. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 416] #Impromptu_Whitbread_1810 (Impromptu, On Hearing Mr. Whitbread Declare, On Lord Melville's Trial, That He Fondly Trusted his Name Would Descend with Honor to Posterity. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 417] #Independence (Independence | Author and date unidentified.); 418] #Independence_1827 (Independence | 1827 | 1827 narrative poem.); 419] #India_JournalResidence_Graham (Maria Graham | 1812 | Another edition was published in 1813 in Edinburgh by A. Constable and Company, ); 420] #Inez_deCastro_MRMplay (Inez de Castro; A Tragedy in Five Acts | ); 421] #InfantileLove_1811 (Infantile Love. | 1811 | 1811 poem. A portion of this poem appears as an epigraph in Poems by Eliza Gabri); 422] #Inferno_Dante (Inferno | 1472 | The Inferno is the first part of Dante Alighieri’s 14th-century epic poem %h3 Di); 423] #Inquisitive_Gent_OV (The Inquisitive Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 424] #InsaneWorld (The Insane World | 1818 | Full title: The Insane World; or, a Week in London. A Satire. Mitford dismissed ); 425] #IntendedRemoval_1827 (On an Intended Removal From a Favourite Residence. November, 1820 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 20 in the 1827 collection (page 314) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont); 426] #IntNarr_Bruce (An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Abyssinia | 1790 | Full title: An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Ab); 427] #Intro_DW (Introduction | 1854 | Introduction, first published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not); 428] #Intro_Farewell_to_OV_v5 (Introduction. Farewell to Our Village | 1832 | This sketch appeared as the introduction to the fifth and final volume of Our Vi); 429] #Introduction_ExtractsLetters_OV_v3 (Introduction [to Our Village, volume 3] | 1828 | This essay appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828.); 430] #Introductory_Letter_to_Miss_W_OV (Introductory Letter, to Miss W. [Our Village version] | 1830 | This appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village, by way of introduction. The l); 431] #InvariablePrin_WLB (The Invariable Principles of Poetry, in a Letter Addressed to Thomas Campbell, Esq.; Occasioned by Some Critical Observations in his Specimens of British Poets, Particularly Relating to the Poetical Character of Pope. | | Part of a controversy over the significance poetry of Alexander Pope in the earl); 432] #Ion_Euripides (Ion | -0414—-0412 | The ancient Greek play on which Thomas Noon Talfourd based his political tragedy); 433] #Ion_TNTplay (Ion); 434] #Irish_Haymaker_BR (The Irish Haymaker | 1835); 435] #Isabella_poem (Isabella, or the Pot of Basil | 1820 | Keats's narrative poem is adapted from the tale of Isabella and Lorenzo from Gio); 436] #Italian_AR (The Italian | 1797 | Full title: The Italian, or the Confessional of the Black Penitents. A Romance.); 437] #ItalianTrans_ChasD (Italian Translations | 1819 | Unpublished manuscript translations of works in Italian. Mitford reviewed the ma); 438] #Ivanhoe (Ivanhoe); 439] #Jack_Hatch_OV (Jack Hatch [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published); 440] #Jesse_Cliffe_CS (Jesse Cliffe | 1835 | This story was also published in The Library of Fiction; or Family Story Teller ); 441] #Jessy_Lucas_OV (Jessy Lucas [Our Village version] Jessy of Kibe's Farm [Bijou version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 442] #JoannasProphecy_1810 (Joanna's Prophecy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 443] #JohnBull_play (John Bull the Englishman’s Fireside, a Comedy in five acts. | 1805); 444] #JohnGospel_NewTest (The Gospel of John | Fourth Book of the New Testament of the Christian Bible, presumably (and contest); 445] #Johnson_Lives (Lives of the English Poets | 1783); 446] #Journal_Greenland (Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the years 1770 to 1778 | 1818 | Full title: Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the); 447] #Journal_India1817 (Journal of a Route Across India | 1819 | Full title: Journal of a Route Across India, Through Egypt, to England, in the L); 448] #Journal_Soldier71st (A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st | 1819 | Full title: A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st, or Glasgow Regiment, Highland Li); 449] #Julian_MRMplay (Julian; a Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823); 450] #Julius_Caesar_play (Julius Caesar | 1599 | Shakespeare's play about the assassination of Julius Caesar.); 451] #JuniusLtrs (The Letters of Junius | 1772 | Collection of letters written pseudonymously between 1769 and 1772 and colleccte); 452] #Kehama (The Curse of Kehama: A Poem in Two Volumes | 1810); 453] #Kenilworth_WS (Kenilworth | 1821); 454] #King_Harwood_BR (King Harwood | 1835); 455] #King_John_play (The Life and Death of King John | Likely written in the mid-1590s; not published until it appeared in the First Fo); 456] #King_John_Valpy (King John, an Historical Tragedy, Altered from Shakespeare, as it was Acted at Reading School for the Subscription to the Naval Pillar, to be Erected in Honor of the Naval Victories of the Present War | 1800); 457] #King_Lear_play (King Lear); 458] #KingAnecd (Political and Literary Anecdotes of His Own Times. | According to the title page, a memoir of Dr. William King, written in his sevent); 459] #KingCoal (King Coal's Levée | 1819 | Full title: King Coal's Levee, Or Geological Etiquette, With Explanatory Notes; ); 460] #KingsPg_FT (The King's Page | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 461] #Knights_Swan (Knights of the Swan | 1796 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Knights of the Swan: or, the court of Charlemagne: a ); 462] #Lallegro (John Milton | 1645 | Poem found in Milton’s 1645 Poems of Mr. John Milton both English and Latin, Com); 463] #Lamb_Chas_NewStyleActing (Charles Lamb); 464] #Lamb_Chas_Works (Charles Lamb | ); 465] #Lament_Tasso (Lament of Tasso); 466] #Laodamia_WW (Laodamia | 1815); 467] #Last_Letters_Jac_Ortis (The Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis | 1802 | Epistolary novel read by Mitford who describes it in her Journal on 15 June 1820); 468] #LeavingPicture_1827 (On Leaving a Favourite Picture [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 16 in the 1827 collection (page 309) . Appeared in the 1821 New Monthly M); 469] #LecComic_WHaz (Lectures on the English Comic Writers, delivered at the Surry Institution | 1819 | Spelled Surry on title page.); 470] #LecDramatic_WHaz (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth, Delivered at the Surry Institution | 1820); 471] #LecPoetry_WHaz (Lectures on the English Poets, delivered at the Surrey Institution | 1819); 472] #Lects_WmLawrence (Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and the Natural History of Man | 1819 | Full title: Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and t); 473] #LectsHistLit_Schlegel (Lectures on the History of Literature: Ancient and Modern | 1819); 474] #Lectures_Dramatic (A course of lectures on dramatic art and literature | 1815 | Translation of Schlegel's Vorlesungen über dramatische Kunst und Litteratur, fi); 475] #Lectures_JOpie (Lectures on Painting | 1809 | Full title: Lectures on Painting, Delivered at the Royal Academy of Arts: with a); 476] #Lectures_Paint_HF (Lectures on Painting: Delivered at the Royal Academy, March, 1801. | 1801); 477] #LegendGoodWomen (The Legend of Good Women | A collection of legends believed to be composed during the 1380s.); 478] #Legends_B (Metrical Legends of Exalted Characters | 1821 | ); 479] #LeightonPr (Leighton Priory | Author and date unidentified.); 480] #Letters_Hearne_Aubrey (Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: To Which are Added, Hearne’s Journeys to Reading, and to Whaddon Hall, the Seat of Browne Willis, Esq., and Lives of Eminent Men by John Aubrey, Esq., the Whole Now First Published from the Originals | 1813); 481] #Letters_NItaly (Letters from the North of Italy | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Letters from the North of Italy: Addressed to Henry Hallam, ); 482] #Letters_to_Heber (Letters to R. Heber, Esq., containing critical remarks on the series of novels beginning with Waverley and an attempt to ascertain their author | 1821); 483] #LIEO_Poems (Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems | 1820 | Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, published in July 1820, ); 484] #Life_Burke_RB (The Life of Burke | 1800 | Full title: The Life of Edmund Burke: Comprehending an Impartial Account of his ); 485] #Life_DukeofMarl_WC (Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough: With His Original Correspondence; Collected from the Family Records at Blenheim, and Other Authentic Sources. Illustrated with Portraits, Maps, and Military Plans. | 1818); 486] #Life_LadyRussell (Some Account of the Life of Rachael Wriothesley, Lady Russell, by the editor of Madam Du Deffand’s letters. | 1819 | Source: HathiTrust); 487] #Life_of_Johnson (Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. | 1791 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D., Comprehending an Accoun); 488] #Life_Wesley (The Life of Wesley | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Life of Wesley; and the Rise and Progress of Methodis); 489] #Life_WmRussell (The Life of William, Lord Russell | 1820 | Full title: The Life of William, Lord Russell; with some account of the times in); 490] #LifeRichard2 (The Life and Reign of King Richard the Second, by a Person of Quality | 1681); 491] #Lights_Shadows (Lights and Shadows of American Life | 1832); 492] #LilyBells_1827 (The lily bells are wet with dew | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.); 493] #Lit_Pocket_Bk (The Literary Pocket Book, or Companion for the Lover of Art and Nature | Literary almanac edited by Leigh Hunt that includes original poems by P. Shelley); 494] #Little_Miss_Wren_OV (Little Miss Wren [Our Village version] Little Miss Wren: a Sketch [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe); 495] #Little_Rachel_OV (Little Rachel [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 496] #Lives_HaydnMoz (The Lives of Haydn and Mozart | 1818 | Written by Marie-Henri Beyle, better known as Stendahl, under the pseudonym L. A); 497] #London_Visitor_CS (The London Visitor | 1835); 498] #Lost_Dahlia_CS (The Lost Dahlia | 1835); 499] #Lost_Found_OV (Lost and Found [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 500] #Lost_Keys_OV (The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 501] #Lost_Won_OV (Lost and Won [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be); 502] #LostPearl_FT (Ceylon. The Lost Pearl | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 503] #Louisa_OV (Louisa [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 504] #LoveSickMaid_1811 (The Love-Sick Maid; An Imitation of the Writers of the Seventeenth Century. [1811 version] | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 505] #Ltrs_Cont_JW (Letters from the Continent | 1819 | Full title: Letters from the Continent During the Months of October, November, a); 506] #Lucy_LM (Lucy [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-09 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 507] #Lucy_OV (Lucy [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the sixth sketch in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It); 508] #Lucy_Revisited_LM (Lucy Re-visited [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-08 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in August 1824. It was re-titled for); 509] #Macbeth_play (Macbeth); 510] #Mademoiselle_Therese_OV (Mademoiselle Therese [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 511] #Mademoiselle_Tournon (Mademoiselle de Tournon | 1820 | ); 512] #Mahomet_play (Mahomet | 1741); 513] #Maids_Tragedy_play (The Maid’s Tragedy); 514] #Manfred (Manfred); 515] #ManinMoon_Hone (The Man in the Moon | 1820 | Full title: The Man in the Moon, A Speech from the Throne to the Senate of Lunat); 516] #Manners (Manners: A Novel | 1817 | 3 vols. Written under the pseudonym Madame Panache. Mitford rated it a pretty th); 517] #MansfieldPk (Mansfield Park | 1814 | 3 volumes. Full title: Mansfield Park: A Novel. Published as by the Author of Pr); 518] #Marianne_OV (Marianne [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 519] #MariaWinningCup_1810 (On Maria's Winning the Cup, At the Ilsley Coursing Meeting. November 9, 1808. Inscribed to W. Cobbett, Esq. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 520] #MarinersTale_1811 (The Mariner's Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 521] #Marino_Faliero (Marino Faliero); 522] #Mark_Bridgman_BR (Mark Bridgman | 1835); 523] #Marmion_WS (Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field | 1808); 524] #Marriage_SF (Marriage: A Novel | 1818 | Mitford records that she liked it very much; she also says that it made me laugh); 525] #Masque_Seasons_DS_1827 (Masque of the Seasons: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 526] #Materials_WB (Materials for Thinking | 1806); 527] #MaternalAffection_1811 (Maternal Affection. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 528] #Matthew_Shore_OV (Matthew Shore [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 529] #Mazeppa_By (Mazeppa, a Poem. | 1819 | Mitford records that she liked it very much.); 530] #Measure_Measure_play (William Shakespeare | 1623 | Comedy likely written in 1603 or 1604, first known to be published in the First ); 531] #Medecine_esprit (La Médecine de l’esprit | 1753); 532] #Melincourt (Melincourt | 1817 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.); 533] #Melmoth_CM (Melmoth the Wanderer: A Tale | 1820); 534] #Memoirs_of_the_life_of_Colonel_Hutchinson (Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson | 1806 | Lady Lucy Hutchinson composed the Memoirs sometime between the date of her husba); 535] #Memory_John_Moore_1810 (To The Memory of Sir John Moore. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 536] #Mems_AnneBoleyn (Memoirs of the Life of Anne Boleyn, Queen of Henry VIII. By Miss Benger. | 1818 | 2 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entries of March 25, 2); 537] #Mems_Conde (Memoirs of the Life of the Great Condé | 1807 | Translated into English from the French by Fanny Holcroft. Mitford called them n); 538] #Mems_Curran (Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the Right Honourable John Philpot Curran | 1817 | Full title: Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the ); 539] #Mems_ElizHamilton (Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, with a selectio); 540] #Mems_Evelyn (Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writing of John Evelyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writings of John Evelyn, Esq. ); 541] #Mems_Huet (Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranches | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranche); 542] #Mems_Martyn (Memoirs of the Rev. Henry Martyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoir of the Rev. Henry Martyn, B.D. late fellow of St. John's Coll); 543] #Mems_Montrose (Memoirs of the Most Renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs of the most renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose. Tran); 544] #Mems_Napoleon1815 (Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1820 | Mitford rated it rather dull but then also called it a most interesting book.); 545] #Mems_RLEdgeworth (Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth, Esq. begun by himsel); 546] #Mems_Sidney_TZ (Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Sir Philip Sidney | 1808 | Mitford rated it as stupid.); 547] #Mems_Temple (Mémoires Particuliers de la Captivité de la Famille Royale de la Tour de Temple | 1817 | Full title: Mémoires particuliers, formant avec l'ouvrage de M. Hue et le Journa); 548] #Mems_Vaux (Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life of James Hardy Vaux | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Volume 1: Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life ); 549] #Mems_WilhelminaofPrussia (Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina | 1812 | Full title: Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina: princess royal of Prussia, m); 550] #MemsQE1 (Memoirs of the Court of Elizabeth, Queen of England | 1818 | 2 volumes.); 551] #Merchant_of_Venice_play (The Merchant of Venice); 552] #Merope_play (Merope); 553] #Merry_Wives_play (The Merry Wives of Windsor | 1602 | First printed in 1602; believed to have been written prior to 1597.); 554] #Metamorphoses (Metamorphōseōn librī | 0008 | First translated into English by William Caxton in 1480.); 555] #Methought_sonnet23 (Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint | 1673 | Milton's sonnet later designated 23, Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint, som); 556] #MidsummerNtsD (A Midsummer Night's Dream); 557] #Milton_PoemsI (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1645 | Milton's first published collection of poems.); 558] #Milton_PoemsII (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1673); 559] #MiltonWksLife_CS (The Prose Works of John Milton: with a Life of the Author | 1806 | Mitford rated it very good.); 560] #Minstrelsy_WS (Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border: Consisting of Historical and Romantic Ballads, Collected in the Southern Counties of Scotland; with a Few of Modern Date, Founded upon Local Tradition | 1802); 561] #MiscPoems_Dryden (Miscellany Poems, in two parts. Containing new translations of Virgil’s Eclogues, Ovid’s Love-elegies, several parts of Virgil’s Æneids, Lucretius, Theocritus, Horace, &c. With several original poems, never before printed. | 1688); 562] #Miseries_JB (The Miseries of Human Life, Or the Last Groans of Timothy Testy and Samuel Sensitive; with a few supplementary sighs from Mrs. Testy. With which are now for the first time Interspersed, Varieties, Incidental to the Principal Matter, In Prose and Verse. In Nine Additional Dialogues, as Overheard by James Beresford, A.M. Fellow of Merton-College, Oxford | 1807); 563] #MiserMarried (The Miser Married: A Novel | 1813 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it a clever thing.); 564] #Miss_Philly_Filkin_CS (Miss Philly Filkin, the China Woman | 1835); 565] #Mission_Ashantee (Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee | 1819 | Full title: Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee: with a statistical accou); 566] #Missionary_SO (The Missionary: An Indian Tale | 1811 | ); 567] #MissMurray_1810 (To the Hon. Miss Murray, with Miss Rowden's "Poetical Introduction to Botany." | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 568] #Mod_Antiques_LM (Modern Antiques [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-03 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 569] #Mod_Antiques_OV (Modern Antiques [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I); 570] #MoleCatcher_OV (The Mole-catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 571] #Monastery (The Monastery | As Mitford reads, she rates it not very good, not so good as some of his Novels ); 572] #Montorio_CM (The Fatal Revenge; or, the Family of Montorio | 1807); 573] #Moonlight_Adventure_OV (A Moonlight Adventure [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 574] #Moore_ViewItaly (A View of Society and Manners in Italy: with Anecdotes relating to some Eminent Characters | ); 575] #MoralTales_ME (Moral Tales for Young People | 1801 | In 3 volumes. Includes: Forester, The Prussian Vase, The Knapsack, The Good Aunt); 576] #Mordaunt (Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Countries | 1800 | Full title: Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Coun); 577] #More_of_OurVillage_LM (More of Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-12 | This sketch was published in The Lady's Magazine in December 1824. It was re-tit); 578] #Morland (Morland | Author and date unidentified.); 579] #Morning_Ramble_OV (A Morning Ramble | Subtitle of the Our Village, third volume story, Wheat Hoeing, that was adopted ); 580] #MossyMs (Manuscript tribute to Mossy | Manuscript tribute to Mossy, written after his death.); 581] #MossyPoem (Manuscript poem to Mossy | Manuscript poem to Mossy, written after his death.); 582] #MotherSleeping_1827 (To My Mother Sleeping [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 6 in the 1827 collection (page 299) .); 583] #Mr_Jos_Hanson_CS (Mr. Joseph Hanson, the Haberdasher | 1835); 584] #MRM_Bio_Selected_OV_Blackie (Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?]); 585] #Mrs_Hollis_BR (Mrs. Hollis, the Fruiterer | 1835); 586] #Mrs_Mosse_OV (Mrs. Mosse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the twentieth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.); 587] #Mrs_Tompkins_BR (Mrs. Tompkins, the Cheesemonger | 1835); 588] #Much_Ado_play (Much Ado About Nothing); 589] #MungoPark_1810 (Lines, Suggested by the Uncertain Fate of Mungo Park, the Celebrated African Traveller. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 590] #My_Godmothers_OV (My Godmothers [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 591] #MyGarden_MRM (My Garden: A Nineteenth-Century Writer on her English Cottage Garden | 1990); 592] #MysteriousWife (The Mysterious Wife: a novel | 1797 | 4 volumes. Minerva Press. Published under the pseudonym Gabrielli.); 593] #Mystery_TG (Mystery, or Forty Years Ago: A Novel | 1820 | 3 vols. Mitford considered it not very good.); 594] #Napoleon_memoir_nonfict (Mémoires pour servir à l’histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1819—1820 | Two volume publication: the first volume was published in 1819 and the second in); 595] #NapoleonPeint (Napoleon Peint Par Lui-même. Extraits du Véritable Manuscrit de Napoleon Bonaparte, par un Amércain | 1818 | ); 596] #Narr_Algiersin1816 (A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816 | 1819 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816, under the); 597] #Narr_Campaign_Saxony (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 1813 | 1820 | Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 18); 598] #Narr_EgyptCataracts (Narrative of a Journey in Egypt and the Country Beyond the Cataracts | 1817); 599] #Narr_SAmPatriots (Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Join the South American Patriots | 1818 | Full title: Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Jo); 600] #Narr_Senegal (Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816 | 1817 | Full title: Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816; Undertaken by Order of the); 601] #Narrative_Eqypt_RW (A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt | 1800 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt. Under Sir Ralph Abercrombie.); 602] #NarrativePoems (Narrative Poems on the Female Character in the Various Relations of Human Life | 1813); 603] #Nat_Calendar (A Naturalist's Calandar: with Observations in Various Branches of Natural History | 1795 | This book, published posthumously, gives precise accounts of the actions of anim); 604] #Nat_Hist_Selborne (The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne | 1789 | This influential book of nature writing is ostensibly formed from 110 letters ad); 605] #NaturalisHist (Naturalis Historiæ | 0077—0079 | Encyclopedic work of thirty-seven books, organized in ten volumes. Source: LBT); 606] #NearRuinedFarm_1811 (Stanzas Written Near a Ruined Farm. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 607] #New_Married_Couple_OV (A New Married Couple [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 608] #NewTestament_Bible (The New Testament | The second half of the Christian Bible, containing scriptures composed in Greek ); 609] #NewWhigGuide (The New Whig Guide | 1819 | Authorship attributed to Viscount Henry John Temple Palmerston John Wilson Croke); 610] #NewYearsDay_1827 (New Year's Day. 1819 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 11 in the 1827 collection (page 304) .); 611] #NightmareAbbey (Nightmare Abbey | 1818 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.); 612] #NightMay_1810 (The Night of May. To Miss W-- | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 613] #NoFiction (No Fiction | 1820 | Full title: No Fiction: a narrative founded on recent and interesting facts. Mit); 614] #Northanger_Abbey (Northanger Abbey | 1817 | First issued together with Persuasion in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Persuasio); 615] #Note_OVBlackwoodsEd (Note [to Our Village, Blackwoods Educational Series edition, 1884] | 1884 | Introductory note to the Blackwood's Educational Series edition of Our Village.); 616] #Obs_CauseEffect (Observations on the Nature and Tendency of the Doctrine of Mr. Hume, concerning the relation of cause and effect | 1806); 617] #Obs_Landscape (Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening | 1818 | Full title: Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening: Incl); 618] #ODonnel_SO (O’Donnel: A National Tale | 1814); 619] #Odyssey (The Odyssey | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.); 620] #Oedipus_play (Oedipus Tyrranus | Mitford tends to refer to this play by its Greek title, Oedipus Tyrranus.); 621] #Old_Bachelor_OV (An Old Bachelor [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the sixteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824); 622] #Old_David_Dykes_BR (Old David Dykes | 1835); 623] #Old_Emigre_BR (The Old Emigre | 1835); 624] #Old_Gipsy_OV (The Old Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 625] #Old_Master_Green_OV (Old Master Green. A Village Sketch. [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 626] #Old_Mortality (Old Mortality); 627] #OldManor_CS (Old Manor House | 1793 | ); 628] #OldTestament_Bible (The Old Testament | The collection of ancient Hebrew scriptures comprising the first half of the Chr); 629] #Olive_Hathaway_OV (Olive Hathaway [Our Village version] Olive Hathaway: a Village Sketch [Pledge of Friendship version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 630] #OnRdngBalldWW_MRMpoem (On Reading a Ballad of Wordsworth | 1822-08-31); 631] #Orestes_PB (Orestes in Argos; a Tragedy in Five Acts, by the late Peter Bayley, Esq. | 1825 | After his sudden death in 1823, Peter Bayley’s wife arranged to have his work pe); 632] #Orestes_play (Orestes | -0408); 633] #Orig_Miniature (The Original of the Miniature. A Novel. | 1816 | 4 volumes. Printed at the Minerva Press.); 634] #Ormond_novel (Harrington, A Tale, and Ormond, A Tale. In Three Volumes. Vol.I | 1817); 635] #Othello_play (Othello); 636] #Otto (Otto of Wittelsbach: A Tragedy | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep); 637] #Otto_Babo (Otto von Wittelsbach | 1783 | First performed in 1782. German tragedy based on the life of Otto II of Wittelsb); 638] #Our_Maying_OV (Our Maying | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in .); 639] #Our_Village1st_ed (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. [Volume I.] [volume one] | 1824 | The first edition, first volume of Our Village appeared without a volume number ); 640] #Our_Village2nd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume II. [volume two] | 1826); 641] #OurVillage_3rd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume III. [volume three] | 1828); 642] #OurVillage_4th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume IV. [volume four] | 1830); 643] #OurVillage_5th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume V. [volume five] | 1832); 644] #OurVillage_BelfordsClarke (Our Village [Belfords Clarke 1880 edition] Editor Introduction [Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, Belfords Clarke editions] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1880 | Edition reprinted from the 1879 illustrated edition published by Sampson Low, Ma); 645] #OurVillage_Bell (Our Village, New edition, second series [George Bell and Sons, first published 1848]The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1877 | Re-issue of the 1848 Henry G. Bohn edition after George Bell & Sons had bought i); 646] #OurVillage_BlackwoodsEd (Our Village [Blackwoods Educational Series, 1884] | 1884 | A selected edition of Our Village stories for the juvenile market. It reprints t); 647] #OurVillage_Bohn (Our Village, Henry G. Bohn, New Edition, First Series The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1848 | A two-volume edition of Our Village stories that reprints most titles from the s); 648] #OurVillage_Caldwell (Our Village [Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and); 649] #OurVillage_CountryPictures_WalterScott (Our Village: Country Pictures [Walter Scott edition, 1884, 1888] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village story] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Another Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh A Morning Ramble [alternate title of Wheat Hoeing Whitsun-Eve Haymaking [alternate title of Hay-Carrying Our Maying Lost and Found Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Harry Lewington A Castle in the Air Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls A Visit to Richmond Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1886—1888 | An illustrated edition of selected sketches from Our Village. The contents are o); 650] #OurVillage_DentEveryman (Our Village [Dent Everyman edition, 1936, 1951] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Dent Everyman series edition, 1936, 1951] MRM's Dedication to her Father Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1936—1951 | A much-republished selected edition of Our Village stories, published by Dent in); 651] #OurVillage_FolioSoc (Our Village [Folio Society, 1996] Editor's Introduction, Our Village, Folio Society, 1996 Dedication to her father Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velveet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1997 | Based on the volume published by George G. Harrap in 1947, illustrated by Shirle); 652] #OurVillage_Hurst (OurVillage [Hurst edition, 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and); 653] #OurVillage_ISIS (Our Village [ISIS Clear Type Classics, 1992] Country Pictures Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1992 | Selected large-print hardcover edition of Our Village stories. The edition compi); 654] #OurVillage_JMDent (Temple Classics | 1900—1902—1906—1930—1935 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches that went through multiple editions in ); 655] #OurVillage_Macmillan (Our Village, 1 volume, Macmillan edition, 1893 Editor Introduction [Our Village, Macmillan edition, 1893] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village (story)] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copose Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1893 | This selected edition of the Our Village stories is illustrated with black and w); 656] #OurVillage_OUP_pb (Our Village [Oxford University Press edition, 1982] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Oxford University Press pb edition, 1982] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. A farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1982 | Selected paperback edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illustrated 194); 657] #OurVillage_Penguin (Our Village [Penguin edition, 1987] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987| Our Village [story, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor the Talking Gentleman Walks in the Country. Nutting A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy A New Married Couple A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Lost and Won Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races A Castle in the Air Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1987 | Selected edition of Our Village stories, drawn largely from the first four volum); 658] #OurVillage_PrenticeHall (Our Village [Prentice Hall 1986 edition] Our Village [story, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy A Christmas Party Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Lost and Found Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf The Haymakers | 1986 | A selected edition of sketches from Our Village, based on the edition originally); 659] #OurVillage_SampsonLowMSR (Our Village. Illustrated. New and cheaper edition. [Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, 1882] Editor's Introduction [to Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington edition, 1882] Our Village [story] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1882 | This edition includes only the Walks in the Country stories. It contains numerou); 660] #OurVillage_story (Our Village | 1821 | This refers to the draft sketch of the story whose title became eponymous with M); 661] #OurVillage_story_LM (Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12 | This sketch became the first and standard introductory story to volume one of Ou); 662] #OurVillage_story_OV (Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | The sketch entitled Our Village appeared as the first sketch in the Our Village ); 663] #OurVillage_TicknorReadFields (Our Village [story] | 1853 | This edition re-prints virtually all of the Our Village stories, with the except); 664] #OurVillage_Unit (Our Village [Unit Library edition, 1902] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village, sketch [Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood Early Recollections. The English Teacher Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland | 1902 | A selected edition of stories from Our Village. It reprints virtually the whole ); 665] #OurVillage_WhiteLion (Our Village [White Lion edition, 1976] Publisher's Note and Introduction [Our Village, White Lion edition, 1976] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1976 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illlustrated 1947 George ); 666] #OV ( | All editions of Our Village as a collection of related sketches and stories, eve); 667] #OV_Harrap_1947 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1947] | 1947 | This 1947 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes); 668] #OV_Macmillan_1893 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1893] | 1893 | This 1893 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes); 669] #PaintersDa_DS_1827 (The Painter's Daughter: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M); 670] #PaintersDa_DS_LM (The Artist: A Dramatic Sketch | 1822 | First published in The Lady's Magazine, new series 2, volume 3 (1822) under this); 671] #ParadiseLost (John Milton | ); 672] #Parisina (Parisina | 1816); 673] #Parting_Glance_OV (A Parting Glance at Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch was the twenty-fourth and final story to appear in volume one of Our); 674] #Parvenus (Les Parvenus; ou, Les Aventures de Julien Delmours | 1819); 675] #Pattys_New_Hat_OV (Patty's New Hat [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been previous); 676] #Pen_Sword_1810 (The Pen and the Sword. Inscribed to the Rt. Hon. R. B. Sheridan. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 677] #Pendennis_WT (The History of Pendennis: His Fortunes and Misfortunes, His Friends and His Greatest Enemy | 1849); 678] #Peoples_Charter (People's Charter | 1838 | The formal declaration of the Chartist movement, which the Chartists strove to h); 679] #Percival (Percival: or, Nature Vindicated: a Novel. | 1801 | Mitford called it a stupid old Novel. Source: Journal.); 680] #Percy_Reliques (Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, consisting of Old Heroic Ballads, Songs, and other Pieces of our Earlier Poets, Together with Some of Later Date | 1765); 681] #Peregrine_Pickle (The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, In Which are Included Memoirs of a Lady of Quality | 1751); 682] #Persuasion (Persuasion | 1817 | First issued together with Northanger Abbey in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Per); 683] #Peter_Jenkins_BR (Peter Jenkins, the Poulterer | 1835); 684] #PeterBell_JHR (Peter Bell: A Lyrical Ballad | ); 685] #PeterBell_WW (Peter Bell. A Tale in Verse. | 1817 | Mitford reports that she liked it and the parody by J. H. Reynolds very much. So); 686] #Peters_Letters_novel (Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk | | Mitford rated it very good. In journal entry Saturday 4 September 1819 .); 687] #Petrarque_deG (Pétrarque et Laura | 1819); 688] #Phedre_play (Phèdre | 1677 | A play retelling the plot of the ancient Greek Hyppolytus by Euripedes, concentr); 689] #Philaster_play (Philaster | 1620 | First performed before 1611, first printed in 1620.); 690] #Philoctetes_play (Philoctetes); 691] #PictTour_FrSw (A Picturesque Tour Through France, Switzerland, on the Banks of the Rhine, and Through Part of the Netherlands in the Year 1816 | 1817 | Mitford rated it as stupid. Unsigned, author unknown.); 692] #Pilgrim_Cross (The Pilgrim of the Cross | 1805 | 4 vols. Full title: The Pilgrim of the Cross: or, the Chronicles of Christabelle); 693] #Pirate_novel (The Pirate | 1822 | ); 694] #Pizarro_play (Pizarro); 695] #Pl_Friendship (The Pleasures of Friendship: A Poem, in two parts | 1810 | Long poem, first published in 1810 and reprinted in 1812 and 1818.); 696] #PO_BerkshireDir (Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, and Oxfordshire; with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | 1847—1854 | Text and page images of the 1854 edition may be accessed through the University ); 697] #PO_Directory_Berkshire (The Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | A series of directories of local gentry and tradespeople in the counties of the ); 698] #Poems1645_Milton (John Milton | 1645); 699] #Poems_1st_ed_MRM (Poems | 1810 | 1 volume.); 700] #Poems_2nd_ed_MRM (Poems: Second Edition with Considerable Additions | 1811 | 2 volumes.); 701] #Poems_2vols_WW (Poems by William Wordsworth [...] in Two Volumes | 1815 | 2 volumes. Full title: Poems by William Wordsworth: Including Lyrical Ballads, a); 702] #PoemsOdes_Valpy1804 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. To Which is Added Some Account of the Lives of Rev. Mr. Benwell and Rev. Dr. Butt | 1804); 703] #PoemsOdes_Valpy1826 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. Second edition. | 1826); 704] #PopetoArbuthnot (An Epistle from Mr. Pope to Dr. Arbuthnot (1734)); 705] #PopularTales_ME (Popular Tales | 1804 | In 3 volumes. Volume 1 includes: Lame Jervas, The Will, The Limerick Gloves, Out); 706] #Portrait_Blanch_1811 (A Portrait. [from Blanch, an Unfinished Poem.] | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 707] #Portugal_1811 (Portugal. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 708] #PR_JLeyden (The Poetical Remains of the Late Dr. John Leyden, with Memoirs of his Life, by the Rev. James Morton. | Source: HathiTrust); 709] #Pratt_1810 (To Mr. Pratt. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 710] #Prayer_Souls_Desire (Prayer is the Soul's Sincere Desire | 1818 | ); 711] #Preface_OV_v1 (Preface [to Our Village, volume one] | 1824); 712] #Preface_OV_v2 (Preface [to Our Village, volume two] | 1826); 713] #Preface_OV_v3 (Preface [to Our Village, volume three] | 1828); 714] #Preface_OV_v4 (Preface [to Our Village, volume four] | 1830); 715] #Prelude_WW (The Prelude, or, Growth of a Poet's Mind: An Autobiographical Poem | 1850 | Autobiographical narrative poem, originally intended to introduce a poetic work ); 716] #Pride_and_Prejudice (Pride and Prejudice: A Novel | 1813); 717] #PrioryTales_H (Tales of the Priory | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading these tales in her Journal entries of July 1820, findin); 718] #Prisoner_Chillon (Prisoner of Chillon); 719] #PrivateCorr_BF (The Private Correspondence of Benjamin Franklin | 1817 | Full title: The private correspondence of Benjamin Franklin [ . . .]: comprising); 720] #PrivLife_Misc_JN (Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father | 1818 | Full title: Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father. To which are added miscell); 721] #Prologue_ReadingSchool_1810 (Prologue, Intended to Have Been Spoken Before the First Part of Henry the Fourth, Acted by the Gentlemen of the Reading School Meeting, October 23, 1809. Inscribed to the Rev. Dr. Valpy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 722] #Prom_Chained (Prometheus Chained | One of R. Potter’s eighteenth-century translations of Aeschylus’s plays, from hi); 723] #PromBound_Aesch (Prometheus Bound | The authorship of this influential ancient Greek tragedy was classically attribu); 724] #ProudL_FT (The Proud Ladye. A Chapter from the Chronicles of Adlersberg. | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 725] #Pub_Note_Intro_WhiteLion (Publisher's Note and Introduction); 726] #Quakers_EL (The Quakers: A Tale | 1817); 727] #Queen_of_the_Meadow_OV (The Queen of the Meadow [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 728] #QueenhooH (Queenhoo Hall, A Romance | 1808 | 3 volumes. Published with Ancient Times, a drama as volume 4.); 729] #QueensWake (The Queen’s Wake: a Legendary Poem | 1813 | A long poem, first published in 1813, purporting to be a collection of poems and); 730] #Quiet_Gentlewoman_OV (A Quiet Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 731] #RatCatcher_OV (The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu); 732] #Raymond (Raymond | Author and date unidentified.); 733] #RecluseScotland (The Recluse of the Appenines; or the Automaton Chief. A Romance. | 1820 | Read by Mitford, as recorded in her Journal in September 1820.); 734] #Recoll_Reign_GeoIII (Recollections and Reflections, Personal and Political, as Connected with Public Affairs, During the Reign of George III | 1822); 735] #Recollections (Recollections of a Literary Life; or, Books, Places, and People | 1852 | London edition in three volumes; New York edition in two volumes.); 736] #Remarkable_Character_of_Old_School_LM (A Remarkable Character of the Old School [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01-31 | This sketch was published in the January 31, 1824 issue of The Lady's Magazine. ); 737] #Remarks_HistEng (Remarks on the History of England | 1743 | Full title: Remarks on the History of England: From the Minutes of Humphry Oldca); 738] #Remarks_Italy (Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, During an Excursion in Italy, in the Years 1802 and 1803. | 1816 | Mitford records she was charmed with it in her journal entry of Monday 15 Februa); 739] #Remarks_scepticism (Remarks on Scepticism | 1819 | Full title: Remarks on Scepticism especially as it is connected with the subject); 740] #Residuary_Legatee_OV (The Residuary Legatee. A True Story [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe); 741] #ReturnFair_FT (The Return from the Fair | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 742] #Revenge_play (The Revenge: a Tragedy | First acted in 1721.); 743] #RevisitingSchool_1810 (On Revisiting the School Where I was Educated. Addressed to Mrs. Rowden, of Hans Place. | 1810 | 1810 poem addressed to Mitford's friend and former teacher Frances Rowden, refer); 744] #RevoltofIslam (The Revolt of Islam: A Poem, in Twelve Cantos | 1816 | The second published version of a poem that Percy Bysshe Shelley originally titl); 745] #Reynolds_LitWks (The Literary Works of Sir Joshua Reynolds | 1819 | Full title: The Literary Works Of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Knight. Late President Of); 746] #Rhododaphne (Rhododaphne: Or, The Thessalian Spell: A Poem | 1818); 747] #RichardIII_play (The Life and Death of Richard the Third | Dramatizes King Richard III’s usurpation of the throne of England. The date of c); 748] #Richelieu_play (Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy. A Play in Five Acts | 1839 | Loosely based on the historical Cardinal Richelieu; title role originated by Wil); 749] #Rienzi (Rienzi; a Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1828 | There appears to be no printed edition of Rienzi authorized by Mitford upon its ); 750] #Rienzi_EBL (Rienzi, The Last of the Roman Tribunes | 1835 | Edward Bulwer-Lytton's novel; a 1835 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienz); 751] #Rienzi_Wagner (Rienzi, der Letzte der Tribunen | 1842 | Richard Wagner's opera; an 1842 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienzi, th); 752] #Rival_Sisters (The Rival Sisters, a Poem in Three Cantos | 1813); 753] #Rivals_RBS (The Rivals: A Comedy | First performed in 1776 at Covent Garden Theatre. Upon reading the play, Mitford); 754] #RobinsonCrusoe_DD (The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner" | 1719 | Full title: The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of Yo); 755] #Rome_ThreeMonths_Graham (Three Months Passed in the Mountains East of Rome: during the year 1819 | | Illustrated with engravings. Source: Google Books and WorldCAT. Mitford mentions); 756] #Romeo_Juliet (Romeo and Juliet | 1597 | Shakespeare's tragedy, first published in 1597 in a quarto edition that is missi); 757] #Rosamund_Story_of_Plague_BR (Rosamund. A Story of the Plague | 1835); 758] #Rosedale_OV (Rosedale [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village .); 759] #RoundheadsDa_FT (The Roundhead's Daughter | 1839 | A short story by Mitford set during the English Republican Era and the Restorati); 760] #Rule_a_Wife_play (Rule a Wife and Have a Wife | Play was first performed in 1624 and first printed in 1640); 761] #RusticT_FT (The Rustic Toilet | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 762] #Ruth_OT (Book of Ruth | Book of the Old Testament, considered a historical book in the canon of the the ); 763] #Sacrifice_Isabel (The Sacrifice Of Isabel: A Poem. | 1816 | Mitford rated it an elegant Poem.); 764] #Sad_Shepherd_BJ (The Sad Shepherd: Or, A Tale of Robin Hood, a Fragment | Appeared in this form in 1783, edited by Francis Godolphin Waldron and Peter Wha); 765] #Sadak_Kalasrade (Sadak and Kalasrade; or, The Waters of Oblivion. A Romantic Opera in Two Acts | 1835 | Title page indicates Printed for the proprietor by S.G. Fairbrother, Lyceum Prin); 766] #Sailors_Wedding_BR (The Sailor's Wedding | 1835 | This story was also published in English Annual for 1835.); 767] #Sardanapalus_play (Sardanapalus: A Tragedy | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Cain.); 768] #Sc_SirAllan_FT (Scotland. Sir Allan and His Dog | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 769] #Scenery_1810 (Sonnet, On Being Requested to Write on Scottish Scenery. | 1810 | 1810 sonnet. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerabl); 770] #SeaSide_Recollections_OV (Sea-side Recollections [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.); 771] #SecretCell_1811 (The Secret Cell. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 772] #Selected_Stories_from_OV_Blackie (Selected Stories from Our Village [Blackie and Sons, Ltd., n.d., 1920s?] Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?] Hannah Lucy Cousin Mary Ellen A Village Beau The Vicar's Maid The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Grace Neville Olive Hathaway A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines The Village Schoolmistress Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Mole-Catcher Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint The China Jug The Election The Two Sisters Hopping Bob the Incendiary. A Country Tale The Cousins The Residuary Legatee Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland A Moonlight Adventure | 1919-12-31—1929-12-31 | This edition of Our Village selections appears to have been published for the ju); 773] #Self_Control (Self Control: A Novel | 1811 | First edition published anonymously.); 774] #Sense_S (Sense and Sensibility | 1811 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously as by a Lady. Mitford rated it very good.); 775] #Sermons_Chalmers (Sermons preached in the Tron Church, Glasgow | 1819 | Likely the new sermons that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on 2 July 18); 776] #Sermons_RRussell (Manuscript sermons | Unpublished manuscript sermons by Mitford's grandfather. Mitford owns a copy, wh); 777] #Shakespeare_Times_nonfict (Shakespeare and His Times: Including the Biography of the Poet; Criticisms on his Genius and Writings; A New Chronology of the Plays; A Disquisition on the Object of His Sonnets; And a History of the Manners, Customs, and Amusements, Superstitions, Poetry, and Elegant Literature of His Age | 1817 | Mitford considered it good materials badly used. In journal entry Sunday 19th Ma); 778] #Sicilian_MM (The Sicilian | 1798 | Minerva Press.); 779] #Siege_DS_1827 (The Siege | 1827 | Dramatic sketch which appeared in Lady's Magazine of September 30, 1822:462-66 a); 780] #Silchester_1811 (Silchester. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 781] #Simple_Story (A Simple Story | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading this novel in her Journal on October 16, 1820.); 782] #Sintram_Comp (Sintram and His Companions: A Romance | ); 783] #Sir_Fr_Darrell (Sir Francis Darrell; or, the Vortex. A Novel | ); 784] #SirPFrancisDenied (Sir Philip Francis denied!: a letter addressed to the British nation | 1817 | James Wilmot's niece Olivia Wilmot Serres claims that her uncle wrote The Letter); 785] #Sketch_FriendsFam (A Sketch of my Friend's Family | 1817 | Full title: A Sketch of my Friend's Family: intended to suggest some practical h); 786] #SketchBook_WI (The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. | 1819); 787] #Sketches_France (Sketches descriptive of Italy, in the years 1816 and 1817; with a brief account of travels in various parts of France and Switzerland, in the same years. | 1820 | Mitford may have read this in the summer of 1820.); 788] #Sketches_of_America (Sketches of America: a Narrative of a Journey of Five Thousand Miles Through the Eastern and Western States of America; Contained in Eight Reports Addressed to the Thirty-nine English Families by whom the Author was Deputed, in June 1817, to Ascertain Whether Any, and What Part of the United States Would be Suitable for Their Residence. With Remarks on Mr. Birkbeck’s Notes and Letters | 1818 | The work’s subtitle refers to to Morris Birkbeck’s Notes on a Journey in America); 789] #SoldierBoy (Soldier Boy | Author and date unidentified.); 790] #Song_FairestThings_1811 (Song. ["The fairest things are those which live"] | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 791] #Specimen_Nat_poem (The Monks and the Giants: Prospectus and Specimen of an Intended National Work; Intended to Comprise the Most Interesting Particulars Relating to King Arthur and his Round Table, by William and Robert Whistlecraft of Stow-Market, in Suffolk, Harness and Collar Makers | 1818 | An ottava rima burlesque written by John Hookham Frere under the nom de plume Wi); 792] #Specimens_BritPoets (Specimens of the British Poets | 1819 | 7 vols. The Essay on English Poetry which prefaces this collection, forms part o); 793] #Specimens_Dramatic_Poets (Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, Who Lived About the Time of Shakespeare. With Notes | 1808); 794] #Speeches_Windham (Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Windham | 1812 | 3 volumes. Full title: Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Wi); 795] #SpencesAnec (Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters of Books and Men. Collected from the Conversation of Mr. Pope, and Other Eminent Persons of His Time | 1820 | Spence’s Anecdotes were collected and published posthumously in 1820 by Edmund M); 796] #St_Botany (Poetical Introduction to the Study of Botany (1801)); 797] #Stephen_Lane_BR (Stephen Lane, the Butcher | 1835); 798] #StMagdaleneAM (The Fast of St. Magdalen: A Romance | ); 799] #StolenL_FT (The Stolen Letter | 1840 | A poem by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of National ); 800] #Stories_AmLife (Stories of American Life; by American Writers | 1830); 801] #StoryWoods_FT (A Story of the Woods | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 802] #Stranger_play (The Stranger); 803] #Sun_Set_MRM (Sun-Set. | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1811 Poems, mentioned in a ); 804] #Suppers_and_Balls_BR (Suppers and Balls | 1835); 805] #Surgeons_Courtship_BR (The Surgeon's Courtship | 1835 | This story was previously published in The Royal Lady's Magazine, and Archives o); 806] #Sybille_1810 (Sybille. A Northumbrian Tale. | 1810 | 1810 narrative poem. Mitford's introductory argument indicates that she wrote th); 807] #TaleOf2Cities (A Tale of Two Cities | 1859); 808] #Tales_Heart (Tales of the heart | 1820 | ); 809] #TalesHall_GC (Tales of the Hall | 1819 | 2 vols. Verse. Last work published in his lifetime.); 810] #TalesofFancy_Shipwreck (Tales of Fancy: The Shipwreck | 1816 | The Shipwreck makes up volume one of the three-volume work. The remaining volume); 811] #TalesofmyLandord_3rd (Tales of my Landlord, 3rd series | 1819 | 4 volumes. The Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes one and two and Legend of Mon); 812] #TalesofWHS (Tales of Wonder, of Humour, and of Sentiment; Original and Translated | 1818 | 2 vols. Volume 1 contains Zelis, The Weathercock, The Magic Dollar Volume 2 cont); 813] #Talking_Gentleman_OV (The Talking Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the nineteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182); 814] #Talking_Lady_LM (The Talking Lady [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .); 815] #Talking_Lady_OV (The Talking Lady [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eleventh story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.); 816] #Tartuffe (Tartuffe | Controversial play by the French author Molière. The title character poses as a ); 817] #Temora_Ossian (Temora, an Ancient Epic Poem, in Eight Books: Together with Several Other Epic Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic language, by James Macpherson. | 1763 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.); 818] #Tempest_play (The Tempest); 819] #Tenants_of_Beechgrove_OV (The Tenants of Beechgrove [Our Village version] The Lady of Beechgrove | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the second story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. I); 820] #TenYearsatTripoli (Miss Tully | 1816 | Mitford may have read the third edition, published in 1819.); 821] #TestofLove (The Testament of Love | In Mitford’s time, believed to be the work of Chaucer. Now attributed to Thomas ); 822] #Th_d_Gr (Théâtre des Grecs); 823] #ThaddeusofWarsaw (Thaddeus of Warsaw | 1803 | ); 824] #The_Election_OV (The Election [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was first publish); 825] #The_Town_BR (The Town | 1835); 826] #The_Two_Foscari (The Two Foscari: A Tragedy | 1821 | A historical blank verse tragedy by Lord Byron that tells the story of Doge Fosc); 827] #TheChalkpit_OV (The Chalk-Pit [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It has previously b); 828] #TheCousins_OV (The Cousins [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe); 829] #TheIncendiary_OV (The Incendiary. A Country Tale [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in the fifth and final volume of Our Village in 1832. It wa); 830] #TheRunaway_OV (The Runaway [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe); 831] #TheTambourine_BR (The Tambourine | 1835); 832] #TheVillage (The Village [alternate title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version | Alternative title assigned to the sketch, Our Village, in the 1884 Blackwood's E); 833] #ThreeMusketeers (The Three Musketeers | 1846 | First published in serial form in the French newspaper Le Siècle between March a); 834] #ToHenryRichardson_1827 (To Mr. Henry Richardson. On His Performance of Admetus in the Alcestis of Euripides as Represented in the Original Greek at Reading School [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 4 in the 1827 collection (pages 296-97) .); 835] #Tom_Cordery_LM (Tom Cordery [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 836] #Tom_Cordery_OV (Tom Cordery [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824); 837] #ToMay_1810 (To May. 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 838] #TomCrib (Tom Crib’s Memorial to Congress | 1819); 839] #ToMissPorden_1827 (To Miss Porden: On Her Poem of COEUR DE LION [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 8 in the 1827 collection (page 301) . Also appeared in the August 17, 182); 840] #TomJones_HF (The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling | 1749); 841] #ToMrHaydon_Nature_1827 (To Mr. Haydon, On a Study From Nature [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 9 in the 1827 collection (page 302) . Also appeared in the July 19, 1817 ); 842] #TomThumb_Fielding (Scriblerus Secundus | 1730 | First performed outside the Haymarket Theatre in September 1730.); 843] #TomThumb_OHaraAdpt (Kane O’Hara | Comic opera adapation of Henry Fielding’s Tom Thumb . Roach’s edition of 1811 fe); 844] #Touchy_Lady_OV (The Touchy Lady [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 845] #Tour_Alet (A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse | 1816 | Full title: A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse by Dom Claude Lancelot, Auth); 846] #Tour_Normandy (Account of a Tour in Normandy | 1820); 847] #Town_v_Country_CS (Town versus Country | 1835); 848] #TraitsNature (Traits of Nature | 1812 | 5 volumes.); 849] #Travels_Acerbi (Travels through Sweden, Finland, and Lapland to the North Cape, in the Years 1798 and 1799. | 1802); 850] #Travels_Belzoni (Narrative of the Operations and Recent Discoveries within the Pyramids, Temples, Tombs, and Excavations, in Egypt and Nucia | 1821 | Mitford mentions reading this in her Journal on September 29, 1821.); 851] #Travels_NGermany (Travels in the North of Germany | 1820 | Full title: Travels in the North of Germany: Describing the Present State of the); 852] #Travels_Nile (Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771 1772, and 1773 | 1790); 853] #Travels_Nubia (Travels in Nubia | 1819 | Published by the Association for Promoting the Discovery for the Interior Parts ); 854] #Travels_TheoDucas (Travels of Theodore Ducas | 1822 | Full title: The Travels of Theodore Ducas of Candia in Various Countries in Euro); 855] #TwelfthNight_Shkspr (Twelfth Night | 1601 | A late dark romantic comedy in Shakespeare’s oeuvre, with first recorded product); 856] #Two_N_Kinsmen (Two Noble Kinsmen | Tragicomedy likely first performed around 1613 and first printed in 1634; genera); 857] #Two_Sisters_OV (Two Sisters [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be); 858] #Two_Valentines_OV (The Two Valentines [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 859] #TwoHoflandLandscapes_1827 (On Two of Mr. Hofland's Landscapes [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 12 in the 1827 collection (page 305) .); 860] #TwoPapers (Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and an Essay [ . . . ] attributed to the Editor of the Ex-m-n-r | Satire aimed at Leigh Hunt. Full title: Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and a); 861] #TwopennyPost (Intercepted Letters, or, the Twopenny Post-bag | 1813); 862] #Undine (Undine: A Romance, translated from the German | Mitford would likely have been familiar with the 1818 translation by George Soan); 863] #Valerius_novel (Valerius: A Roman Story | ); 864] #Vampyre (The Vampyre: A Tale | 1819 | ); 865] #Venice_Preserved_play (Venice Preserv’d | 1683 | First performed in 1683 and printed soon thereafter. Frequently re-staged until ); 866] #Verses_with_Primroses_1810 (Verses, Sent with Some Primroses to a Young Lady, who had Promised us a Visit Early in the Spring. Feb. 7, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 867] #VeryWoman_play (A Very Woman; or the Prince of Tarent | Authorship and date contested.); 868] #Vespers_of_Palermo (The Vespers of Palermo: A Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823); 869] #Vicar_Wakefield (The Vicar of Wakefield: A Tale. Supposed to be Written by Himself | 1766); 870] #Vicars_Maid_OV (The Vicar's Maid [Our Village version] The Vicar's Maid: A Village Story [Amulet version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published); 871] #Vicissitudes (Vicissitudes | Author and date unidentified. May be On the Origin and Vicissitudes of Literatur); 872] #VictoryOfBarrosa_1811 (On the Victory of Barrosa. To Mrs. Taylor, of Hartley Court, Near Reading, Mother of Colonel Norcott. | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 873] #View_Europe (View of the State of Europe during the Middle Ages | 1818 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it good.); 874] #Village_Beau_OV (A Village Beau [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventeenth story in volume one of Our Village in 18); 875] #Village_Schoolmistress_OV (The Village Schoolmistress [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish); 876] #Village_Tales_and_Sketches (Village Tales and Sketches Biographical Preface [Village Tales and Sketches, Nimmo edition, 1881] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Titled here A Morning Ramble] A Village Schoolmistress Whitsun-Eve Our Maying Dora Creswell Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother The Lost Keys [Retitled here "the Lost Key"] | 1881 | Edited collection of Our Village sketches, consisting mostly but not exclusively); 877] #VillageA_FT (The Village Amanuensis | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 878] #Virginius_play (Virginius); 879] #Visit_LaTrappe (A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe, in 1817 | 1818 | Full title: A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817 With Notes Taken Durin); 880] #Visit_Paris (A Visit To Paris in 1814: Being a Review of the Moral, Political, Intellectual, and Social Condition of the French Capital | 2nd edition, corrected and with a new preface referring to late events, publishe); 881] #Visit_to_Lucy_OV (A Visit to Lucy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. ); 882] #Visit_to_Richmond_OV (A Visit to Richmond [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 883] #Vivian (Vivian | 1812); 884] #VoiceofPraise_MRM (The Voice of Praise | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1810 Poems, mentioned in a ); 885] #Voyage_PolarExp (A Voyage of Discovery, Made Under the Orders of the Admiralty, in his Majesty's ships Isabella and Alexander for the purpose of exploring Baffin's Bay, and Enquiring into the possibility of a North-West Passage. | 1819); 886] #VoyagePG_WH (A Voyage up the Persian Gulf, and a Journey Overland from India to England, in 1817 | 1819 | ); 887] #Wager_FT (Florence. The Wager | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 888] #Walk_Switz1816 (A Walk Through Switzerland in September 1816 | 1818); 889] #Walk_Through_Village_OV (A Walk Through the Village [Our Village version] | 1826 | This was the first sketch to appear in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 890] #Walks_Country_LM (Walks in the Country [Lady's Magazine subseries versions] The Copse The Hard Summer Nutting Violeting Number IX Wood-Cutting | | Title given to the popular series of sketches written by Mitford for The Lady's ); 891] #Walks_Country_OV (Walks in the Country [Our Village subseries versions] The Copse The Cowslip Ball The Dell The Fall of the Leaf The First Primrose Frost and Thaw Hannah Bint The Hard Summer Nutting The Old House at Aberleigh The Shaw Violeting The Visit The Wood | 1824—1830 | A popular subseries within Our Village, republished or adapted from the periodic); 892] #Walks_Cowslip_Ball_OV (Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the thirteenth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. ); 893] #Walks_Fall_of_Leaf_OV (Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1830 | This sketch appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village in 1830.); 894] #Walks_First_Primrose_OV (Walks in the Country. The First Primrose [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventh story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It ); 895] #Walks_Frost_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost | The first part of the Frost and Thaw sketch that was sometimes republished singl); 896] #Walks_Frost_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the third story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It wa); 897] #Walks_Hannah_Bint_OV (Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 898] #Walks_Hard_Summer_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VII. The Hard Summer [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-09 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 899] #Walks_Hard_Summer_OV (Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182); 900] #Walks_NoIX_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01 | This sketch was later published as The Visit in volume one of Our Village . In t); 901] #Walks_Nutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VIII. Nutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-11 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 902] #Walks_Nutting_OV (Walks in the Country. Nutting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-first story in volume one of Our Village in 1); 903] #Walks_Old_House_Aberleigh_OV (Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 904] #Walks_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Thaw | The brief second part of Frost and Thaw that was sometimes republished singly in); 905] #Walks_TheCopse_LM (Walks in the Country X. The Copse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-05 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in May 1824 as the tenth installment); 906] #Walks_TheCopse_OV (Walks in the Country. The Copse [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was first publishe); 907] #Walks_TheDell_OV (Walks in the Country. The Dell [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 908] #Walks_TheShaw_OV (Walks in the Country. The Shaw [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.); 909] #Walks_TheVisit_OV (Walks in the Country. The Visit [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-third story volume one of Our Village in 1824); 910] #Walks_TheWood_OV (Walks in the Country. The Wood [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It consists of the se); 911] #Walks_Violeting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. III. Violeting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .); 912] #Walks_Violeting_OV (Walks in the Country. Violeting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the tenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It); 913] #Walks_WoodCutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. Wood-Cutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch appeared in the May 1823 issue of the Lady's Magazine. Passages of W); 914] #Wallace_MHpoem (Wallace: or, The fight of Falkirk. A Metrical Romance | 1809); 915] #Wallace_play (Wallace: an historical tragedy in five acts | 1820 | Performed at Covent Garden in November 1820; William Macready performed the titl); 916] #WalpoleltrstoCole (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and others | 1818 | Full title: Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and o); 917] #WalpoletoMontagu (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole to George Montagu, Esq. from the year 1736, to the year 1770: Now First Published from the Originals in the Possession of the Editor | 1818 | A second edition appears in 1819.); 918] #Walsingham (Walsingham | 1797 | Full title: Walsingham, or the Pupil of Nature: A Domestic Story. Reprinted in 1); 919] #Walton_Lives (The Lives of Dr. John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Mr. Richard Hooker, Mr. George Herbert and Dr. Robert Sanderson. | Walton had written biographical sketches of Donne, Wotton, Hooker and Herbert wh); 920] #Wanderer (The Wanderer, a Poem | 1820 | Mitford mentions in her Journal that MacFarlane sent her his poem in her on Augu); 921] #Warbeck_Wolfstein_MH (Warbeck of Wolfstein | 1820); 922] #Wardle_Death_1810 (To G. L. Wardle, Esq., on the Death of His Child. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable); 923] #Warlock_Play (The Warlock of the Glen: A Melo-drama in Two Acts | 1820 | MRM saw this play in December 1820 at Covent Garden Theatre.); 924] #WashingtonEpic_TN (Washington; or Liberty Restored. A Poem in Ten Books | Epic poem about George Washington published in 1809. Only Baltimore editions now); 925] #Watch_1811 (The Watch. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted in Romanticism: An Anthology, ed. Duncan Wu.); 926] #WatlingtonH (Watlington Hill; A Poem | | First printed version of this long narrative poem.); 927] #WatlingtonH_1827 (Watlington Hill: A Descriptive Poem | 1827 | 1827 published version of long narrative poem, originally published separately i); 928] #Waverley (Waverley; or ’Tis Sixty Years Since | | Mitford mentions reading Waverley in her Journal in 1819 and 1820.); 929] #WaytoKeepHim (The Way to Keep Him. A Comedy in Five Acts | 1770 | Full title: The Way to Keep Him: a Comedy in five acts, as it is performed at th); 930] #WealthofNations (An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations | 1761); 931] #Wedding_Ring_DS_1827 (The Wedding Ring: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f); 932] #WestminsterAbbey_1811 (Westminster Abbey | 1811 | 1811 poem.); 933] #WestonGrove_1827 (Weston Grove: A Descriptive Poem [1827 version] | 1827 | Narrative poem); 934] #Wheat_Hoeing_OV (Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was later called); 935] #Wheel_Fortune_play (Wheel of Fortune | 1805 | Play first performed in 1795 and printed 1805.); 936] #WhiteCottage_AM (The White Cottage | 1817 | Full title: The White Cottage. A Tale.. Mitford rated it too dismal.); 937] #Whiteknights_Desc_TCH (A Descriptive Account of the Mansion and Gardens of White-Knights: A Seat of His Grace the Duke of Marlborough. By Mrs. Hofland. Illustrated with twenty-three engravings, from pictures taken on the spot by T.C. Hofland | 1819 | Printed by T.C. Hofland for the 6th Duke of Marlbourough; publisher and printer ); 938] #WhitsunEve_OV (Whitsun-Eve [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.); 939] #Widows_Dog_CS (The Widow's Dog | 1835); 940] #Wild_Oats (Wild Oats | 1791 | Play featuring naval characters, a complex marriage plot, and a fictional theatr); 941] #William_and_Hannah_BR (William and Hannah | 1835); 942] #Willow_1810 (The Willow. Translated from the French of J. J. Rousseau. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 943] #WinterEve_JH (Winter Evening's Tales | 1820 | 2 vols. Full title: Winter Evening's Tales, collected among the cottagers in the); 944] #WinterNts_ND (Winter Nights; Or, Fire-side Lucubrations | 1820); 945] #Winters_Tale_play (The Winter’s Tale | 1623 | Classed as a dark comedy or romance play, The Winter’s Tale was likely written a); 946] #WinterScenery_1810 (Winter Scenery. January, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 947] #WksPainting_JR (The Works of Jonathan Richardson | 1773 | Full title: The Works of Mr. Jonathan Richardson. Consisting of I. The theory of); 948] #WmHerbert_1810 (To the Hon. William Herbert | 1810 | 1810 poem; serves as dedication to the volume and appears before the Table of Co); 949] #WmTell_play (William Tell | 1825); 950] #Woman_MB (Woman, or Minor maxims | 1818 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Woman, or Minor maxims. A Sketch. Minerva Press.); 951] #WomanHater_play (The Woman Hater | 1607); 952] #Women_CM (Women: Or Pour et Contre. A Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she don't like it much--too dismal.In Journal Saturday 27 M); 953] #Wonders_NW (The Wonders of the Little World | 1678 | Full title: Wonders of the Little World; or, a General History of Man: displayin); 954] #Woodcutter_FT (The Woodcutter | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na); 955] #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_Crissy (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy, 1841] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1841 | This edition of Mitford's works omits the Preface to volume one of Our Village, ); 956] #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_CrissyMarkley (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy & Markley, 1844] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841 and Crissy&Markley, 1846] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1846 | Re-issue of the 1841 James Crissy edition. As with the earlier edition, this one); 957] #Works_of_MRM (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse; viz. Our Village, Belford Regis, Country Stories, Finden's Tableaux, Foscari, Julian, Rienzi, Charles the First | 1841 | Published only in Philadelphia and presumably not an edition authorized by Mitfo); 958] #WorksEngPoets_1810 (The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowpwer, with prefaces, biographical and critical | 1810 | ); 959] #Wreaths_1810 (The Wreaths. A Tale. Taken from the "Curiosities of Literature." Addressed to a Young Lady. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 960] #WrightvClement (Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement | 1819 | Full title: Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for certain libels publishe); 961] #WrittenAfterVisit_1827 (Written After a Visit From Some Friends [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 19 in the 1827 collection (page 313).); 962] #WrittenJuly1824_1827 (Written July, 1824 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 5 in the 1827 collection (page 298) .); 963] #WrittenOct1825_1827 (Written October, 1825 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 22 in the 1827 collection (page 316) . Also appeared in the 1827 Amulet a); 964] #WutheringHts (Wuthering Heights | 1847); 965] #Year_Day (A Year and a Day | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: A Year and a Day. A Novel. Written under the pseudonym Madam); 966] #YellowButterfly_1810 (To a Yellow Butterfly. April 8, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ); 967] #Young_Gipsy_OV (The Young Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.); 968] #Young_Market_Woman_BR (The Young Market Woman | 1835 | This story is a revised version of what was originally published in The Forget M); 969] #Young_Painter_BR (The Young Painter | 1835); 970] #Young_Sculptor_BR (The Young Sculptor | 1835); 971] #YoungPhil_CS (The Young Philosopher. A Novel | 1798 | Mitford rated it pretty but too dismal. Source: Journal.); 972] #Zaire_play (Zaíre | 1732); 973] #Zapolya (Zapolya | 1819 | Subtitled: A Dramatic Poem ] . . .] in humble imitation of The Winter's Tale of ); 974] #Zuma (Zuma, or the Tree of Health | 1818 | Full title: Zuma, or the Tree of Health. To which are added, the fair Pauline,--); 975] #AlterationsOfState (Alterations of State: Sacred Kingship in the English Reformation | 2002); 976] #BannedThtr_Findlater (Banned!: A Review of Theatrical Censorship in Britain | 1967); 977] #Calumniated_Rep (Calumniated Republicans and the Hero of Shelley's "Charles the First" | 2007); 978] #CensorshipEnglDrama (The Censorship of English Drama, 1824-1901 | 2010); 979] #coles_Thesis (William Allan Coles | 1956-08 | Coles’ doctoral dissertation presented to the Department of English at Harvard U); 980] #Cromwell_Soldier (Cromwell: Soldier | 2004); 981] #Lestrange_Letters (The Life of Mary Russell Mitford, Authoress of "Our Village," Etc, Related in a Selection from Her Letters to Her Friends | 1870); 982] #Needham_PapersRCL (Francis Needham | Francis Needham’s extensive and unpublished handwritten papers, which we estimat); 983] #OED (The Oxford English Dictionary Online | 2016 | Multi-volume descriptive dictionary of the English language, first published in ); 984] #PossibleScotlands (Possible Scotlands: Walter Scott and the Story of Tomorrow | 2005); 985] #Review_55Days (Review: 55 Days | 2012-10-25); 986] #RomDrama_Hoagwood (Romantic Drama and Historical Hermeneutics | 1998); 987] #ShelleyPB_ReimanEd (Shelley's Poetry and Prose | 2002 | Scholarly edition of Shelley's major works.); 988] #ShelleysLate (Shelley's Late Fragmentary Plays: 'Charles the First' and the 'Unfinished Drama' | 2009); 989] #Talking_Demon ('The Talking Demon': Liberty and Liberal Ideologies in the 1820s British Stage | 2006); 990] #Writing_Eng_Rep (Writing the English Republic: Poetry, Rhetoric, and Politics, 1627-60 | 1999) #Ackermans_Juv_ForgetMeNot (Ackermann's Juvenile Forget Me Not | 1830—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic S) #Amulet (The Amulet; or Christian and Literary Remembrancer | 1826—1836 | Gift book/annual started in 1826. Mitford published yearly in this periodical be) #Anniversary_annual (The Anniversary | 1829 | Short-lived gift book/annual published in 1829. Mitford published the story Goin) #Anti-Jacobin (The Anti-Jacobin, or Weekly Examiner | 1797-11-20—1798-07-09 | Conserative Tory newspaper founded by George Canning whose short run of 36 issue) #Berkshire_Chron (Berkshire Chronicle | Newspaper founded in 1825, now known as the Reading Chronicle.) #Bijou_annual (The Bijou: An Annual of Literature and the Arts | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1828 and 1830. Mitford published ) #Blackwoods (Blackwood’s Magazine | 1817-04—1980 | Founded as a Tory magazine in opposition to the Whig Edinburgh Review.) #BritishCritic_per (British Critic, A New Review | Conservative periodical with High Church editorial views. Published monthly betw) #Cameo_annual (The Cameo: A Melange of Literature and the Arts, selected from the Bijou | Short-lived giftbook/annual from the early 1830s. Title pages are undated. Altho) #Christmas_Box (The Christmas Box: An Annual Present for Young Persons | 1829—1830 | Short-lived gift book/annual for children. Mitford published in this periodical ) #Comic_Offering (The Comic Offering, or Ladies' Melange of Literary Mirth | Literary humor annual edited by and for women founded by Smith, Elder, and co. M) #Courier_news (The Courier | 1804-04-20—1842-07-06 | London newspaper that ran daily except on Sundays from 1804 to 1842.) #EclecticRev (The Eclectic Review | Monthly periodical published between 1805 and 1868. Focusesd on long and short r) #Edinburgh_Tales (The Edinburgh Tales | 1845—1846 | Three-volume anthology of stories published in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine while u) #EdinburghMag1785to1816 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Published by Sibbald, 1785 to 1816, then published by Constable until 1826.) #EdinburghMag1817to1826 (Edinburgh Magazine; or Literary Miscellany | Previously published by Sibbald, then published by Constable, 1817 to 1826.) #EdinburghRev_per (Edinburgh Review, second series | Quarterly political and literary review founded by Francis Jeffrey, Sydney Smith) #English_Annual (The English Annual | Short-lived annual from the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in 1838.) #EuroMag (European Magazine | Monthly periodical published from 1782 until 1826. Original title: European Maga) #Examiner (The Examiner | 1808—1886 | Weekly periodical launched by editor Leigh Hunt and his brother, the printer Joh) #Findens_Tableaux_annual (Finden's Tableaux | 1837—1843 | Finden's Tableaux was a lavishly illustrated gift book/annual produced between 1) #ForgetMeNot (Forget Me Not | 1822-11—1847 | Gift book/annual founded by Rudolf Ackermann and edited by Frederic Shoberl thro) #Friendships_Off (Friendship's Offering | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s by Lupton Relfe and then revived in the ) #Gem_annual (The Gem | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1829 and 1832, perhaps the succes) #John_Bull (John Bull | English periodical founded in 1820 and published between 1820 and 1825 and in a ) #Journal_BellesLettres (The Journal of Belles Lettres | American annual published between 1832 and 1842 Mitford was published in this pe) #Juv_Forget (The Juvenile Forget Me Not: A Christmas or New Year's Gift, or Birthday Present | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1837. Mitford published) #Juv_Keepsake (The Juvenile Keepsake | Gift book/annual for children. Mitford published her story The Two Magpies in th) #La_Belle_Assemblee (La Belle Assemblée, Or Bell's Court and Fashionable Magazine, Addressed Particularly to the Ladies | 1806—1832 | A general-interest miscellaneous periodical aimed at a female readership. Origin) #Ladys_Mag (The Lady's Magazine | 1770—1847 | A popular and influential monthly magazine for women that ran from 1756 until 18) #Ladys_Mag_Ser1 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, series one | 1770—1818 | Monthly magazine for women founded by bookseller and publisher John Coote and ed) #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v1-3 (The Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, appropriated solely for their Use and Amusement, new series 2, vol. 1-3 | 1820—1822 | A continuation of The Lady's Magazine as a new series (series two), volumes 1 th) #Ladys_Mag_Ser2_v4-10 (The Lady's Magazine; or Mirror of the Belle-Lettres, Fine Arts, Fashions, Music, Drama, &c., new series 2, vol. 4-10 | 1823—1829 | Many of Mitford's contributions to the magazine were to this series, a continuat) #Ladys_Monthly_Museum (Lady’s Monthly Museum; Or, Polite Repository of Amusement and Instruction | A monthly periodical running from 1798 to 1832.) #Laurel_annual (The Laurel: Fugitive Poetry of the XIXth century | 1830 | Literary annual published in 1830 and edited by Miss S. Lawrence. Mitford publis) #Letter_to_HM_1820 (An Englishwoman’s Letter to Mrs. Hannah More on the Present Crisis | | Anonymously published eighteen-page pamphlet on the Queen Caroline Affair. World) #Lit_Gazette (The Literary Gazette, and Journal of Belles Lettres, Arts, Sciences | Periodical founded by Henry Colburn, ran from 1817 to 1863. For details on the j) #Lit_Souvenir (The Literary Souvenir, or, Cabinet of Poetry and Romance | Gift book/annual published in the 1820s and 1830s and edited by Alaric Watts. Mi) #LondonMag (The London Magazine | 1820—1829 | An 18th-century periodical of this title (The London Magazine, or Gentleman’s Mo) #Marshalls_Christmas (Marshall's Christmas Box: A Juvenile Annual | 1828—1832 | Children's gift book/annual founded by William Marshall. Mitford published in th) #Metropolitan (The Metropolitan | 1831—1850 | A London monthly originally titled The Metropolitan: A Monthly Journal of Litera) #MonthlyMag (The Monthly Magazine | Monthly general-interest periodical. Published between 1796 and 1843. Founded by) #Museum_per (The Museum; or Record of Literature, Fine Arts, Antiquities, the Drama, &c. | 1822-04-27 | Weekly periodical edited by Peter Bayley and printed by John Valpy.) #New_Monthly_Mag (New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal | Periodical edited by Thomas Campbell and Cyrus Redding from 1821 to 1830, after ) #New_Years_Gift (The New Year's Gift and Juvenile Souvenir | Gift book/annual for children published between 1829 and 1836. Mitford published) #NewYork_Visiter (New York Visiter and Parlour Companion | Short-lived American periodical published between 1838 and 1840. An interview wi) #Observer (The Observer | Founded on December 4, 1791 by W.S. Bourne. It is the first Sunday newspaper in ) #Pamphleteer_per (The Pamphleteer | Published between 1813 and 1828. Full title: The Pamphleteer: Respectfully Dedic) #Panoramic_Misc (Panoramic Miscellany, and Review of Literature, Science, Arts, Inventions and Occurrences | 1826-01-31—1826-06-01 | Periodical edited by John Thelwall to which Mitford, signing as M, contributed t) #Pledge_Friendship (The Pledge of Friendship: A Christmas Present, and New Year's Gift | Short-lived gift book/annual published between 1826 and 1828. Mitford published ) #Poetical_Album (The Poetical Album and Register of Modern Fugitive Poetry | 1828—1829 | Short-lived literary annual published between 1828 and 1829 and edited by Alaric) #Political_Register (Cobbett's Weekly Political Register | Weekly periodical issued by William Cobbett from 1802 to 1835. Founded as Tory a) #QuarterlyRev_per (Quarterly Review | 1809—1967 | Tory periodical founded by George Canning in 1809, published by John Murray. Wil) #ReadingMer_per (The Reading Mercury and Oxford Gazette, etc. | Newspaper of Reading, Berkshire. Founded as The Reading Mercury, or Weekly Enter) #Remember_Me (Remember Me: A Token of Christian Affection; consisting of entirely original pieces in prose and verse. | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s and 1840s. Mitford published in this per) #Remembrance_annual (Remembrance | Gift book/annual published in the 1830s. Mitford published in this periodical in) #Review_RaisingLaz (Mr. Haydon’s Raising of Lazarus | 1823-04-01 | Detailed discussion of the contents of Haydon’s painting, The Raising of Lazarus) #Royal_LadysMag (The Royal Lady's Magazine; and Archives of the Court of St. James | 1831—1835 | Mitford published in this periodical in 1832.) #Sheffield_Iris (The Iris | Newspaper of Sheffield, Yorkshire, to which Barbara Hofland contributed poems.) #Spectator (The Spectator | A daily periodical founded by Joseph Addison Richard Steele which was published ) #Stage (Letter by Philo-Dramaticus | Letter reprinted in the Observer on June 20, 1825 from Blackwoods. The letter is) #Tatler (The Tatler | A literary and society journal founded by Richard Steele which was published fro) #Times_news (The Times | Newspaper issued daily, begun in London in 1785 as The Daily Universal Register,) #Trueman_Clergy (Timothy Trueman’s Admonitions to the Clergy, Respecting Tithes: First Published in a Letter Inserted in the Statesman Newspaper, and Now Reprinted with Several Corrections and Additions, Particularly an Introduction | 1816 | Pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acquaintance Mr. Johnson.) #Trueman_Gehazi (The Curse of Gehazi, or, Leprosy of Corruption: Exemplified in a Narrative of the Life of Robert Watkins, alias Robert Turner Watkins, alias Bribery Bob, Who was Executed on the 30th of July Last, for the Robbery and Murder of Mr. Stephen Rodway, Late of Cricklade, in Whitshire | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua) #Trueman_Westminster (A Letter to the Independent Electors of Westminster, as it Appeared in the Independent Whig of Sunday, May 21, 1809 | An essay on representative government pseudonymously authored by Mitford’s acqua) #Winters_Wreath (The Winter's Wreath | Gift book/annual published from the mid-1820s to 1832. Some issues subtitled, a ) #Abbot_WS (The Abbot | 1820 | Historical novel: One of Scott’s series of Tales from Benedictine Sources, The A) #Absent_Member_BR (The Absent Member | 1835 | This story was also published in the Amulet for 1835.) #Absentee (The Absentee | 1812) #Account_GeoMathews (Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews | 1819 | Full title: Account of the Extraordinary and Shocking Case of George Mathews: Wh) #AccountOfIndia (Description of the character, manners, and customs of the people of India : and of their institutions, religious and civils | 1818 | ) #Acct_Knox (Account of the captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, in the island of Ceylon | 1818 | Full title: Account of the Captivity of Capt. Robert Knox and other Englishmen, ) #Acct_War1808 (Account of the War in Spain and Portugal, and in the South of France, from 1808, to 1814, inclusive | 1818 | She rated considered it a sad uncandid military book) #AcctDenmark1692 (An Account of Denmark in 1692 | 1694 | Full title: An Account of Denmark as it was in the year MDCXCII.) #Admiral_on_Shore_OV (An Admiral on Shore [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Advice_Julia (Advice to Julia: A Letter in Rhyme | 1820 | A poem that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on October 7 1820.) #Aeneid_CP (The Works of Virgil, in Latin and English. The original Text correctly printed from the most authentic Editions, collated for this Purpose. The Æneid Translated By the Rev. Mr. Christopher Pitt, The Eclogues and Georgics, with Notes on the Whole, By the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton. With several New Observations By Mr. Holdsworth, Mr. Spence, and Others. Also, A Dissertation on the Sixth Book of the Æneid, by Mr. Warburton. On the Shield of Æneas, by Mr. W. Whitehead. On the Character of Japis, by the late Dr. Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester. And, Three Essays on Pastoral, Didactic and Epic Poetry, by the Editor | 1753) #Aeneid_Dryden (The Aeneid | 1688 | Dryden’s translation of The Aeneid may be found in Miscellany Poems, in two part) #Aeneid_JB (The Æneid of Virgil, translated into blank verse by J. Beresford | 1794) #Aeneid_Virgil (The Aeneid | Latin epic poem written between 29 and 19 BC.) #Aeschylus_Potter (The Tragedies of Aeschylus | Translation of Aeschylus’s plays read by Mitford.) #Aesops_Fables_Croxall (Fables of Aesop and Others, Translated into English. With Instructive Applications; and a Cut Before Each Fable. | 1722—1728 | The most influential and frequently reprinted English translation of the Fables ) #Agamemnon_play (Agamemnon | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the first play of the Oresteia) #Age_Elizabeth (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth | 1820 | Mitford indicated that she read Hazlitt’s Lectures in her Journal on October 22,) #Aladdin_panto (Aladdin | There were many pantomimes under this name on the English stage, many combining ) #Alcestis_play (Alcestis | Athenian tragedy attributed to Euripides. First produced at the City Dionysia fe) #Alice_DS_1827 (Alice: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f) #All_For_Love_play (All for Love | 1678 | First performed in 1677 and published in 1678, based on Antony and Cleopatra.) #AllsWellTEW (All’s Well that Ends Well | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1604 and first printed in 1623.) #Altham (Altham and His Wife: A Domestic Tale | 1810 | 1 vol. Mitford calls it a pretty tale. Source: Journal) #America_Birkbeck (Notes on a Journey in America, from the Coast of Virginia to the Territory of Illinois | 1817 | Mitford likely read the second edition, published in London in 1818 by J. Ridgwa) #AmStories_Above10 (American Stories for Young People, Intended for Children above Ten Years of Age | 1832) #AmStories_Under10 (American Stories for Little Boys and Girls, Intended for Children under Ten Years of Age | 1831) #Anecdotes_WSeward (Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons | 1804 | 4 vols. Full title: Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons: Chiefly of the Last and ) #AnecdotesTo1700_JM (Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasion to the Year 1700 | 1811 | Full title: Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman Invasi) #Another_Glance_OV (Another Glance at Our Village | 1886—1888 | Alternative title assigned to A Parting Glance at Our Village in Walter Scott Pu) #Antigone_MRM_1827 (Antigone: A Portrait in Verse | 1827 | 1827 verse portrait based on Antigone.) #Antigone_play (Antigone) #Antiquary (The Antiquary) #AntiquitatesCurio (Antiquitates Curiosae: the etymology of many remarkable old sayings, proverbs, & singular customs | 1819) #Antony_Cleopatra (Antony and Cleopatra | 1623 | Drama likely first performed around 1607 and first printed in 1623.) #Arabian_Tales (Arabian Tales; or, A Continuation of the Arabian Nights Entertainments, consisting of stories related by the Sultana of the Indies, newly tr[anslated] from the original Arabic into French by Dom Chavis and Cazotte; and tr[anslated] from the French into English, by Robert Heron | 1792 | Mitford was likely familiar with this 1792 English translation of the Thousand a) #As_You_Like_It_play (As You Like It | 1623 | First performed around 1599 and first printed 1623.) #Athalie_play (Athalie | 1691 | One of two plays written by Jean Racine (along with Esther), for the students at) #Atherton (Atherton, and Other Tales | 1854) #Aunt_Deborah_CS (Aunt Deborah | 1835) #Aunt_Martha_OV (Aunt Martha [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-second story in volume one of Our Village in ) #AuthAcct_FrRev (Authentic Account of the French Revolution | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it interesting. Source: Journal.) #AutumnRhine (An Autumn Near the Rhine | 1818 | Full title: An Autumn Near the Rhine; Or Sketches of Courts, Society, Scenery, &) #BaronsDa_FT (The Baron's Daughter | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Beacon_FT (The Beacon | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Beau_Fletch (The Works of Beaumont and Fletcher, in Fourteen Volumes: With an Introduction and Explanatory Notes | 1812 | ) #BeautifulWoman_1827 (On a Beautiful Woman [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 7 in the 1827 collection (page 300) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Month) #Beauty_MRM (Beauty: An Ode. | 1811 | Poem first collected in 1811 Poems, mentioned in a 13 February 1821 letter from ) #Beauty_of_Village_CS (The Beauty of the Village | 1835 | This story also appeared in the Friendship's Offering for 1835".) #Bees_Fable (The Fable of the Bees, or, Private vices, public benefits: containing several discourses to demonstrate that human frailties, during the degeneracy of mankind, may be turn’d to the advantage of the civil society, and made to supply the place of moral virtues. | 1714) #BeggarGirl (The Beggar Girl and her Benefactors | 1790 | 5 vols. Minerva Press. Mitford rated it as famous.) #Belford_Races_BR (Belford Races | 1835) #Belford_Regis (Belford Regis; or, Sketches of a Country Town | 1835) #Belinda_ME (Belinda | 1801) #Belles_Ballroom1_Will_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. I - The Will | 1835 | This story was orginally published in the Forget Me Not for 1834 with the title ) #Belles_Ballroom2_Matchmaking_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. II - Matchmaking Match-Making | 1835 | This story was published, in a slightly different version, in the Friendship's O) #Belles_Ballroom3_SilverArrow_BR (Belles of the Ballroom, No. III - The Silver Arrow | 1835 | This story also appeared as The Silver Arrow in the English Annual for 1836.) #Belles_Ballroom_BR (Belles of the Ballroom | 1835 | A series of stories within Mitford's later book of prose sketches, Belford Regis) #BelovedMotherBirthday_1810 (To my Beloved Mother, On Her Birth-Day, June 15, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Bertha_1811 (Bertha. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Bertram_CM (Bertram; or, The Castle of St. Aldobrand: a tragedy, in five acts | 1816) #BessyBell_1811 (Bessy Bell and Mary Gray. A Ballad. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Bible (Christian Bible | The sacred scriptures of Christianity consisting of the Old and New Testament.) #Bibletrans_Bellamy (The Holy Bible Newly Translated from the Original Hebrew: with Notes Critical and Explanatory | 1818 | Published by subscription in 1818. Originally published in three volumes in abou) #Bio_Note_OV_JMDent (Biographical Note [Our Village, J.M. Dent, 1900+ edition]) #Bio_Preface_OV_Caldwell (Biographical Preface {Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d., 1910s?]) #Bio_Preface_VilTales (Biographical Preface [to Village Tales and Sketches, Routledge, 1880] | 1881) #Bio_SketchMRM_Works_Crissy (Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy edition, 1841; Crissy & Markley, 1846]) #BioMem_PrCharlotte (Biographical Memoir of the Public and Private Life of the Much Lamented Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales and Saxe-Coburg | 1817 | Full title: A biographical memoir of the public and private life of the much lam) #BirdCatcher_OV (The Bird-Catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Black_Velvet_Bag_LM (The Black Velvet Bag [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-07 | This sketch was first published in the July 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. I) #Black_Velvet_Bag_OV (The Black Velvet Bag [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Blanch (Blanch: A Poem in Four Cantos | 1827) #BlankPaperBook_1827 (Written in a Blank-Paper Book Given to the Author by a Friend [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 1 in the 1827 collection (page 293) . Also appeared in the 1821 New Month) #BlindMansStory_1811 (The Blind Man's Story. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Bluebeard_GC (Bluebeard, or Female Curiosity: a Dramatic Romance in Three Acts | 1798) #Boarding_School_Rec_English_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. III. The English Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12-31 | This sketch was issued as No. III in the Boarding School Recollections series th) #Boarding_School_Rec_French_Teacher_LM (Boarding School Recollections, No. I. The French Teacher [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-10-31 | This sketch appeared as No. 1 in the Boarding School Recollections series in The) #Boarding_School_Rec_LM (Early Recollections [subseries published in Lady's Magazine] Boarding School Recollections. No. I. The French Teacher Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows Boarding School Recollections. No. III. The English Teacher | An occasional series of sketches by Mitford for The Lady's Magazine. Some of the) #Boarding_School_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_LM (Boarding School Recollections. No. II. My School-Fellows | 1822-11 | This sketch appeared as No. II in the Boarding School Recollections series in Th) #Bonduca_play (Bonduca | First performed around 1613, first printed in 1647.) #BoR (Bill of Rights | 1689 | One of the basic instruments of the British constitution, the English Bill of Ri) #BowlesPamphletWar_1820 (A reply to the charges brought by the reviewer of Spence's Anecdotes in the Quarterly review for October 1820 against the last editor of Pope's works, and author of A letter to Mr. Campbell on The invariable principles of poetry | 1820 | Bowles' riposte of 1820 in the midst of a pamphlet war over Alexander Pope’s wri) #Bramley_Maying_LM (Bramley Maying [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Bramley_Maying_OV (Bramley Maying [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I) #Branford (Branford | Author and date unidentified. Mitford rated it pretty good.) #Bridal_Eve_DS_1827 (Bridal Eve: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f) #Bride_FT (The Bride | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Bride_of_Lammermoor_WS (The Bride of Lammermoor | 1819 | Part of Tales of my Landlord, third series. Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes ) #Buccaneer_FT (The Buccaneer | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #BurkeWks_Rivington (The Works of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke | 1801—1823 | The Rivingtons published a comprehensive edition of Burke's works and correspond) #BustFox_1810 (On a Bust of Fox. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Byron_6thPoems (The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. Vol. 6 of 6 | 1818 | Full title: The Works of the Right Honourable Lord Byron. In Six Volumes. Vol. V) #Cain_play (Cain: A Mystery | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Sardanapalus.) #Calamities (Calamities of Authors | 1812 | Full title: Calamities of Authors: including some inquiries respecting their mor) #Camilla_FB (Camilla, or a Picture of Young Lady | 1796) #CanonsCriticism (The canons of criticism, and glossary, being a supplement to Mr. Warburton's edition of Shakespear. | 1765 | Mitford mentions reading Edwards' Canons of Criticism in her Journal on 12 June ) #CanterburyTales (The Canterbury Tales | 1400 | Collection of 23 tales and a prologue frame story, written over a period of year) #Captive_DS_1827 (The Captive: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #CaptivityCaptKnox (Account of the Captivity of Robert Knox and Other Englishmen, in the Island of Ceylon: And of the Captain’s Miraculous Escape and Return to England in September 1680, After Detention on the Island of Nineteen Years and a Half | 1818) #CaribCh (The Carib Chief: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | ) #Carpenters_Daughter_BR (The Carpenter's Daughter | 1835 | This story was first published in the Friendship's Offering for 1834.) #Cartel_FT (The Cartel | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #CarysDante (The Vision; or, Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise | 1814 | Printed for the author.) #Cast_Signal_FT (Castile. The Signal | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Castle_in_Air_OV (A Castle in the Air [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Cecilia_FB (Cecilia; or Memoirs of an Heiress | 1782) #Cenci_play (The Cenci: A Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1819 | Percy Bysshe Shelley's only completed stage play was written in 1819, informed b) #CharlesI_MRMplay (Charles the First; An Historical Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1834) #CharlesV (The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V | 1769) #Chas_Grandison_novel (The history of Sir Charles Grandison: In a series of letters published from the originals, by the editor of Pamela and Clarissa. | 1753) #ChasI_GCtoJG1825 (George Colman letter to James Graham | 1825-09-29 | Letter from George Colman to James Graham, Duke of Montrose, regarding the decis) #ChasI_GCtoMRM1825 (George Colman letter to Mary Russell Mitford | 1825-10-10 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, notifying her of the decision) #ChasI_JGtoGC1825 (James Graham letter to George Colman | 1825-09-25 | Letter from James Graham, Duke of Montrose to George Colman, regarding the decis) #ChasI_MRMtoGC1825 (Mary Russell Mitford letter to George Colman | 1825-12-18 | Letter from George Colman to Mary Russell Mitford, regarding the decision to ref) #ChasI_Warrant (Death Warrant of Charles Stuart | 1649-01-29 | The warrant for the execution of Charles I for treason, signed on January 29, 16) #Chaucer_Wks_Martins (Poetical Works of Geoffrey Chaucer | 1782 | Collected poetical works, including the Canterbury Tales, in 14 volumes, publish) #Cheerfulness_1810 (To Cheerfulness. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #ChildeHaroldsPil (Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage | Published in parts between 1812 and 1818.) #Children_of_the_Village_Routledge (Children of the Village Dora Creswell Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1880 | An illustrated collection of Mitford's Our Village stories, largely but not enti) #Children_of_Village_OV (Children of the Village [Our Village subseries] Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Children of the Village. The Foster Mother Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Children of the Village. Young Master Ben | 1830—1832 | The title of a subseries within the Our Village books that ran through volumes f) #Children_Vil_Amy_Lloyd_OV (Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been publishe) #Children_Vil_FosterMother_OV (Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Children_Vil_Harry_Lewington_OV (Children of the Village. Harry Lewington [Our Village version] Harry Lewington and his Dog [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu) #Children_Vil_Pride_Shall_Have_Fall_OV (Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with a few revisions, in volume four of Our Village in 183) #Children_Vil_TheMagpies_OV (Children of the Village. The Magpies [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Children_Vil_TheRobins_OV (Children of the Village. The Robins [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu) #Children_Vil_Two_Dolls_OV (Children of the Village. The Two Dolls [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Children_Vil_Young_Master_Ben_OV (Children of the Village. Young Master Ben [Our Village version] Young Master Ben [Comic Offering version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #China_Jug_OV (The China Jug [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared, with some revision, in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Choephorae_Aes_play (Choephoræ | Athenian tragedy attributed to Aeschylus; the second play of the Oresteia) #Christina (Christina, The Maid of the South Seas; A Poem | 1811) #Christmas_Amusements1_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. 1 [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished w) #Christmas_Amusements2_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. II [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. Portions of it (Char) #Christmas_Amusements3_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. III [Our Village version] | 1832 | This story appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. A portion of it, incl) #Christmas_Amusements4_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. IV [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Christmas_Amusements5_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. V [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Christmas_Amusements6_OV (Christmas Amusements, No. VI [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Christmas_Amusements_OV (Christmas Amusements [Our Village subseries] Christmas Amusements, No. I Christmas Amusements, No. II Christmas Amusements, No. III Christmas Amusements, No. IV Christmas Amusements, No. V Christmas Amusements, No. VI | 1832 | The title of a subseries of sketches that appeared in volume five of Our Village) #Christmas_Party_OV (A Christmas Party [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #ChronHist_Arctic (A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions | 1818 | Full title: A Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions; Undertak) #Cid_play (The Cid | 1637) #Cinna_play (Cinna | 1643) #CircNarr_Russia (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia | 1814 | 2 vols. Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia: embell) #Cistineae (Cistineae: the Natural Order of Cistus, or Rock-Rose; Illustrated by Coloured Figures & Descriptions of All the Distinct Species, and the Most Prominent Varieties, that could be at Present produced in the Gardens of Great Britain; With the Best Directions for Their Cultivation and Propagation | 1825—1830 | ) #City_Wives_play (The City Wives’ Confederacy | A comedic play by Sir John Vanbrugh based on Florent Carton de Dancourt’s Les bo) #Clarissa (Clarissa, or, The history of a young lady : comprehending the most important concerns of private life: and particularly shewing, the distresses that may attend the misconduct both of parents and children, in relation to marriage | 1748) #ClarkesTravelsScand (Travels in Various Countries of Europe, Asia and Africa. Part the third, section the first: Scandinavia | 1819 | Clarke began publishing a series of travel accounts in 1811 under the series tit) #ClassicalTour_Hoare (A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily | 1819 | Full title: A Classical Tour Through Italy and Sicily: tending to illustrate som) #Claudias_Dr (Claudia’s Dream | One of Mitford’s dramatic sketches, appeared in Lady’s Magazine September 30, 18) #CoA (the Code of Alfred | 0893 | This law book, or Doom-book, is attributed to King Alfred. In the text, Alfred’s) #Coeur_de_Lion_poem (Coeur de Lion; or the Third Crusade. A Poem in 16 books. | 1822) #Coll_PolTracts (A Collection of Political Tracts | 1754 | Full title: A Collection of Political Tracts: By the author of the Dissertation ) #Collectanea (Collectanea Curiosa, or Miscellaneous Tracts: Relating to the History and Antiquities of England and Ireland, the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and a Variety of Other Subjects | 1781) #ComicDramas_ME (Comic Dramas, in Three Acts | 1817 | Contains three plays: Love and Law; The Two Guardians; and The Rose, Thistle and) #Compl_Angler (The Compleat Angler, or, The Contemplative Man’s Recreation: Being a Discourse of Rivers, and Fish-ponds, and Fish and Fishing: Not Unworthy the Perusal of Most Anglers | 1653 | First published in 1653, then expanded and republished in further editions in 16) #Confessions_OpiumEater_nonfict (Confessions of an English Opium-Eater) #Consumption_1811 (Ode to Consumption. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted as a selection in Benjamin Suggitt Nayler's 18) #Corinne_deS (Corinne, ou, L’Italie | 1807) #Coriolanus_play (Coriolanus | 1623 | Believed to have been written between 1605 and 1610, first printed) #Cottage_Names_OV (Cottage Names [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Country_Apothecary_OV (A Country Apothecary [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub) #Country_Barber_OV (A Country Barber [Our Village version] The Last of the Barbers [Literary Souvenir version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub) #Country_Cricket_Match_LM (A Country Cricket Match [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-06) #Country_Cricket_Match_OV (A Country Cricket Match [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182) #Country_Excursions_BR (Country Excursions | 1835) #Country_Lodgings_CS (Country Lodgings | 1835) #Country_Neighbours (Tales of Fancy: Country Neighbors; or, The Secret | 1816 | Country Neighbors makes up volumes two and three of the three-volume work. As sh) #Country_Pictures_OV (Country Pictures [alternative title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version] | The sketch entitled Our Village was sometimes retitled Country Pictures in some ) #Country_Stories (Country Stories | 1835) #Cousin_Mary_LM (Cousin Mary [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04) #Cousin_Mary_OV (Cousin Mary [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the ninth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It) #Cranford (Cranford | 1853) #Cribbage_Players_OV (The Cribbage Players. A Country Dialogue [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #CrimTrials_Porteous (Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-Lothian | 1818 | Full title: Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-L) #Critic_play (The Critic: or, a Tragedy Rehearsed | A burlesque satire on theatrical production and performance, first performed in ) #CritProse_Dryden (The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden | 1800 | Full title: The Critical and Miscellaneous Prose Works of John Dryden, Now First) #Cunigonda_DS_1827 (Cunigonda's Vow: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #Curate_St_Nicholas_BR (The Curate of St. Nicholas | 1835 | A version of this story was published as Our Rector in the English Annual for 18) #Cyllenius_epic (The Travels of Cyllenius: A Poem, in 66 cantos | 1795 | First published in 1795 and privately printed by Charles Dickinson himself. Peri) #Cymbeline_play (Cymbeline | 1623 | First performed around 1611 and first printed in 1623.) #Daniells (Rural Sports | Printed in numerous editions between 1801-1817.) #Deaf_Dumb_play (Deaf and Dumb) #DeafasPost_play (Deaf as a Post (Drury Lane, 1823) | a one-act farce) #Decline_Fall (The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) #Dedication_to_Father_OV1 (Dedication to her father [of Our Village] | In late editions of Our Village, Mitford added this dedication to her father. No) #Delphine (Delphine | 1802 | Mitford rated it not good and much too dismal.) #DeRance (De Rancé: a Poem | 1815) #Desc_NSWales (A Description of the Colony of New South Wales | 1819 | Full title: A Statistical, Historical, and Political Description of the Colony o) #DescCat_Louvre (A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the Louvre | 1817 | Full title: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures in the Royal Museum, or, the) #Diary_Dodington (The Diary of the late George Bubb Dodington | 1784 | Full title: The Diary of the Late George Bubb Dodington, Baron of Melcombe Regis) #Diary_Invalid (The Diary of an Invalid | 1820 | Full title: The Diary of an Invalid; being the journal of a tour in pursuit of h) #Discipline (Discipline: A Novel | 1814 | First edition published anonymously.) #Display_JT (Display | 1815 | Full title: Display: A Tale. For Young People.) #Dissenting_Minister_BR (The Dissenting Minister | 1835) #DoctorCasden_LM (Doctor Casden | 1824-06 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in June 1824. It was re-titled for v) #DoctorTubb_OV (Doctor Tubb [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Don_Juan_poem (Don Juan | Published in parts between 1820 and 1824.) #Don_Quixote_novel (El ingenioso hidalgo don Quijote de la Mancha | Published in two volumes in 1605 and 1615) #Don_Sebastian_play (Don Sebastian) #DonningtonCastle_1827 (On Visiting Donnington Castle [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 18 in the 1827 collection (pages 311-12). Also appeared in the 1821 New M) #Dora_Creswell_OV (Dora Creswell [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It also appeared as) #Douglas_play (Douglas: A Tragedy | 1757 | First performed in 1756in Edinburgh, followed by a performance in London in 1757) #Dramatic_Works_of_MRM (The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford | 1854) #DramaticScenes (Dramatic Scenes, Sonnets, and Other Poems | 1827) #Dudley (Dudley | 1819 | 3 volumes. by Miss O'Keeffe.) #Early_Rec_Caroline_Cleveland_OV (Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #Early_Rec_Cobbler_Over_Way_OV (Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Early_Rec_English_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The English Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Early_Rec_French_Emigrants_OV (Early Recollections. French Emigrants [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch originally appeared in the February 29, 1824 issue of The Lady's Mag) #Early_Rec_French_Teacher_OV (Early Recollections. The French Teacher [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It originally appeare) #Early_Rec_General_and_Lady_OV (Early Recollections. The General and his Lady [Our Village version] The General and His Lady: A Sketch [Literary Souvenir version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Early_Rec_My_Godfather_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published) #Early_Rec_My_SchoolFellows_OV (Early Recollections. My School-Fellows | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was originally pub) #Early_Rec_MyGodfathers_Manoeuvering_OV (Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Early_Rec_OV (Early Recollections [Our Village subseries] Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Early Recollections. The English Teacher Early Recollections. French Emigrants Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Early Recollections. The French Teacher Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuverings Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman | 1826—1832 | The title of an Our Village subseries, Early Recollections first ran occasionall) #Early_Rec_Tom_Hopkins_OV (Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins [Our Village version] Tom Hopkins [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was published pre) #Early_Rec_Widow_Gentlewoman_OV (Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was republished i) #EditorIntro_OV_DentEveryman (Editor's Introduction [Dent Everyman edition]) #EditorIntro_OV_FolioSoc (Our Village, Folio Society, 1996) #EditorIntro_OV_Macmillan ( | This introduction by Anne Thackeray Ritchie was influential in establishing Mitf) #EditorIntro_OV_OUP_pb (Editor's Introduction [Oxford University Press, pb]) #EditorIntro_OV_Penguin (Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987]) #EditorIntro_OV_SampsonLowMSR_BC (Our Village [Sampson Low, Martson, Seale & Rivington edition, 1882] | This introduction appeared in the 1882 Sampson Low, Martson & and Rivington, and) #Ellen_OV (Ellen [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. ) #Ellesmere (Ellesmere | Author and date unidentified.) #Emily_DS (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Originally appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505. Later repri) #Emily_DS_1827 (Emily, A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in the London Magazine 3.17 (May 1821): 499-505 . Late) #Emma_JA (Emma: A Novel | 1819) #Enc_Metr (Encyclopedia Metropolitana; or, Universal Dictionary of Knowledge (30 vols., 1817-1845)) #Endymion (Endymion) #Eng_KingsWd_FT (England. The King's Ward | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #EnglefieldHouse_1827 (Englefield House [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 10 in the 1827 collection (page 303) .) #Epilogue_Orestes_TNT (Epilogue to Orestes by Euripides | Talfourd wrote an Epilogue for a performance of Orestes by Euripides . Later pri) #Epistle_Friend_1810 (Epistle to a Friend. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #EpitaphOnMary_1811 (Epitaph on Mary, the Wife of George Mitford, Esq. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #EskdaleHerdboy (The Eskdale Herd-Boy | 1819 | Full title: The Eskdale Herd-Boy, a Scottish Tale for the Instruction and Amusem) #Essays_of_Elia_nonfict (The Essays of Elia) #Eunice (Eunice | 1809) #Euro_Settlements_in_Am (An Account of the European Settlements in America, in six parts | 1757) #Evelina_FB (Evelina: Or, The History of a Young Lady’s Entrance Into the World | 1778 | First edition published anonymously.) #EveningHour_1827 (Sweet is the balmy evening hour | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line. Also appeared in the 1827 Pledg) #EveningPrimrose_1810 (To the Evening Primrose. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #EveningsRichest_1827 (Evening's richest colours glowing | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #FaerieQu_ES (The Faerie Queene | ) #Fair_Rosamund_DS_1827 (Fair Rosamund: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #FairEleanor_1811 (Fair Eleanor: A Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #FaithfulShepherdess_JF (The Faithful Shepherdess | Likely first performed in 1608 and first appeared in print in 1609.) #Fall_Jerusalem_HM (The Fall of Jerusalem | 1820 | Full title: The Fall of Jerusalem: A Dramatic Poem.) #FallofRobespierre (The Fall of Robespierre: An Historic Drama | 1794 | Three-act historical drama collaboratively written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge an) #Fannys_Fairings_OV (Fanny's Fairings [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828. It was also pub) #Father_Bocking_1810 (To my Father, on his Return from Bocking. May 29, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #FavoriteBower_1810 (Written in a Favorite Bower, Previous to Leaving Home, May 14, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem refers to Mitford's home Bertram House and is dated May 14, 1809. This) #Fawn_DS_1827 (The Fawn: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #Fiesco_MRMplay (Fiesco | Mitford’s first attempt to write a full-length tragedy, never performed or print) #Fiesco_play (Die Verschwörung des Fiesco zu Genua; or Fiesco’s Conspiracy at Genoa) #FindensT_1838 (Findens' Tableaux: A Series of Picturesque Scenes of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1837 | 1838 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed five selections.) #FindensT_1839 (Findens' Tableaux of the Affections; A series of Picturesque Illustrations of the Womanly Virtues | 1838 | 1839 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed four selections.) #FindensT_1840 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXL | 1839 | 1840 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.) #FindensT_1841 (Findens' Tableaux: The Iris of Prose, Poetry, and Art for MDCCXLI | 1840 | 1841 annual edited by Mitford, to which she contributed six selections.) #FindensT_1843 (Finden's Tableaux of National Character, Beauty, and Costume | 1842 | A two-volume anthology of previously-published stories and poems from Finden's T) #Fingal_Ossian (Fingal: An Ancient Epic Poem, in Six Books: Together with Several Other Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic Language, by James Macpherson. | 1762 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.) #Fisherman_in_Married_State_OV (The Fisherman in his Married State [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It is a second part ) #FishingSeat_1827 (The Fishing-Seat, Whiteknights [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 14 in the 1827 collection (page 307) . Also appeared in the 1827 Literary) #Flirtation_Extraordinary_BR (Flirtation Extraordinary | 1835 | This story was also published in the English Annual for 1837 with the title A Se) #Flora_Fest (Festival of Flora | 1818 | ) #Florence_Macarthy_SO (Florence Macarthy: An Irish Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she was very much amused by it. Later, she writes that she ) #ForgetMeNot_1827 (The Forget-Me-Not [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 3 in the 1827 collection (page 295) .) #Foscari_MRMplay (Foscari: A Tragedy | 1826) #Fragments_Ossian (Fragments of Ancient Poetry Collected in the Highlands of Scotland, and Translated from the Galic or Erse Language | 1760 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.) #Frags_Dumas (Fragments des oeuvres d'Alexandre Dumas choisis à l'usage de la jeunesse par Miss Mitford | 1846) #Freshwater_Fisherman_OV (The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It also appeared in ) #FriendBirthday_1827 (To a Friend on Her Birthday [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 15 in the 1827 collection (page 308) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont) #FriendsAlbum_1827 (Written in a Friend's Album [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 17 in the 1827 collection (page 310) . Also appeared in Marshall's Christ) #FriendToLisbon_1827 (On the Departure of a Friend to Lisbon for the Recovery of Her Health [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 21 in the 1827 collection (page 315) .) #FudgeFamilyParis (The Fudge Family in Paris | 1818) #GammerGurton (Gammer Gurton’s Needle | Comic play written during the 1550s, considered one of the first comedies in Eng) #Gaston_deBlondeville (Gaston de Blondeville | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep) #Gaston_novel (Gaston de Blondeville) #GaySummerMorn_1827 ('Tis a gay summer morn, and the sunbeams dance | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #George3_CourtFam (George III, his court, and family | 1820) #Geraniaceae (Geraniaceae: The Natural Order of Gerania, Illustrated by Coloured Figures and Descriptions; Comprising the Numerous and Beautiful Mule-varieties Cultivated in the Gardens of Great Britain, with Directions for Their Treatment | 1820—1830 | Printed in 5 volumes between 1820 and 1830.) #GhostStories_OV (Ghost Stories [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Gleaner_FT (The Gleaner | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Glenarvon_fict (Glenarvon) #Glenfergus_fict (Glenfergus. In Three Volumes | 1820) #GlowWorm_1810 (To the Glow-Worm. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Going_to_Races_OV (Going to the Races [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was previously pu) #Grace_Neville_OV (Grace Neville [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was previously p) #Great_Farmhouse_LM (A Great Farmhouse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-02 | This sketch was collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Great_Farmhouse_OV (A Great Farmhouse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It or) #Greek_Plays_BR (The Greek Plays | 1835) #Ground_Ash_CS (The Ground Ash | 1835) #GulliversTr_JS (Jonathan Swift | 1726 | Amended 1735) #Guy_Mannering (Guy Mannering) #Hacho (Hacho; or, the Spell of St. Wilten | 1819 | Narrative poem in imitation of Scott, written while the author was at Cambridge.) #HalidonHill (Halidon Hill; A Dramatic Sketch from Scottish History | 1822) #Hamlet_play (Hamlet | 1603 | First performed around 1602 and first printed in 1603.) #Hannah_LM (Hannah [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village in 1824.) #Hannah_OV (Hannah [Our Village version] | 1824 | Hannahappeared as the second story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It was ori) #HaroldEx (Harold the Exile | 1819 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously and with no publisher listed. Considered to be ) #Harry_L_Talking_Gent_LM (Harry L., or The Talking Gentleman [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-08 | This sketch appeared in the August 1823 issue of The Lady's Magazine. It was lat) #HavardChasI_play (The Tragedy of Charles I | 1747) #HayCarrying_OV (Hay-Carrying [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was first publis) #Haydon_Corresp (Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table-Talk | ) #Haymakers_OV (The Haymakers. A Country Story [Our Village Version[ | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu) #Haymaking_OV (Haymaking [alternate title assigned to Hay-Carrying in some later editions of Our Village]) #Hazlitt_LecComic (Lectures on the English Comic Writers) #Hazlitt_LecDrama (Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth) #HeadlongHall (Headlong Hall | 1816 | Mitford rated it as famous.) #HearingTalfourd_1827 (On Hearing Mr. Talfourd Plead in the Assize-Hall at Reading, On His First Circuit, March 1821 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 13 in the 1827 collection (page 306) .) #Heart_of_Mid (The Heart of Midlothian | 1822) #Heiress_MRM (The Heiress | Projected novel by Mary Russell Mitford, apparently never completed. Coles posit) #Helen_play (Helen) #Henry_Talbot_DS_1827 (Henry Talbot: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #HenryIVpt1_play (Henry IV, part one | First printed in 1598; likely in performance before that date.) #HenryIVpt2_play (Henry IV, part two | 1600) #HenryV_play (Henry V) #HenryVIII_play (Henry VIII) #Heraline_LMH (Heraline; or, Opposite Proceedings | 1821 | 4 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entry of 9 August 9 18) #HermitInLondon (The Hermit in London | 1819 | Published anonymously. 5 volumes. Full title: The Hermit In London, Or, Sketches) #Hester_BR ( | 1835) #Hist_Crusades_CM (The History of the Crusades | 1820 | Full title: The History of the Crusades, for the recovery and possession of the ) #Hist_JSpinner (The History of Jenny Spinner | 1800 | Full title: The History of Jenny Spinner, the Hertfordshire Ghost. Written by he) #Hist_ParisianMass (The History of the Parisian Massacre | 1810 | Full title: The History of the Parisian Massacre; Wherein all the minute circums) #HistAcctAfrica_JL (Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late J. Leyden | 1817 | Full title: Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa, by the late) #HistEdRichII_Howard (History of the Reigns of Edward and Richard II | 1690 | Published near the end of his life, this play involved Sir Robert, a royalist sy) #HistEngland_Hume (The History of England | 1754—1761 | Hume wrote the six volumes of this monumental history in reverse chronological o) #History_Burnet (Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time | 1818 | Full title: Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time from the restoration of King) #History_Municipal_Church_St_Lawrence (A History of the Municipal Church of St. Lawrence, Reading | 1883 publication used by Needham to establish local histories and identities of ) #HistWIndies_BE (History of the West Indies | 1798 | 5 volumes. Full title: The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British West In) #HoflandsJerusalem_1827 (On Mr. Hofland's Picture of Jerusalem at the Time of the Crucifixion [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 2 in the 1827 collection (page 294) . Also appeared in the 1826 Amulet as) #Holcroft_Mems (Memoirs of the Late Thomas Holcroft, Written by Himself and Continued to the Time of His Death | 1816) #Honeymoon_play (The Honeymoon) #Honor_OCallaghan_CS (Honor O'Callaghan | 1835) #HopG_FT (Hop-Gathering | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Hopping_Bob_OV (Hopping Bob [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Horace_play (Horace | 1640) #HoundandHorn_1827 (With hound and horn and huntsman's call | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #Hudibras_SB (Hudibras | First published in three parts in 1663, 1664 and 1678, then as a single edition ) #HumanLife_SR (Human Life: A Poem | 1819) #Humphrey_Clinker_fict (The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker | 1771) #Hypocrite (The Hypocrite | A satirical version of Moliere’splay, Tartuffe by Bickerstaff.) #Il_Pensoroso (Il Pensoroso | 1645 | Written 1632, together with L' Allegro.) #Iliad (The Iliad | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.) #Illinois_Birkbeck (Letters from Illinois: Illustrated by a Map of the United States, Shewing Mr. Birkbeck’s Journey from Norfolk to Illinois and a Map of English Prairie and the Adjacent Country by John Melish | 1818 | Mitford likely read this edition, published in London; editions also appeared in) #Illus_LitHist (Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century | 1818 | Full title: Illustrations of the Literary History of the Eighteenth Century, Con) #Imitated_Italian_1810 (Imitated from the Italian. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Impromptu_Whitbread_1810 (Impromptu, On Hearing Mr. Whitbread Declare, On Lord Melville's Trial, That He Fondly Trusted his Name Would Descend with Honor to Posterity. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #Independence (Independence | Author and date unidentified.) #Independence_1827 (Independence | 1827 | 1827 narrative poem.) #India_JournalResidence_Graham (Maria Graham | 1812 | Another edition was published in 1813 in Edinburgh by A. Constable and Company, ) #Inez_deCastro_MRMplay (Inez de Castro; A Tragedy in Five Acts | ) #InfantileLove_1811 (Infantile Love. | 1811 | 1811 poem. A portion of this poem appears as an epigraph in Poems by Eliza Gabri) #Inferno_Dante (Inferno | 1472 | The Inferno is the first part of Dante Alighieri’s 14th-century epic poem %h3 Di) #Inquisitive_Gent_OV (The Inquisitive Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #InsaneWorld (The Insane World | 1818 | Full title: The Insane World; or, a Week in London. A Satire. Mitford dismissed ) #IntendedRemoval_1827 (On an Intended Removal From a Favourite Residence. November, 1820 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 20 in the 1827 collection (page 314) . Also appeared in the 1822 New Mont) #IntNarr_Bruce (An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Abyssinia | 1790 | Full title: An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. into Ab) #Intro_DW (Introduction | 1854 | Introduction, first published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not) #Intro_Farewell_to_OV_v5 (Introduction. Farewell to Our Village | 1832 | This sketch appeared as the introduction to the fifth and final volume of Our Vi) #Introduction_ExtractsLetters_OV_v3 (Introduction [to Our Village, volume 3] | 1828 | This essay appeared in the third volume of Our Village in 1828.) #Introductory_Letter_to_Miss_W_OV (Introductory Letter, to Miss W. [Our Village version] | 1830 | This appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village, by way of introduction. The l) #InvariablePrin_WLB (The Invariable Principles of Poetry, in a Letter Addressed to Thomas Campbell, Esq.; Occasioned by Some Critical Observations in his Specimens of British Poets, Particularly Relating to the Poetical Character of Pope. | | Part of a controversy over the significance poetry of Alexander Pope in the earl) #Ion_Euripides (Ion | -0414—-0412 | The ancient Greek play on which Thomas Noon Talfourd based his political tragedy) #Ion_TNTplay (Ion) #Irish_Haymaker_BR (The Irish Haymaker | 1835) #Isabella_poem (Isabella, or the Pot of Basil | 1820 | Keats's narrative poem is adapted from the tale of Isabella and Lorenzo from Gio) #Italian_AR (The Italian | 1797 | Full title: The Italian, or the Confessional of the Black Penitents. A Romance.) #ItalianTrans_ChasD (Italian Translations | 1819 | Unpublished manuscript translations of works in Italian. Mitford reviewed the ma) #Ivanhoe (Ivanhoe) #Jack_Hatch_OV (Jack Hatch [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published) #Jesse_Cliffe_CS (Jesse Cliffe | 1835 | This story was also published in The Library of Fiction; or Family Story Teller ) #Jessy_Lucas_OV (Jessy Lucas [Our Village version] Jessy of Kibe's Farm [Bijou version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #JoannasProphecy_1810 (Joanna's Prophecy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #JohnBull_play (John Bull the Englishman’s Fireside, a Comedy in five acts. | 1805) #JohnGospel_NewTest (The Gospel of John | Fourth Book of the New Testament of the Christian Bible, presumably (and contest) #Johnson_Lives (Lives of the English Poets | 1783) #Journal_Greenland (Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the years 1770 to 1778 | 1818 | Full title: Greenland: being extracts from a journal kept in that country in the) #Journal_India1817 (Journal of a Route Across India | 1819 | Full title: Journal of a Route Across India, Through Egypt, to England, in the L) #Journal_Soldier71st (A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st | 1819 | Full title: A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st, or Glasgow Regiment, Highland Li) #Julian_MRMplay (Julian; a Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823) #Julius_Caesar_play (Julius Caesar | 1599 | Shakespeare's play about the assassination of Julius Caesar.) #JuniusLtrs (The Letters of Junius | 1772 | Collection of letters written pseudonymously between 1769 and 1772 and colleccte) #Kehama (The Curse of Kehama: A Poem in Two Volumes | 1810) #Kenilworth_WS (Kenilworth | 1821) #King_Harwood_BR (King Harwood | 1835) #King_John_play (The Life and Death of King John | Likely written in the mid-1590s; not published until it appeared in the First Fo) #King_John_Valpy (King John, an Historical Tragedy, Altered from Shakespeare, as it was Acted at Reading School for the Subscription to the Naval Pillar, to be Erected in Honor of the Naval Victories of the Present War | 1800) #King_Lear_play (King Lear) #KingAnecd (Political and Literary Anecdotes of His Own Times. | According to the title page, a memoir of Dr. William King, written in his sevent) #KingCoal (King Coal's Levée | 1819 | Full title: King Coal's Levee, Or Geological Etiquette, With Explanatory Notes; ) #KingsPg_FT (The King's Page | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Knights_Swan (Knights of the Swan | 1796 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Knights of the Swan: or, the court of Charlemagne: a ) #Lallegro (John Milton | 1645 | Poem found in Milton’s 1645 Poems of Mr. John Milton both English and Latin, Com) #Lamb_Chas_NewStyleActing (Charles Lamb) #Lamb_Chas_Works (Charles Lamb | ) #Lament_Tasso (Lament of Tasso) #Laodamia_WW (Laodamia | 1815) #Last_Letters_Jac_Ortis (The Last Letters of Jacopo Ortis | 1802 | Epistolary novel read by Mitford who describes it in her Journal on 15 June 1820) #LeavingPicture_1827 (On Leaving a Favourite Picture [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 16 in the 1827 collection (page 309) . Appeared in the 1821 New Monthly M) #LecComic_WHaz (Lectures on the English Comic Writers, delivered at the Surry Institution | 1819 | Spelled Surry on title page.) #LecDramatic_WHaz (Lectures Chiefly on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth, Delivered at the Surry Institution | 1820) #LecPoetry_WHaz (Lectures on the English Poets, delivered at the Surrey Institution | 1819) #Lects_WmLawrence (Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and the Natural History of Man | 1819 | Full title: Cursory Observations upon the Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and t) #LectsHistLit_Schlegel (Lectures on the History of Literature: Ancient and Modern | 1819) #Lectures_Dramatic (A course of lectures on dramatic art and literature | 1815 | Translation of Schlegel's Vorlesungen über dramatische Kunst und Litteratur, fi) #Lectures_JOpie (Lectures on Painting | 1809 | Full title: Lectures on Painting, Delivered at the Royal Academy of Arts: with a) #Lectures_Paint_HF (Lectures on Painting: Delivered at the Royal Academy, March, 1801. | 1801) #LegendGoodWomen (The Legend of Good Women | A collection of legends believed to be composed during the 1380s.) #Legends_B (Metrical Legends of Exalted Characters | 1821 | ) #LeightonPr (Leighton Priory | Author and date unidentified.) #Letters_Hearne_Aubrey (Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: To Which are Added, Hearne’s Journeys to Reading, and to Whaddon Hall, the Seat of Browne Willis, Esq., and Lives of Eminent Men by John Aubrey, Esq., the Whole Now First Published from the Originals | 1813) #Letters_NItaly (Letters from the North of Italy | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Letters from the North of Italy: Addressed to Henry Hallam, ) #Letters_to_Heber (Letters to R. Heber, Esq., containing critical remarks on the series of novels beginning with Waverley and an attempt to ascertain their author | 1821) #LIEO_Poems (Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems | 1820 | Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, published in July 1820, ) #Life_Burke_RB (The Life of Burke | 1800 | Full title: The Life of Edmund Burke: Comprehending an Impartial Account of his ) #Life_DukeofMarl_WC (Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough: With His Original Correspondence; Collected from the Family Records at Blenheim, and Other Authentic Sources. Illustrated with Portraits, Maps, and Military Plans. | 1818) #Life_LadyRussell (Some Account of the Life of Rachael Wriothesley, Lady Russell, by the editor of Madam Du Deffand’s letters. | 1819 | Source: HathiTrust) #Life_of_Johnson (Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. | 1791 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D., Comprehending an Accoun) #Life_Wesley (The Life of Wesley | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: The Life of Wesley; and the Rise and Progress of Methodis) #Life_WmRussell (The Life of William, Lord Russell | 1820 | Full title: The Life of William, Lord Russell; with some account of the times in) #LifeRichard2 (The Life and Reign of King Richard the Second, by a Person of Quality | 1681) #Lights_Shadows (Lights and Shadows of American Life | 1832) #LilyBells_1827 (The lily bells are wet with dew | 1827 | 1827 untitled song. Title taken from first line.) #Lit_Pocket_Bk (The Literary Pocket Book, or Companion for the Lover of Art and Nature | Literary almanac edited by Leigh Hunt that includes original poems by P. Shelley) #Little_Miss_Wren_OV (Little Miss Wren [Our Village version] Little Miss Wren: a Sketch [Gem Annual version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was also publishe) #Little_Rachel_OV (Little Rachel [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Lives_HaydnMoz (The Lives of Haydn and Mozart | 1818 | Written by Marie-Henri Beyle, better known as Stendahl, under the pseudonym L. A) #London_Visitor_CS (The London Visitor | 1835) #Lost_Dahlia_CS (The Lost Dahlia | 1835) #Lost_Found_OV (Lost and Found [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Lost_Keys_OV (The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #Lost_Won_OV (Lost and Won [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be) #LostPearl_FT (Ceylon. The Lost Pearl | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Louisa_OV (Louisa [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #LoveSickMaid_1811 (The Love-Sick Maid; An Imitation of the Writers of the Seventeenth Century. [1811 version] | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Ltrs_Cont_JW (Letters from the Continent | 1819 | Full title: Letters from the Continent During the Months of October, November, a) #Lucy_LM (Lucy [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-09 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Lucy_OV (Lucy [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the sixth sketch in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It) #Lucy_Revisited_LM (Lucy Re-visited [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-08 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in August 1824. It was re-titled for) #Macbeth_play (Macbeth) #Mademoiselle_Therese_OV (Mademoiselle Therese [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #Mademoiselle_Tournon (Mademoiselle de Tournon | 1820 | ) #Mahomet_play (Mahomet | 1741) #Maids_Tragedy_play (The Maid’s Tragedy) #Manfred (Manfred) #ManinMoon_Hone (The Man in the Moon | 1820 | Full title: The Man in the Moon, A Speech from the Throne to the Senate of Lunat) #Manners (Manners: A Novel | 1817 | 3 vols. Written under the pseudonym Madame Panache. Mitford rated it a pretty th) #MansfieldPk (Mansfield Park | 1814 | 3 volumes. Full title: Mansfield Park: A Novel. Published as by the Author of Pr) #Marianne_OV (Marianne [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #MariaWinningCup_1810 (On Maria's Winning the Cup, At the Ilsley Coursing Meeting. November 9, 1808. Inscribed to W. Cobbett, Esq. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #MarinersTale_1811 (The Mariner's Tale. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Marino_Faliero (Marino Faliero) #Mark_Bridgman_BR (Mark Bridgman | 1835) #Marmion_WS (Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field | 1808) #Marriage_SF (Marriage: A Novel | 1818 | Mitford records that she liked it very much; she also says that it made me laugh) #Masque_Seasons_DS_1827 (Masque of the Seasons: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #Materials_WB (Materials for Thinking | 1806) #MaternalAffection_1811 (Maternal Affection. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Matthew_Shore_OV (Matthew Shore [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Mazeppa_By (Mazeppa, a Poem. | 1819 | Mitford records that she liked it very much.) #Measure_Measure_play (William Shakespeare | 1623 | Comedy likely written in 1603 or 1604, first known to be published in the First ) #Medecine_esprit (La Médecine de l’esprit | 1753) #Melincourt (Melincourt | 1817 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.) #Melmoth_CM (Melmoth the Wanderer: A Tale | 1820) #Memoirs_of_the_life_of_Colonel_Hutchinson (Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson | 1806 | Lady Lucy Hutchinson composed the Memoirs sometime between the date of her husba) #Memory_John_Moore_1810 (To The Memory of Sir John Moore. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Mems_AnneBoleyn (Memoirs of the Life of Anne Boleyn, Queen of Henry VIII. By Miss Benger. | 1818 | 2 vols. Mitford mentions reading this book in her Journal entries of March 25, 2) #Mems_Conde (Memoirs of the Life of the Great Condé | 1807 | Translated into English from the French by Fanny Holcroft. Mitford called them n) #Mems_Curran (Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the Right Honourable John Philpot Curran | 1817 | Full title: Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late, the ) #Mems_ElizHamilton (Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, with a selectio) #Mems_Evelyn (Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writing of John Evelyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs, Illustrative of the Life and Writings of John Evelyn, Esq. ) #Mems_Huet (Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranches | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: Memoirs of the Life of Peter Daniel Huet, Bishop of Avranche) #Mems_Martyn (Memoirs of the Rev. Henry Martyn | 1819 | Full title: Memoir of the Rev. Henry Martyn, B.D. late fellow of St. John's Coll) #Mems_Montrose (Memoirs of the Most Renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose | 1819 | Full title: Memoirs of the most renowned James Graham, Marquis of Montrose. Tran) #Mems_Napoleon1815 (Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1820 | Mitford rated it rather dull but then also called it a most interesting book.) #Mems_RLEdgeworth (Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth | 1820 | 2 volumes. Full title: Memoirs of Richard Lovell Edgeworth, Esq. begun by himsel) #Mems_Sidney_TZ (Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Sir Philip Sidney | 1808 | Mitford rated it as stupid.) #Mems_Temple (Mémoires Particuliers de la Captivité de la Famille Royale de la Tour de Temple | 1817 | Full title: Mémoires particuliers, formant avec l'ouvrage de M. Hue et le Journa) #Mems_Vaux (Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life of James Hardy Vaux | 1819 | 2 vols. Full title: Volume 1: Memoirs of the First Thirty-two Years of the Life ) #Mems_WilhelminaofPrussia (Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina | 1812 | Full title: Memoirs of Frederica Sophia Wilhelmina: princess royal of Prussia, m) #MemsQE1 (Memoirs of the Court of Elizabeth, Queen of England | 1818 | 2 volumes.) #Merchant_of_Venice_play (The Merchant of Venice) #Merope_play (Merope) #Merry_Wives_play (The Merry Wives of Windsor | 1602 | First printed in 1602; believed to have been written prior to 1597.) #Metamorphoses (Metamorphōseōn librī | 0008 | First translated into English by William Caxton in 1480.) #Methought_sonnet23 (Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint | 1673 | Milton's sonnet later designated 23, Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint, som) #MidsummerNtsD (A Midsummer Night's Dream) #Milton_PoemsI (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1645 | Milton's first published collection of poems.) #Milton_PoemsII (Poems on Several Occasions by Mr. John Milton, both English and Latin, composed at several times | 1673) #MiltonWksLife_CS (The Prose Works of John Milton: with a Life of the Author | 1806 | Mitford rated it very good.) #Minstrelsy_WS (Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border: Consisting of Historical and Romantic Ballads, Collected in the Southern Counties of Scotland; with a Few of Modern Date, Founded upon Local Tradition | 1802) #MiscPoems_Dryden (Miscellany Poems, in two parts. Containing new translations of Virgil’s Eclogues, Ovid’s Love-elegies, several parts of Virgil’s Æneids, Lucretius, Theocritus, Horace, &c. With several original poems, never before printed. | 1688) #Miseries_JB (The Miseries of Human Life, Or the Last Groans of Timothy Testy and Samuel Sensitive; with a few supplementary sighs from Mrs. Testy. With which are now for the first time Interspersed, Varieties, Incidental to the Principal Matter, In Prose and Verse. In Nine Additional Dialogues, as Overheard by James Beresford, A.M. Fellow of Merton-College, Oxford | 1807) #MiserMarried (The Miser Married: A Novel | 1813 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it a clever thing.) #Miss_Philly_Filkin_CS (Miss Philly Filkin, the China Woman | 1835) #Mission_Ashantee (Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee | 1819 | Full title: Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee: with a statistical accou) #Missionary_SO (The Missionary: An Indian Tale | 1811 | ) #MissMurray_1810 (To the Hon. Miss Murray, with Miss Rowden's "Poetical Introduction to Botany." | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Mod_Antiques_LM (Modern Antiques [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-03 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Mod_Antiques_OV (Modern Antiques [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fourth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. I) #MoleCatcher_OV (The Mole-catcher [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Monastery (The Monastery | As Mitford reads, she rates it not very good, not so good as some of his Novels ) #Montorio_CM (The Fatal Revenge; or, the Family of Montorio | 1807) #Moonlight_Adventure_OV (A Moonlight Adventure [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #Moore_ViewItaly (A View of Society and Manners in Italy: with Anecdotes relating to some Eminent Characters | ) #MoralTales_ME (Moral Tales for Young People | 1801 | In 3 volumes. Includes: Forester, The Prussian Vase, The Knapsack, The Good Aunt) #Mordaunt (Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Countries | 1800 | Full title: Mordaunt: Sketches of Life, Characters, and Manners, in Various Coun) #More_of_OurVillage_LM (More of Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-12 | This sketch was published in The Lady's Magazine in December 1824. It was re-tit) #Morland (Morland | Author and date unidentified.) #Morning_Ramble_OV (A Morning Ramble | Subtitle of the Our Village, third volume story, Wheat Hoeing, that was adopted ) #MossyMs (Manuscript tribute to Mossy | Manuscript tribute to Mossy, written after his death.) #MossyPoem (Manuscript poem to Mossy | Manuscript poem to Mossy, written after his death.) #MotherSleeping_1827 (To My Mother Sleeping [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 6 in the 1827 collection (page 299) .) #Mr_Jos_Hanson_CS (Mr. Joseph Hanson, the Haberdasher | 1835) #MRM_Bio_Selected_OV_Blackie (Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?]) #Mrs_Hollis_BR (Mrs. Hollis, the Fruiterer | 1835) #Mrs_Mosse_OV (Mrs. Mosse [Our Village version] | 1824 | This story appeared as the twentieth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.) #Mrs_Tompkins_BR (Mrs. Tompkins, the Cheesemonger | 1835) #Much_Ado_play (Much Ado About Nothing) #MungoPark_1810 (Lines, Suggested by the Uncertain Fate of Mungo Park, the Celebrated African Traveller. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #My_Godmothers_OV (My Godmothers [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #MyGarden_MRM (My Garden: A Nineteenth-Century Writer on her English Cottage Garden | 1990) #MysteriousWife (The Mysterious Wife: a novel | 1797 | 4 volumes. Minerva Press. Published under the pseudonym Gabrielli.) #Mystery_TG (Mystery, or Forty Years Ago: A Novel | 1820 | 3 vols. Mitford considered it not very good.) #Napoleon_memoir_nonfict (Mémoires pour servir à l’histoire de la vie privée, du retour, et du règne de Napoléon en 1815 | 1819—1820 | Two volume publication: the first volume was published in 1819 and the second in) #NapoleonPeint (Napoleon Peint Par Lui-même. Extraits du Véritable Manuscrit de Napoleon Bonaparte, par un Amércain | 1818 | ) #Narr_Algiersin1816 (A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816 | 1819 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816, under the) #Narr_Campaign_Saxony (A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 1813 | 1820 | Full title: A Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony, in the year 18) #Narr_EgyptCataracts (Narrative of a Journey in Egypt and the Country Beyond the Cataracts | 1817) #Narr_SAmPatriots (Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Join the South American Patriots | 1818 | Full title: Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Jo) #Narr_Senegal (Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816 | 1817 | Full title: Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816; Undertaken by Order of the) #Narrative_Eqypt_RW (A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt | 1800 | Full title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Egypt. Under Sir Ralph Abercrombie.) #NarrativePoems (Narrative Poems on the Female Character in the Various Relations of Human Life | 1813) #Nat_Calendar (A Naturalist's Calandar: with Observations in Various Branches of Natural History | 1795 | This book, published posthumously, gives precise accounts of the actions of anim) #Nat_Hist_Selborne (The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne | 1789 | This influential book of nature writing is ostensibly formed from 110 letters ad) #NaturalisHist (Naturalis Historiæ | 0077—0079 | Encyclopedic work of thirty-seven books, organized in ten volumes. Source: LBT) #NearRuinedFarm_1811 (Stanzas Written Near a Ruined Farm. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #New_Married_Couple_OV (A New Married Couple [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #NewTestament_Bible (The New Testament | The second half of the Christian Bible, containing scriptures composed in Greek ) #NewWhigGuide (The New Whig Guide | 1819 | Authorship attributed to Viscount Henry John Temple Palmerston John Wilson Croke) #NewYearsDay_1827 (New Year's Day. 1819 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 11 in the 1827 collection (page 304) .) #NightmareAbbey (Nightmare Abbey | 1818 | First edition published anonymously as by the Author of Headlong Hall.) #NightMay_1810 (The Night of May. To Miss W-- | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #NoFiction (No Fiction | 1820 | Full title: No Fiction: a narrative founded on recent and interesting facts. Mit) #Northanger_Abbey (Northanger Abbey | 1817 | First issued together with Persuasion in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Persuasio) #Note_OVBlackwoodsEd (Note [to Our Village, Blackwoods Educational Series edition, 1884] | 1884 | Introductory note to the Blackwood's Educational Series edition of Our Village.) #Obs_CauseEffect (Observations on the Nature and Tendency of the Doctrine of Mr. Hume, concerning the relation of cause and effect | 1806) #Obs_Landscape (Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening | 1818 | Full title: Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening: Incl) #ODonnel_SO (O’Donnel: A National Tale | 1814) #Odyssey (The Odyssey | The author of this poem would have been presumed to be Homer in Mitford’s time.) #Oedipus_play (Oedipus Tyrranus | Mitford tends to refer to this play by its Greek title, Oedipus Tyrranus.) #Old_Bachelor_OV (An Old Bachelor [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the sixteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824) #Old_David_Dykes_BR (Old David Dykes | 1835) #Old_Emigre_BR (The Old Emigre | 1835) #Old_Gipsy_OV (The Old Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Old_Master_Green_OV (Old Master Green. A Village Sketch. [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #Old_Mortality (Old Mortality) #OldManor_CS (Old Manor House | 1793 | ) #OldTestament_Bible (The Old Testament | The collection of ancient Hebrew scriptures comprising the first half of the Chr) #Olive_Hathaway_OV (Olive Hathaway [Our Village version] Olive Hathaway: a Village Sketch [Pledge of Friendship version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #OnRdngBalldWW_MRMpoem (On Reading a Ballad of Wordsworth | 1822-08-31) #Orestes_PB (Orestes in Argos; a Tragedy in Five Acts, by the late Peter Bayley, Esq. | 1825 | After his sudden death in 1823, Peter Bayley’s wife arranged to have his work pe) #Orestes_play (Orestes | -0408) #Orig_Miniature (The Original of the Miniature. A Novel. | 1816 | 4 volumes. Printed at the Minerva Press.) #Ormond_novel (Harrington, A Tale, and Ormond, A Tale. In Three Volumes. Vol.I | 1817) #Othello_play (Othello) #Otto (Otto of Wittelsbach: A Tragedy | 1854 | First published in The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell Mitford; not published sep) #Otto_Babo (Otto von Wittelsbach | 1783 | First performed in 1782. German tragedy based on the life of Otto II of Wittelsb) #Our_Maying_OV (Our Maying | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in .) #Our_Village1st_ed (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. [Volume I.] [volume one] | 1824 | The first edition, first volume of Our Village appeared without a volume number ) #Our_Village2nd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume II. [volume two] | 1826) #OurVillage_3rd (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume III. [volume three] | 1828) #OurVillage_4th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume IV. [volume four] | 1830) #OurVillage_5th (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. Volume V. [volume five] | 1832) #OurVillage_BelfordsClarke (Our Village [Belfords Clarke 1880 edition] Editor Introduction [Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, Belfords Clarke editions] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1880 | Edition reprinted from the 1879 illustrated edition published by Sampson Low, Ma) #OurVillage_Bell (Our Village, New edition, second series [George Bell and Sons, first published 1848]The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1877 | Re-issue of the 1848 Henry G. Bohn edition after George Bell & Sons had bought i) #OurVillage_BlackwoodsEd (Our Village [Blackwoods Educational Series, 1884] | 1884 | A selected edition of Our Village stories for the juvenile market. It reprints t) #OurVillage_Bohn (Our Village, Henry G. Bohn, New Edition, First Series The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairing Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying" Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Little Miss Wren Children of the Village. The Robins Going to the Races The China Jug Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore Introduction: Farewell to Our Village The Incendiary. A Country Tale Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Christmas Amusements, No. 1 The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Cousins Christmas Amusements, No. 2 Children of the Village. Young Master Ben The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress The Residuary Legatee. A True Story The Runaway Christmas Amusements, No. 3 Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Freshwater Fisherman. A Sketch Christmas Amusements, No. 4 The Haymakers. A Country Story The Fisherman in his Married State Christmas Amusements, No. 5 A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1848 | A two-volume edition of Our Village stories that reprints most titles from the s) #OurVillage_Caldwell (Our Village [Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and) #OurVillage_CountryPictures_WalterScott (Our Village: Country Pictures [Walter Scott edition, 1884, 1888] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village story] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Another Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh A Morning Ramble [alternate title of Wheat Hoeing Whitsun-Eve Haymaking [alternate title of Hay-Carrying Our Maying Lost and Found Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Children of the Village. Harry Lewington A Castle in the Air Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls A Visit to Richmond Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother Children of the Village. Young Master Ben A Moonlight Adventure Sea-Side Recollections | 1886—1888 | An illustrated edition of selected sketches from Our Village. The contents are o) #OurVillage_DentEveryman (Our Village [Dent Everyman edition, 1936, 1951] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Dent Everyman series edition, 1936, 1951] MRM's Dedication to her Father Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1936—1951 | A much-republished selected edition of Our Village stories, published by Dent in) #OurVillage_FolioSoc (Our Village [Folio Society, 1996] Editor's Introduction, Our Village, Folio Society, 1996 Dedication to her father Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velveet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy A Christmas Party A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Bird-Catcher The Mole-Catcher Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1997 | Based on the volume published by George G. Harrap in 1947, illustrated by Shirle) #OurVillage_Hurst (OurVillage [Hurst edition, 1910s?] Biographical Preface [Our Village, Caldwell edition, n.d. 1910s?; Hurst edition, n.d. 1910s?] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Ellen A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha A Parting Glance at Our Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. the Dell Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1909-12-31—1919-12-31 | An edition of selected stories from Our Village, mostly drawn from the first and) #OurVillage_ISIS (Our Village [ISIS Clear Type Classics, 1992] Country Pictures Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1992 | Selected large-print hardcover edition of Our Village stories. The edition compi) #OurVillage_JMDent (Temple Classics | 1900—1902—1906—1930—1935 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches that went through multiple editions in ) #OurVillage_Macmillan (Our Village, 1 volume, Macmillan edition, 1893 Editor Introduction [Our Village, Macmillan edition, 1893] Country Pictures [alternate title of Our Village (story)] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copose Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1893 | This selected edition of the Our Village stories is illustrated with black and w) #OurVillage_OUP_pb (Our Village [Oxford University Press edition, 1982] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Oxford University Press pb edition, 1982] Preface to Our Village, volume one Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. A farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1982 | Selected paperback edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illustrated 194) #OurVillage_Penguin (Our Village [Penguin edition, 1987] Editor's Introduction [Our Village, Penguin edition, 1987| Our Village [story, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady A Country Cricket Match An Old Bachelor the Talking Gentleman Walks in the Country. Nutting A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Walks in the Country. The Wood A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh The Old Gipsy A New Married Couple A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Lost and Won Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races A Castle in the Air Rosedale Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Rat-Catcher The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress | 1987 | Selected edition of Our Village stories, drawn largely from the first four volum) #OurVillage_PrenticeHall (Our Village [Prentice Hall 1986 edition] Our Village [story, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy A Christmas Party Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Lost and Found Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Going to the Races Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf The Haymakers | 1986 | A selected edition of sketches from Our Village, based on the edition originally) #OurVillage_SampsonLowMSR (Our Village. Illustrated. New and cheaper edition. [Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, 1882] Editor's Introduction [to Our Village, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington edition, 1882] Our Village [story] Walks in the Country. Frost Walks in the Country. The Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1882 | This edition includes only the Walks in the Country stories. It contains numerou) #OurVillage_story (Our Village | 1821 | This refers to the draft sketch of the story whose title became eponymous with M) #OurVillage_story_LM (Our Village [Lady's Magazine version] | 1822-12 | This sketch became the first and standard introductory story to volume one of Ou) #OurVillage_story_OV (Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | The sketch entitled Our Village appeared as the first sketch in the Our Village ) #OurVillage_TicknorReadFields (Our Village [story] | 1853 | This edition re-prints virtually all of the Our Village stories, with the except) #OurVillage_Unit (Our Village [Unit Library edition, 1902] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village, sketch [Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood Early Recollections. The English Teacher Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Walks in the Country. The Shaw Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Early Recollections. A Widow Gentlewoman Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland | 1902 | A selected edition of stories from Our Village. It reprints virtually the whole ) #OurVillage_WhiteLion (Our Village [White Lion edition, 1976] Publisher's Note and Introduction [Our Village, White Lion edition, 1976] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit A Walk Through the Village Walks in the Country. The Copse Jack Hatch Walks in the Country. The Wood Doctor Tubb Walks in the Country. The Dell The Old Gipsy The Young Gipsy Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble Whitsun-Eve Our Maying The Mole-Catcher Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Matthew Shore Introduction. Farewell to Our Village The Lost Keys. Or a Day of Distress Old Master Green. A Village Sketch The Haymakers. A Country Story | 1976 | Selected edition of Our Village sketches, based on the illlustrated 1947 George ) #OV ( | All editions of Our Village as a collection of related sketches and stories, eve) #OV_Harrap_1947 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1947] | 1947 | This 1947 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes) #OV_Macmillan_1893 (Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery [1893] | 1893 | This 1893 collection of stories from Mitford's Our Village became one of the bes) #PaintersDa_DS_1827 (The Painter's Daughter: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Reprinted in volume two of The Dramatic Works of Mary Russell M) #PaintersDa_DS_LM (The Artist: A Dramatic Sketch | 1822 | First published in The Lady's Magazine, new series 2, volume 3 (1822) under this) #ParadiseLost (John Milton | ) #Parisina (Parisina | 1816) #Parting_Glance_OV (A Parting Glance at Our Village [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch was the twenty-fourth and final story to appear in volume one of Our) #Parvenus (Les Parvenus; ou, Les Aventures de Julien Delmours | 1819) #Pattys_New_Hat_OV (Patty's New Hat [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had been previous) #Pen_Sword_1810 (The Pen and the Sword. Inscribed to the Rt. Hon. R. B. Sheridan. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Pendennis_WT (The History of Pendennis: His Fortunes and Misfortunes, His Friends and His Greatest Enemy | 1849) #Peoples_Charter (People's Charter | 1838 | The formal declaration of the Chartist movement, which the Chartists strove to h) #Percival (Percival: or, Nature Vindicated: a Novel. | 1801 | Mitford called it a stupid old Novel. Source: Journal.) #Percy_Reliques (Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, consisting of Old Heroic Ballads, Songs, and other Pieces of our Earlier Poets, Together with Some of Later Date | 1765) #Peregrine_Pickle (The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, In Which are Included Memoirs of a Lady of Quality | 1751) #Persuasion (Persuasion | 1817 | First issued together with Northanger Abbey in 1817 as Northanger Abbey; and Per) #Peter_Jenkins_BR (Peter Jenkins, the Poulterer | 1835) #PeterBell_JHR (Peter Bell: A Lyrical Ballad | ) #PeterBell_WW (Peter Bell. A Tale in Verse. | 1817 | Mitford reports that she liked it and the parody by J. H. Reynolds very much. So) #Peters_Letters_novel (Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk | | Mitford rated it very good. In journal entry Saturday 4 September 1819 .) #Petrarque_deG (Pétrarque et Laura | 1819) #Phedre_play (Phèdre | 1677 | A play retelling the plot of the ancient Greek Hyppolytus by Euripedes, concentr) #Philaster_play (Philaster | 1620 | First performed before 1611, first printed in 1620.) #Philoctetes_play (Philoctetes) #PictTour_FrSw (A Picturesque Tour Through France, Switzerland, on the Banks of the Rhine, and Through Part of the Netherlands in the Year 1816 | 1817 | Mitford rated it as stupid. Unsigned, author unknown.) #Pilgrim_Cross (The Pilgrim of the Cross | 1805 | 4 vols. Full title: The Pilgrim of the Cross: or, the Chronicles of Christabelle) #Pirate_novel (The Pirate | 1822 | ) #Pizarro_play (Pizarro) #Pl_Friendship (The Pleasures of Friendship: A Poem, in two parts | 1810 | Long poem, first published in 1810 and reprinted in 1812 and 1818.) #PO_BerkshireDir (Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, and Oxfordshire; with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | 1847—1854 | Text and page images of the 1854 edition may be accessed through the University ) #PO_Directory_Berkshire (The Post Office Directory of Berkshire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, with Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Huntingdonshire | A series of directories of local gentry and tradespeople in the counties of the ) #Poems1645_Milton (John Milton | 1645) #Poems_1st_ed_MRM (Poems | 1810 | 1 volume.) #Poems_2nd_ed_MRM (Poems: Second Edition with Considerable Additions | 1811 | 2 volumes.) #Poems_2vols_WW (Poems by William Wordsworth [...] in Two Volumes | 1815 | 2 volumes. Full title: Poems by William Wordsworth: Including Lyrical Ballads, a) #PoemsOdes_Valpy1804 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. To Which is Added Some Account of the Lives of Rev. Mr. Benwell and Rev. Dr. Butt | 1804) #PoemsOdes_Valpy1826 (Poems, Odes, Prologues, and Epilogues Spoken on Public Occasions at Reading School. Second edition. | 1826) #PopetoArbuthnot (An Epistle from Mr. Pope to Dr. Arbuthnot (1734)) #PopularTales_ME (Popular Tales | 1804 | In 3 volumes. Volume 1 includes: Lame Jervas, The Will, The Limerick Gloves, Out) #Portrait_Blanch_1811 (A Portrait. [from Blanch, an Unfinished Poem.] | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Portugal_1811 (Portugal. An Ode. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #PR_JLeyden (The Poetical Remains of the Late Dr. John Leyden, with Memoirs of his Life, by the Rev. James Morton. | Source: HathiTrust) #Pratt_1810 (To Mr. Pratt. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #Prayer_Souls_Desire (Prayer is the Soul's Sincere Desire | 1818 | ) #Preface_OV_v1 (Preface [to Our Village, volume one] | 1824) #Preface_OV_v2 (Preface [to Our Village, volume two] | 1826) #Preface_OV_v3 (Preface [to Our Village, volume three] | 1828) #Preface_OV_v4 (Preface [to Our Village, volume four] | 1830) #Prelude_WW (The Prelude, or, Growth of a Poet's Mind: An Autobiographical Poem | 1850 | Autobiographical narrative poem, originally intended to introduce a poetic work ) #Pride_and_Prejudice (Pride and Prejudice: A Novel | 1813) #PrioryTales_H (Tales of the Priory | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading these tales in her Journal entries of July 1820, findin) #Prisoner_Chillon (Prisoner of Chillon) #PrivateCorr_BF (The Private Correspondence of Benjamin Franklin | 1817 | Full title: The private correspondence of Benjamin Franklin [ . . .]: comprising) #PrivLife_Misc_JN (Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father | 1818 | Full title: Memoirs of the Private Life of my Father. To which are added miscell) #Prologue_ReadingSchool_1810 (Prologue, Intended to Have Been Spoken Before the First Part of Henry the Fourth, Acted by the Gentlemen of the Reading School Meeting, October 23, 1809. Inscribed to the Rev. Dr. Valpy. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Prom_Chained (Prometheus Chained | One of R. Potter’s eighteenth-century translations of Aeschylus’s plays, from hi) #PromBound_Aesch (Prometheus Bound | The authorship of this influential ancient Greek tragedy was classically attribu) #ProudL_FT (The Proud Ladye. A Chapter from the Chronicles of Adlersberg. | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Pub_Note_Intro_WhiteLion (Publisher's Note and Introduction) #Quakers_EL (The Quakers: A Tale | 1817) #Queen_of_the_Meadow_OV (The Queen of the Meadow [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #QueenhooH (Queenhoo Hall, A Romance | 1808 | 3 volumes. Published with Ancient Times, a drama as volume 4.) #QueensWake (The Queen’s Wake: a Legendary Poem | 1813 | A long poem, first published in 1813, purporting to be a collection of poems and) #Quiet_Gentlewoman_OV (A Quiet Gentlewoman [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #RatCatcher_OV (The Rat-Catcher. A Sketch [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was previously pu) #Raymond (Raymond | Author and date unidentified.) #RecluseScotland (The Recluse of the Appenines; or the Automaton Chief. A Romance. | 1820 | Read by Mitford, as recorded in her Journal in September 1820.) #Recoll_Reign_GeoIII (Recollections and Reflections, Personal and Political, as Connected with Public Affairs, During the Reign of George III | 1822) #Recollections (Recollections of a Literary Life; or, Books, Places, and People | 1852 | London edition in three volumes; New York edition in two volumes.) #Remarkable_Character_of_Old_School_LM (A Remarkable Character of the Old School [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01-31 | This sketch was published in the January 31, 1824 issue of The Lady's Magazine. ) #Remarks_HistEng (Remarks on the History of England | 1743 | Full title: Remarks on the History of England: From the Minutes of Humphry Oldca) #Remarks_Italy (Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, During an Excursion in Italy, in the Years 1802 and 1803. | 1816 | Mitford records she was charmed with it in her journal entry of Monday 15 Februa) #Remarks_scepticism (Remarks on Scepticism | 1819 | Full title: Remarks on Scepticism especially as it is connected with the subject) #Residuary_Legatee_OV (The Residuary Legatee. A True Story [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe) #ReturnFair_FT (The Return from the Fair | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Revenge_play (The Revenge: a Tragedy | First acted in 1721.) #RevisitingSchool_1810 (On Revisiting the School Where I was Educated. Addressed to Mrs. Rowden, of Hans Place. | 1810 | 1810 poem addressed to Mitford's friend and former teacher Frances Rowden, refer) #RevoltofIslam (The Revolt of Islam: A Poem, in Twelve Cantos | 1816 | The second published version of a poem that Percy Bysshe Shelley originally titl) #Reynolds_LitWks (The Literary Works of Sir Joshua Reynolds | 1819 | Full title: The Literary Works Of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Knight. Late President Of) #Rhododaphne (Rhododaphne: Or, The Thessalian Spell: A Poem | 1818) #RichardIII_play (The Life and Death of Richard the Third | Dramatizes King Richard III’s usurpation of the throne of England. The date of c) #Richelieu_play (Richelieu; or, The Conspiracy. A Play in Five Acts | 1839 | Loosely based on the historical Cardinal Richelieu; title role originated by Wil) #Rienzi (Rienzi; a Tragedy, in Five Acts | 1828 | There appears to be no printed edition of Rienzi authorized by Mitford upon its ) #Rienzi_EBL (Rienzi, The Last of the Roman Tribunes | 1835 | Edward Bulwer-Lytton's novel; a 1835 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienz) #Rienzi_Wagner (Rienzi, der Letzte der Tribunen | 1842 | Richard Wagner's opera; an 1842 treatment of the rebellion of Cola di Rienzi, th) #Rival_Sisters (The Rival Sisters, a Poem in Three Cantos | 1813) #Rivals_RBS (The Rivals: A Comedy | First performed in 1776 at Covent Garden Theatre. Upon reading the play, Mitford) #RobinsonCrusoe_DD (The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner" | 1719 | Full title: The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of Yo) #Rome_ThreeMonths_Graham (Three Months Passed in the Mountains East of Rome: during the year 1819 | | Illustrated with engravings. Source: Google Books and WorldCAT. Mitford mentions) #Romeo_Juliet (Romeo and Juliet | 1597 | Shakespeare's tragedy, first published in 1597 in a quarto edition that is missi) #Rosamund_Story_of_Plague_BR (Rosamund. A Story of the Plague | 1835) #Rosedale_OV (Rosedale [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village .) #RoundheadsDa_FT (The Roundhead's Daughter | 1839 | A short story by Mitford set during the English Republican Era and the Restorati) #Rule_a_Wife_play (Rule a Wife and Have a Wife | Play was first performed in 1624 and first printed in 1640) #RusticT_FT (The Rustic Toilet | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Ruth_OT (Book of Ruth | Book of the Old Testament, considered a historical book in the canon of the the ) #Sacrifice_Isabel (The Sacrifice Of Isabel: A Poem. | 1816 | Mitford rated it an elegant Poem.) #Sad_Shepherd_BJ (The Sad Shepherd: Or, A Tale of Robin Hood, a Fragment | Appeared in this form in 1783, edited by Francis Godolphin Waldron and Peter Wha) #Sadak_Kalasrade (Sadak and Kalasrade; or, The Waters of Oblivion. A Romantic Opera in Two Acts | 1835 | Title page indicates Printed for the proprietor by S.G. Fairbrother, Lyceum Prin) #Sailors_Wedding_BR (The Sailor's Wedding | 1835 | This story was also published in English Annual for 1835.) #Sardanapalus_play (Sardanapalus: A Tragedy | 1821 | Published together with The Two Foscari and Cain.) #Sc_SirAllan_FT (Scotland. Sir Allan and His Dog | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Scenery_1810 (Sonnet, On Being Requested to Write on Scottish Scenery. | 1810 | 1810 sonnet. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerabl) #SeaSide_Recollections_OV (Sea-side Recollections [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832.) #SecretCell_1811 (The Secret Cell. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Selected_Stories_from_OV_Blackie (Selected Stories from Our Village [Blackie and Sons, Ltd., n.d., 1920s?] Mary Russell Mitford Biography [Selected Stories from Our Village, Blackie edition, n.d. 1920s?] Hannah Lucy Cousin Mary Ellen A Village Beau The Vicar's Maid The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Grace Neville Olive Hathaway A Quiet Gentlewoman The Two Valentines The Village Schoolmistress Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Mole-Catcher Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. The Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint The China Jug The Election The Two Sisters Hopping Bob the Incendiary. A Country Tale The Cousins The Residuary Legatee Early Recollections. Caroline Cleveland A Moonlight Adventure | 1919-12-31—1929-12-31 | This edition of Our Village selections appears to have been published for the ju) #Self_Control (Self Control: A Novel | 1811 | First edition published anonymously.) #Sense_S (Sense and Sensibility | 1811 | 3 volumes. Published anonymously as by a Lady. Mitford rated it very good.) #Sermons_Chalmers (Sermons preached in the Tron Church, Glasgow | 1819 | Likely the new sermons that Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on 2 July 18) #Sermons_RRussell (Manuscript sermons | Unpublished manuscript sermons by Mitford's grandfather. Mitford owns a copy, wh) #Shakespeare_Times_nonfict (Shakespeare and His Times: Including the Biography of the Poet; Criticisms on his Genius and Writings; A New Chronology of the Plays; A Disquisition on the Object of His Sonnets; And a History of the Manners, Customs, and Amusements, Superstitions, Poetry, and Elegant Literature of His Age | 1817 | Mitford considered it good materials badly used. In journal entry Sunday 19th Ma) #Sicilian_MM (The Sicilian | 1798 | Minerva Press.) #Siege_DS_1827 (The Siege | 1827 | Dramatic sketch which appeared in Lady's Magazine of September 30, 1822:462-66 a) #Silchester_1811 (Silchester. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Simple_Story (A Simple Story | 1820 | Mitford mentions reading this novel in her Journal on October 16, 1820.) #Sintram_Comp (Sintram and His Companions: A Romance | ) #Sir_Fr_Darrell (Sir Francis Darrell; or, the Vortex. A Novel | ) #SirPFrancisDenied (Sir Philip Francis denied!: a letter addressed to the British nation | 1817 | James Wilmot's niece Olivia Wilmot Serres claims that her uncle wrote The Letter) #Sketch_FriendsFam (A Sketch of my Friend's Family | 1817 | Full title: A Sketch of my Friend's Family: intended to suggest some practical h) #SketchBook_WI (The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. | 1819) #Sketches_France (Sketches descriptive of Italy, in the years 1816 and 1817; with a brief account of travels in various parts of France and Switzerland, in the same years. | 1820 | Mitford may have read this in the summer of 1820.) #Sketches_of_America (Sketches of America: a Narrative of a Journey of Five Thousand Miles Through the Eastern and Western States of America; Contained in Eight Reports Addressed to the Thirty-nine English Families by whom the Author was Deputed, in June 1817, to Ascertain Whether Any, and What Part of the United States Would be Suitable for Their Residence. With Remarks on Mr. Birkbeck’s Notes and Letters | 1818 | The work’s subtitle refers to to Morris Birkbeck’s Notes on a Journey in America) #SoldierBoy (Soldier Boy | Author and date unidentified.) #Song_FairestThings_1811 (Song. ["The fairest things are those which live"] | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #Specimen_Nat_poem (The Monks and the Giants: Prospectus and Specimen of an Intended National Work; Intended to Comprise the Most Interesting Particulars Relating to King Arthur and his Round Table, by William and Robert Whistlecraft of Stow-Market, in Suffolk, Harness and Collar Makers | 1818 | An ottava rima burlesque written by John Hookham Frere under the nom de plume Wi) #Specimens_BritPoets (Specimens of the British Poets | 1819 | 7 vols. The Essay on English Poetry which prefaces this collection, forms part o) #Specimens_Dramatic_Poets (Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, Who Lived About the Time of Shakespeare. With Notes | 1808) #Speeches_Windham (Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Windham | 1812 | 3 volumes. Full title: Speeches in Parliament of the Right Honourable William Wi) #SpencesAnec (Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters of Books and Men. Collected from the Conversation of Mr. Pope, and Other Eminent Persons of His Time | 1820 | Spence’s Anecdotes were collected and published posthumously in 1820 by Edmund M) #St_Botany (Poetical Introduction to the Study of Botany (1801)) #Stephen_Lane_BR (Stephen Lane, the Butcher | 1835) #StMagdaleneAM (The Fast of St. Magdalen: A Romance | ) #StolenL_FT (The Stolen Letter | 1840 | A poem by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of National ) #Stories_AmLife (Stories of American Life; by American Writers | 1830) #StoryWoods_FT (A Story of the Woods | 1838 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Stranger_play (The Stranger) #Sun_Set_MRM (Sun-Set. | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1811 Poems, mentioned in a ) #Suppers_and_Balls_BR (Suppers and Balls | 1835) #Surgeons_Courtship_BR (The Surgeon's Courtship | 1835 | This story was previously published in The Royal Lady's Magazine, and Archives o) #Sybille_1810 (Sybille. A Northumbrian Tale. | 1810 | 1810 narrative poem. Mitford's introductory argument indicates that she wrote th) #TaleOf2Cities (A Tale of Two Cities | 1859) #Tales_Heart (Tales of the heart | 1820 | ) #TalesHall_GC (Tales of the Hall | 1819 | 2 vols. Verse. Last work published in his lifetime.) #TalesofFancy_Shipwreck (Tales of Fancy: The Shipwreck | 1816 | The Shipwreck makes up volume one of the three-volume work. The remaining volume) #TalesofmyLandord_3rd (Tales of my Landlord, 3rd series | 1819 | 4 volumes. The Bride of Lammermoor made up volumes one and two and Legend of Mon) #TalesofWHS (Tales of Wonder, of Humour, and of Sentiment; Original and Translated | 1818 | 2 vols. Volume 1 contains Zelis, The Weathercock, The Magic Dollar Volume 2 cont) #Talking_Gentleman_OV (The Talking Gentleman [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the nineteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182) #Talking_Lady_LM (The Talking Lady [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-01 | This sketch was later collected in volume one of Our Village .) #Talking_Lady_OV (The Talking Lady [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eleventh story in volume one of Our Village in 1824.) #Tartuffe (Tartuffe | Controversial play by the French author Molière. The title character poses as a ) #Temora_Ossian (Temora, an Ancient Epic Poem, in Eight Books: Together with Several Other Epic Poems, Composed by Ossian the Son of Fingal. Translated from the Galic language, by James Macpherson. | 1763 | Galic is Macpherson’s spelling.) #Tempest_play (The Tempest) #Tenants_of_Beechgrove_OV (The Tenants of Beechgrove [Our Village version] The Lady of Beechgrove | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the second story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. I) #TenYearsatTripoli (Miss Tully | 1816 | Mitford may have read the third edition, published in 1819.) #TestofLove (The Testament of Love | In Mitford’s time, believed to be the work of Chaucer. Now attributed to Thomas ) #Th_d_Gr (Théâtre des Grecs) #ThaddeusofWarsaw (Thaddeus of Warsaw | 1803 | ) #The_Election_OV (The Election [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It was first publish) #The_Town_BR (The Town | 1835) #The_Two_Foscari (The Two Foscari: A Tragedy | 1821 | A historical blank verse tragedy by Lord Byron that tells the story of Doge Fosc) #TheChalkpit_OV (The Chalk-Pit [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It has previously b) #TheCousins_OV (The Cousins [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It had been publishe) #TheIncendiary_OV (The Incendiary. A Country Tale [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in the fifth and final volume of Our Village in 1832. It wa) #TheRunaway_OV (The Runaway [Our Village version] | 1832 | This sketch appeared in volume five of Our Village in 1832. It was also publishe) #TheTambourine_BR (The Tambourine | 1835) #TheVillage (The Village [alternate title sometimes assigned to Our Village, the story, Our Village version | Alternative title assigned to the sketch, Our Village, in the 1884 Blackwood's E) #ThreeMusketeers (The Three Musketeers | 1846 | First published in serial form in the French newspaper Le Siècle between March a) #ToHenryRichardson_1827 (To Mr. Henry Richardson. On His Performance of Admetus in the Alcestis of Euripides as Represented in the Original Greek at Reading School [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 4 in the 1827 collection (pages 296-97) .) #Tom_Cordery_LM (Tom Cordery [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Tom_Cordery_OV (Tom Cordery [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the fifteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824) #ToMay_1810 (To May. 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #TomCrib (Tom Crib’s Memorial to Congress | 1819) #ToMissPorden_1827 (To Miss Porden: On Her Poem of COEUR DE LION [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 8 in the 1827 collection (page 301) . Also appeared in the August 17, 182) #TomJones_HF (The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling | 1749) #ToMrHaydon_Nature_1827 (To Mr. Haydon, On a Study From Nature [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 9 in the 1827 collection (page 302) . Also appeared in the July 19, 1817 ) #TomThumb_Fielding (Scriblerus Secundus | 1730 | First performed outside the Haymarket Theatre in September 1730.) #TomThumb_OHaraAdpt (Kane O’Hara | Comic opera adapation of Henry Fielding’s Tom Thumb . Roach’s edition of 1811 fe) #Touchy_Lady_OV (The Touchy Lady [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Tour_Alet (A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse | 1816 | Full title: A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse by Dom Claude Lancelot, Auth) #Tour_Normandy (Account of a Tour in Normandy | 1820) #Town_v_Country_CS (Town versus Country | 1835) #TraitsNature (Traits of Nature | 1812 | 5 volumes.) #Travels_Acerbi (Travels through Sweden, Finland, and Lapland to the North Cape, in the Years 1798 and 1799. | 1802) #Travels_Belzoni (Narrative of the Operations and Recent Discoveries within the Pyramids, Temples, Tombs, and Excavations, in Egypt and Nucia | 1821 | Mitford mentions reading this in her Journal on September 29, 1821.) #Travels_NGermany (Travels in the North of Germany | 1820 | Full title: Travels in the North of Germany: Describing the Present State of the) #Travels_Nile (Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771 1772, and 1773 | 1790) #Travels_Nubia (Travels in Nubia | 1819 | Published by the Association for Promoting the Discovery for the Interior Parts ) #Travels_TheoDucas (Travels of Theodore Ducas | 1822 | Full title: The Travels of Theodore Ducas of Candia in Various Countries in Euro) #TwelfthNight_Shkspr (Twelfth Night | 1601 | A late dark romantic comedy in Shakespeare’s oeuvre, with first recorded product) #Two_N_Kinsmen (Two Noble Kinsmen | Tragicomedy likely first performed around 1613 and first printed in 1634; genera) #Two_Sisters_OV (Two Sisters [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830. It had previously be) #Two_Valentines_OV (The Two Valentines [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #TwoHoflandLandscapes_1827 (On Two of Mr. Hofland's Landscapes [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 12 in the 1827 collection (page 305) .) #TwoPapers (Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and an Essay [ . . . ] attributed to the Editor of the Ex-m-n-r | Satire aimed at Leigh Hunt. Full title: Two Papers: A Theatrical Critique, and a) #TwopennyPost (Intercepted Letters, or, the Twopenny Post-bag | 1813) #Undine (Undine: A Romance, translated from the German | Mitford would likely have been familiar with the 1818 translation by George Soan) #Valerius_novel (Valerius: A Roman Story | ) #Vampyre (The Vampyre: A Tale | 1819 | ) #Venice_Preserved_play (Venice Preserv’d | 1683 | First performed in 1683 and printed soon thereafter. Frequently re-staged until ) #Verses_with_Primroses_1810 (Verses, Sent with Some Primroses to a Young Lady, who had Promised us a Visit Early in the Spring. Feb. 7, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #VeryWoman_play (A Very Woman; or the Prince of Tarent | Authorship and date contested.) #Vespers_of_Palermo (The Vespers of Palermo: A Tragedy in Five Acts | 1823) #Vicar_Wakefield (The Vicar of Wakefield: A Tale. Supposed to be Written by Himself | 1766) #Vicars_Maid_OV (The Vicar's Maid [Our Village version] The Vicar's Maid: A Village Story [Amulet version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was also published) #Vicissitudes (Vicissitudes | Author and date unidentified. May be On the Origin and Vicissitudes of Literatur) #VictoryOfBarrosa_1811 (On the Victory of Barrosa. To Mrs. Taylor, of Hartley Court, Near Reading, Mother of Colonel Norcott. | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #View_Europe (View of the State of Europe during the Middle Ages | 1818 | 3 volumes. Mitford rated it good.) #Village_Beau_OV (A Village Beau [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventeenth story in volume one of Our Village in 18) #Village_Schoolmistress_OV (The Village Schoolmistress [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was also publish) #Village_Tales_and_Sketches (Village Tales and Sketches Biographical Preface [Village Tales and Sketches, Nimmo edition, 1881] Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw A Great Farmhouse Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Walks in the Country. Violeting A Country Cricket Match Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer Walks in the Country. Nutting Walks in the Country. The Visit Walks in the Country. The Copse Walks in the Country. The Wood Walks in the Country. The Dell Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Titled here A Morning Ramble] A Village Schoolmistress Whitsun-Eve Our Maying Dora Creswell Children of the Village. The Magpies Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. Harry Lewington Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Foster-Mother The Lost Keys [Retitled here "the Lost Key"] | 1881 | Edited collection of Our Village sketches, consisting mostly but not exclusively) #VillageA_FT (The Village Amanuensis | 1840 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Virginius_play (Virginius) #Visit_LaTrappe (A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe, in 1817 | 1818 | Full title: A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe in 1817 With Notes Taken Durin) #Visit_Paris (A Visit To Paris in 1814: Being a Review of the Moral, Political, Intellectual, and Social Condition of the French Capital | 2nd edition, corrected and with a new preface referring to late events, publishe) #Visit_to_Lucy_OV (A Visit to Lucy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared as the twelfth story in volume two of Our Village in 1826. ) #Visit_to_Richmond_OV (A Visit to Richmond [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Vivian (Vivian | 1812) #VoiceofPraise_MRM (The Voice of Praise | 1811 | Poem by Mary Russell Mitford, first collected in her 1810 Poems, mentioned in a ) #Voyage_PolarExp (A Voyage of Discovery, Made Under the Orders of the Admiralty, in his Majesty's ships Isabella and Alexander for the purpose of exploring Baffin's Bay, and Enquiring into the possibility of a North-West Passage. | 1819) #VoyagePG_WH (A Voyage up the Persian Gulf, and a Journey Overland from India to England, in 1817 | 1819 | ) #Wager_FT (Florence. The Wager | 1837 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Walk_Switz1816 (A Walk Through Switzerland in September 1816 | 1818) #Walk_Through_Village_OV (A Walk Through the Village [Our Village version] | 1826 | This was the first sketch to appear in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Walks_Country_LM (Walks in the Country [Lady's Magazine subseries versions] The Copse The Hard Summer Nutting Violeting Number IX Wood-Cutting | | Title given to the popular series of sketches written by Mitford for The Lady's ) #Walks_Country_OV (Walks in the Country [Our Village subseries versions] The Copse The Cowslip Ball The Dell The Fall of the Leaf The First Primrose Frost and Thaw Hannah Bint The Hard Summer Nutting The Old House at Aberleigh The Shaw Violeting The Visit The Wood | 1824—1830 | A popular subseries within Our Village, republished or adapted from the periodic) #Walks_Cowslip_Ball_OV (Walks in the Country. The Cowslip Ball [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the thirteenth story volume one of Our Village in 1824. ) #Walks_Fall_of_Leaf_OV (Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf | 1830 | This sketch appeared in the fourth volume of Our Village in 1830.) #Walks_First_Primrose_OV (Walks in the Country. The First Primrose [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the seventh story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It ) #Walks_Frost_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost | The first part of the Frost and Thaw sketch that was sometimes republished singl) #Walks_Frost_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the third story volume one of Our Village in 1824. It wa) #Walks_Hannah_Bint_OV (Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Walks_Hard_Summer_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VII. The Hard Summer [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-09 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Walks_Hard_Summer_OV (Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the eighteenth story in volume one of Our Village in 182) #Walks_NoIX_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-01 | This sketch was later published as The Visit in volume one of Our Village . In t) #Walks_Nutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. VIII. Nutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-11 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Walks_Nutting_OV (Walks in the Country. Nutting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-first story in volume one of Our Village in 1) #Walks_Old_House_Aberleigh_OV (Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Walks_Thaw_OV (Walks in the Country. Thaw | The brief second part of Frost and Thaw that was sometimes republished singly in) #Walks_TheCopse_LM (Walks in the Country X. The Copse [Lady's Magazine version] | 1824-05 | This sketch appeared in The Lady's Magazine in May 1824 as the tenth installment) #Walks_TheCopse_OV (Walks in the Country. The Copse [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It was first publishe) #Walks_TheDell_OV (Walks in the Country. The Dell [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Walks_TheShaw_OV (Walks in the Country. The Shaw [Our Village version] | 1830 | This sketch appeared in volume four of Our Village in 1830.) #Walks_TheVisit_OV (Walks in the Country. The Visit [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the twenty-third story volume one of Our Village in 1824) #Walks_TheWood_OV (Walks in the Country. The Wood [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826. It consists of the se) #Walks_Violeting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. III. Violeting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-04 | This sketch was later published in volume one of Our Village .) #Walks_Violeting_OV (Walks in the Country. Violeting [Our Village version] | 1824 | This sketch appeared as the tenth story in volume one of Our Village in 1824. It) #Walks_WoodCutting_LM (Walks in the Country, No. IX. Wood-Cutting [Lady's Magazine version] | 1823-05 | This sketch appeared in the May 1823 issue of the Lady's Magazine. Passages of W) #Wallace_MHpoem (Wallace: or, The fight of Falkirk. A Metrical Romance | 1809) #Wallace_play (Wallace: an historical tragedy in five acts | 1820 | Performed at Covent Garden in November 1820; William Macready performed the titl) #WalpoleltrstoCole (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and others | 1818 | Full title: Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole, to the Rev. William Cole and o) #WalpoletoMontagu (Letters from the Hon. Horace Walpole to George Montagu, Esq. from the year 1736, to the year 1770: Now First Published from the Originals in the Possession of the Editor | 1818 | A second edition appears in 1819.) #Walsingham (Walsingham | 1797 | Full title: Walsingham, or the Pupil of Nature: A Domestic Story. Reprinted in 1) #Walton_Lives (The Lives of Dr. John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Mr. Richard Hooker, Mr. George Herbert and Dr. Robert Sanderson. | Walton had written biographical sketches of Donne, Wotton, Hooker and Herbert wh) #Wanderer (The Wanderer, a Poem | 1820 | Mitford mentions in her Journal that MacFarlane sent her his poem in her on Augu) #Warbeck_Wolfstein_MH (Warbeck of Wolfstein | 1820) #Wardle_Death_1810 (To G. L. Wardle, Esq., on the Death of His Child. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title not republished in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable) #Warlock_Play (The Warlock of the Glen: A Melo-drama in Two Acts | 1820 | MRM saw this play in December 1820 at Covent Garden Theatre.) #WashingtonEpic_TN (Washington; or Liberty Restored. A Poem in Ten Books | Epic poem about George Washington published in 1809. Only Baltimore editions now) #Watch_1811 (The Watch. | 1811 | 1811 poem. This poem is reprinted in Romanticism: An Anthology, ed. Duncan Wu.) #WatlingtonH (Watlington Hill; A Poem | | First printed version of this long narrative poem.) #WatlingtonH_1827 (Watlington Hill: A Descriptive Poem | 1827 | 1827 published version of long narrative poem, originally published separately i) #Waverley (Waverley; or ’Tis Sixty Years Since | | Mitford mentions reading Waverley in her Journal in 1819 and 1820.) #WaytoKeepHim (The Way to Keep Him. A Comedy in Five Acts | 1770 | Full title: The Way to Keep Him: a Comedy in five acts, as it is performed at th) #WealthofNations (An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations | 1761) #Wedding_Ring_DS_1827 (The Wedding Ring: A Dramatic Sketch | 1827 | Dramatic sketch. Appeared in Forget Me Not, a Christmas and New Year's present f) #WestminsterAbbey_1811 (Westminster Abbey | 1811 | 1811 poem.) #WestonGrove_1827 (Weston Grove: A Descriptive Poem [1827 version] | 1827 | Narrative poem) #Wheat_Hoeing_OV (Wheat Hoeing. A Morning Ramble [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828. It was later called) #Wheel_Fortune_play (Wheel of Fortune | 1805 | Play first performed in 1795 and printed 1805.) #WhiteCottage_AM (The White Cottage | 1817 | Full title: The White Cottage. A Tale.. Mitford rated it too dismal.) #Whiteknights_Desc_TCH (A Descriptive Account of the Mansion and Gardens of White-Knights: A Seat of His Grace the Duke of Marlborough. By Mrs. Hofland. Illustrated with twenty-three engravings, from pictures taken on the spot by T.C. Hofland | 1819 | Printed by T.C. Hofland for the 6th Duke of Marlbourough; publisher and printer ) #WhitsunEve_OV (Whitsun-Eve [Our Village version] | 1828 | This sketch appeared in volume three of Our Village in 1828.) #Widows_Dog_CS (The Widow's Dog | 1835) #Wild_Oats (Wild Oats | 1791 | Play featuring naval characters, a complex marriage plot, and a fictional theatr) #William_and_Hannah_BR (William and Hannah | 1835) #Willow_1810 (The Willow. Translated from the French of J. J. Rousseau. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #WinterEve_JH (Winter Evening's Tales | 1820 | 2 vols. Full title: Winter Evening's Tales, collected among the cottagers in the) #WinterNts_ND (Winter Nights; Or, Fire-side Lucubrations | 1820) #Winters_Tale_play (The Winter’s Tale | 1623 | Classed as a dark comedy or romance play, The Winter’s Tale was likely written a) #WinterScenery_1810 (Winter Scenery. January, 1809. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #WksPainting_JR (The Works of Jonathan Richardson | 1773 | Full title: The Works of Mr. Jonathan Richardson. Consisting of I. The theory of) #WmHerbert_1810 (To the Hon. William Herbert | 1810 | 1810 poem; serves as dedication to the volume and appears before the Table of Co) #WmTell_play (William Tell | 1825) #Woman_MB (Woman, or Minor maxims | 1818 | In 2 volumes. Full title: Woman, or Minor maxims. A Sketch. Minerva Press.) #WomanHater_play (The Woman Hater | 1607) #Women_CM (Women: Or Pour et Contre. A Tale | 1818 | Mitford records that she don't like it much--too dismal.In Journal Saturday 27 M) #Wonders_NW (The Wonders of the Little World | 1678 | Full title: Wonders of the Little World; or, a General History of Man: displayin) #Woodcutter_FT (The Woodcutter | 1839 | A short story by Mary Russell Mitford. Also collected in Finden's Tableaux of Na) #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_Crissy (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy, 1841] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841] Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1841 | This edition of Mitford's works omits the Preface to volume one of Our Village, ) #Works_MRM_ProseVerse_CrissyMarkley (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse [Crissy & Markley, 1844] Biographical Sketch of MRM [Works of Mary Russell Mitford, Crissy, 1841 and Crissy&Markley, 1846] Preface to Our Village, volume 1 Our Village [sketch, Our Village version] Hannah Walks in the Country. Frost and Thaw Modern Antiques A Great Farmhouse Lucy Walks in the Country. The First Primrose Bramley Maying Cousin Mary Walks in the Country. Violeting The Talking Lady Ellen Walks in the Country. The Cowslip-Ball A Country Cricket Match Tom Cordery An Old Bachelor A Village Beau Walks in the Country. The Hard Summer The Talking Gentleman Mrs. Mosse Walks in the Country. Nutting Aunt Martha Walks in the Country. The Visit A Parting Glance at Our Village Preface to Our Village, volume 2 A Walk Through the Village The Tenants of Beechgrove Early Recollections. The French Teacher Walks in the Country. The Copse The Touchy Lady Jack Hatch Early Recollections. My School-Fellows Walks in the Country. The Wood The Vicar's Maid Marianne Early Recollections. The English Teacher A Visit to Lucy Doctor Tubb The Black Velvet Bag Walks in the Country. The Dell Early Recollections. French Emigrants The Inquisitive Gentleman Walks in the Country. The Old House at Aberleigh Early Recollections. My Godfather The Old Gipsy Little Rachel Early Recollections. My Godfather's Manoeuvering The Young Gipsy Introduction. Extracts from Letters Grace Neville A New-Married Couple Olive Hathaway A Christmas Party A Quiet Gentleman The Two Valentines A Country Apothecary Wheat-Hoeing. A Morning Ramble The Village Schoolmistress Fanny's Fairings The Chalk-Pit Whitsun-Eve Jessy Lucas A Country Barber Hay-Carrying Our Maying An Admiral on Shore The Queen of the Meadow Dora Creswell The Bird-Catcher My Godmothers The Mole-Catcher Mademoiselle Therese Lost and Found Introductory Letter, to Miss W. Lost and Won Children of the Village. Amy Lloyd Early Recollections. Cobbler Over the Way Patty's New Hat Children of the Village. The Magpies Cottage Names Walks in the Country. The Shaw Little Miss Wren Walks in the Country. Hannah Bint Children of the Village. The Robins Early Recollections. The General and His Lady Going to the Races The China Jug Early Recollections. Tom Hopkins Louisa Children of the Village. Harry Lewington The Election A Castle in the Air The Two Sisters Children of the Village. Pride Shall Have a Fall Rosedale Walks in the Country. The Fall of the Leaf Children of the Village. The Two Dolls Hopping Bob A Visit to Richmond Ghost Stories Matthew Shore | 1846 | Re-issue of the 1841 James Crissy edition. As with the earlier edition, this one) #Works_of_MRM (The Works of Mary Russell Mitford: Prose and Verse; viz. Our Village, Belford Regis, Country Stories, Finden's Tableaux, Foscari, Julian, Rienzi, Charles the First | 1841 | Published only in Philadelphia and presumably not an edition authorized by Mitfo) #WorksEngPoets_1810 (The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowpwer, with prefaces, biographical and critical | 1810 | ) #Wreaths_1810 (The Wreaths. A Tale. Taken from the "Curiosities of Literature." Addressed to a Young Lady. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #WrightvClement (Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement | 1819 | Full title: Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for certain libels publishe) #WrittenAfterVisit_1827 (Written After a Visit From Some Friends [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 19 in the 1827 collection (page 313).) #WrittenJuly1824_1827 (Written July, 1824 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 5 in the 1827 collection (page 298) .) #WrittenOct1825_1827 (Written October, 1825 [1827 version] | 1827 | Sonnet 22 in the 1827 collection (page 316) . Also appeared in the 1827 Amulet a) #WutheringHts (Wuthering Heights | 1847) #Year_Day (A Year and a Day | 1818 | 2 vols. Full title: A Year and a Day. A Novel. Written under the pseudonym Madam) #YellowButterfly_1810 (To a Yellow Butterfly. April 8, 1808. | 1810 | 1810 poem. This title also published in Poems: Second Edition with Considerable ) #Young_Gipsy_OV (The Young Gipsy [Our Village version] | 1826 | This sketch appeared in volume two of Our Village in 1826.) #Young_Market_Woman_BR (The Young Market Woman | 1835 | This story is a revised version of what was originally published in The Forget M) #Young_Painter_BR (The Young Painter | 1835) #Young_Sculptor_BR (The Young Sculptor | 1835) #YoungPhil_CS (The Young Philosopher. A Novel | 1798 | Mitford rated it pretty but too dismal. Source: Journal.) #Zaire_play (Zaíre | 1732) #Zapolya (Zapolya | 1819 | Subtitled: A Dramatic Poem ] . . .] in humble imitation of The Winter's Tale of ) #Zuma (Zuma, or the Tree of Health | 1818 | Full title: Zuma, or the Tree of Health. To which are added, the fair Pauline,--) #AlterationsOfState (Alterations of State: Sacred Kingship in the English Reformation | 2002) #BannedThtr_Findlater (Banned!: A Review of Theatrical Censorship in Britain | 1967) #Calumniated_Rep (Calumniated Republicans and the Hero of Shelley's "Charles the First" | 2007) #CensorshipEnglDrama (The Censorship of English Drama, 1824-1901 | 2010) #coles_Thesis (William Allan Coles | 1956-08 | Coles’ doctoral dissertation presented to the Department of English at Harvard U) #Cromwell_Soldier (Cromwell: Soldier | 2004) #Lestrange_Letters (The Life of Mary Russell Mitford, Authoress of "Our Village," Etc, Related in a Selection from Her Letters to Her Friends | 1870) #Needham_PapersRCL (Francis Needham | Francis Needham’s extensive and unpublished handwritten papers, which we estimat) #OED (The Oxford English Dictionary Online | 2016 | Multi-volume descriptive dictionary of the English language, first published in ) #PossibleScotlands (Possible Scotlands: Walter Scott and the Story of Tomorrow | 2005) #Review_55Days (Review: 55 Days | 2012-10-25) #RomDrama_Hoagwood (Romantic Drama and Historical Hermeneutics | 1998) #ShelleyPB_ReimanEd (Shelley's Poetry and Prose | 2002 | Scholarly edition of Shelley's major works.) #ShelleysLate (Shelley's Late Fragmentary Plays: 'Charles the First' and the 'Unfinished Drama' | 2009) #Talking_Demon ('The Talking Demon': Liberty and Liberal Ideologies in the 1820s British Stage | 2006) #Writing_Eng_Rep (Writing the English Republic: Poetry, Rhetoric, and Politics, 1627-60 | 1999) (structured bibliographic citation) contains a structured bibliographic citation, in which only bibliographic sub-elements appear and in a specified order. [3.12.1. Methods of Encoding Bibliographic References and Lists of References 2.2.7. The Source Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (citation list) contains a list of bibliographic citations of any kind. [3.12.1. Methods of Encoding Bibliographic References and Lists of References 2.2.7. The Source Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] work_MRM serial_MRM schol contains or references some other bibliographic item which is related to the present one in some specified manner, for example as a constituent or alternative version of it. [3.12.2.7. Related Items] If the @target attribute on is used, the relatedItem element must be empty A relatedItem element should have either a 'target' attribute or a child element to indicate the related bibliographic item points to the related bibliographic element by means of an absolute or relative URI reference \S+ (verse line) contains a single, possibly incomplete, line of verse. [3.13.1. Core Tags for Verse 3.13. Passages of Verse or Drama 7.2.5. Speech Contents] Abstract model violation: Lines may not contain lines or lg elements. (line group) contains one or more verse lines functioning as a formal unit, e.g. a stanza, refrain, verse paragraph, etc. [3.13.1. Core Tags for Verse 3.13. Passages of Verse or Drama 7.2.5. Speech Contents] An lg element must contain at least one child l, lg, or gap element. Abstract model violation: Lines may not contain line groups. (speech) contains an individual speech in a performance text, or a passage presented as such in a prose or verse text. [3.13.2. Core Tags for Drama 3.13. Passages of Verse or Drama 7.2.2. Speeches and Speakers] contains a specialized form of heading or label, giving the name of one or more speakers in a dramatic text or fragment. [3.13.2. Core Tags for Drama] (stage direction) contains any kind of stage direction within a dramatic text or fragment. [3.13.2. Core Tags for Drama 3.13. Passages of Verse or Drama 7.2.4. Stage Directions] indicates the kind of stage direction. Suggested values include: 1] setting; 2] entrance; 3] exit; 4] business; 5] novelistic; 6] delivery; 7] modifier; 8] location; 9] mixed setting describes a setting. entrance describes an entrance. exit describes an exit. business describes stage business. novelistic is a narrative, motivating stage direction. delivery describes how a character speaks. modifier gives some detail about a character. location describes a location. mixed more than one of the above [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (TEI corpus) contains the whole of a TEI encoded corpus, comprising a single corpus header and one or more <TEI> elements, each containing a single text header and a text. [4. Default Text Structure 15.1. Varieties of Composite Text] (version) specifies the version number of the TEI Guidelines against which this document is valid. [\d]+(\.[\d]+){0,2} (automatically generated text division) indicates the location at which a textual division generated automatically by a text-processing application is to appear. [3.9.2. Index Entries] specifies what type of generated text division (e.g. index, table of contents, etc.) is to appear. Sample values include: 1] index; 2] toc; 3] figlist; 4] tablist [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (text language) describes the languages and writing systems identified within the bibliographic work being described, rather than its description. [3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information 10.6.6. Languages and Writing Systems] (main language) supplies a code which identifies the chief language used in the bibliographic work. (other languages) one or more codes identifying any other languages used in the bibliographic work. (use) supplies an XPath selection pattern using the syntax defined in . The XPath pattern is relative to the context given in @match, which will either be a sibling attribute in the case of `<citeStructure>` or on the parent `<citeStructure>` in the case of `<citeData>`. specifies a regular expression against which the values of other attributes can be matched. specifies a replacement pattern, that is, the skeleton of a relative or absolute URI containing references to groups in the @matchPattern which, once subpattern substitution has been performed, complete the URI. (TEI header) supplies descriptive and declarative metadata associated with a digital resource or set of resources. [2.1.1. The TEI Header and Its Components 15.1. Varieties of Composite Text] (file description) contains a full bibliographic description of an electronic file. [2.2. The File Description 2.1.1. The TEI Header and Its Components] (title statement) groups information about the title of a work and those responsible for its content. [2.2.1. The Title Statement 2.2. 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Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc. 2.2. The File Description] (distributor) supplies the name of a person or other agency responsible for the distribution of a text. [2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc.] (release authority) supplies the name of a person or other agency responsible for making a work available, other than a publisher or distributor. [2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc.] (identifier) supplies any form of identifier used to identify some object, such as a bibliographic item, a person, a title, an organization, etc. in a standardized way. [13.3.1. Basic Principles 2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc. 2.2.5. The Series Statement 3.12.2.4. Imprint, Size of a Document, and Reprint Information] categorizes the identifier, for example as an ISBN, Social Security number, etc. Suggested values include: 1] ISBN; 2] ISSN; 3] DOI; 4] URI; 5] VIAF; 6] ESTC; 7] OCLC ISBN International Standard Book Number: a 13- or (if assigned prior to 2007) 10-digit identifying number assigned by the publishing industry to a published book or similar item, registered with the International ISBN Agency. ISSN International Standard Serial Number: an eight-digit number to uniquely identify a serial publication. DOI Digital Object Identifier: a unique string of letters and numbers assigned to an electronic document. URI Uniform Resource Identifier: a string of characters to uniquely identify a resource, following the syntax of RFC 3986. VIAF A data number in the Virtual Internet Authority File assigned to link different names in catalogs around the world for the same entity. ESTC English Short-Title Catalogue number: an identifying number assigned to a document in English printed in the British Isles or North America before 1801. OCLC OCLC control number (record number) for the union catalog record in WorldCat, a union catalog for member libraries in the Online Computer Library Center global cooperative. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (availability) supplies information about the availability of a text, for example any restrictions on its use or distribution, its copyright status, any licence applying to it, etc. [2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc.] (status) supplies a code identifying the current availability of the text. free (free) the text is freely available. unknown (unknown) the status of the text is unknown. restricted (restricted) the text is not freely available. contains information about a licence or other legal agreement applicable to the text. [2.2.4. Publication, Distribution, Licensing, etc.] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (series statement) groups information about the series, if any, to which a publication belongs. [2.2.5. The Series Statement 2.2. The File Description] (notes statement) collects together any notes providing information about a text additional to that recorded in other parts of the bibliographic description. [2.2.6. The Notes Statement 2.2. The File Description] (source description) describes the source(s) from which an electronic text was derived or generated, typically a bibliographic description in the case of a digitized text, or a phrase such as "born digital" for a text which has no previous existence. [2.2.7. The Source Description] (fully-structured bibliographic citation) contains a fully-structured bibliographic citation, in which all components of the TEI file description are present. [3.12.1. Methods of Encoding Bibliographic References and Lists of References 2.2. The File Description 2.2.7. The Source Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (encoding description) documents the relationship between an electronic text and the source or sources from which it was derived. [2.3. The Encoding Description 2.1.1. The TEI Header and Its Components] (schema reference) describes or points to a related customization or schema file [2.3.10. The Schema Specification] the identifier used for the customization or schema (project description) describes in detail the aim or purpose for which an electronic file was encoded, together with any other relevant information concerning the process by which it was assembled or collected. [2.3.1. The Project Description 2.3. The Encoding Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (sampling declaration) contains a prose description of the rationale and methods used in selecting texts, or parts of a text, for inclusion in the resource. [2.3.2. The Sampling Declaration 2.3. The Encoding Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (editorial practice declaration) provides details of editorial principles and practices applied during the encoding of a text. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 2.3. The Encoding Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (correction principles) states how and under what circumstances corrections have been made in the text. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] indicates the degree of correction applied to the text. high the text has been thoroughly checked and proofread. medium the text has been checked at least once. low the text has not been checked. unknown the correction status of the text is unknown. indicates the method adopted to indicate corrections within the text. silent corrections have been made silently markup corrections have been represented using markup (normalization) indicates the extent of normalization or regularization of the original source carried out in converting it to electronic form. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] indicates the method adopted to indicate normalizations within the text. silent normalization made silently markup normalization represented using markup (quotation) specifies editorial practice adopted with respect to quotation marks in the original. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] On , either the @marks attribute should be used, or a paragraph of description provided (quotation marks) indicates whether or not quotation marks have been retained as content within the text. none no quotation marks have been retained some some quotation marks have been retained all all quotation marks have been retained (hyphenation) summarizes the way in which hyphenation in a source text has been treated in an encoded version of it. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (end-of-line) indicates whether or not end-of-line hyphenation has been retained in a text. all all end-of-line hyphenation has been retained, even though the lineation of the original may not have been. some end-of-line hyphenation has been retained in some cases. hard all soft end-of-line hyphenation has been removed: any remaining end-of-line hyphenation should be retained. none all end-of-line hyphenation has been removed: any remaining hyphenation occurred within the line. (segmentation) describes the principles according to which the text has been segmented, for example into sentences, tone-units, graphemic strata, etc. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (standard values) specifies the format used when standardized date or number values are supplied. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (interpretation) describes the scope of any analytic or interpretive information added to the text in addition to the transcription. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration] specifies editorial practice adopted with respect to punctuation marks in the original. [2.3.3. The Editorial Practices Declaration 3.2. Treatment of Punctuation] indicates whether or not punctation marks have been retained as content within the text. none no punctuation marks have been retained some some punctuation marks have been retained all all punctuation marks have been retained indicates the positioning of punctuation marks that are associated with marked up text as being encoded within the element surrounding the text or immediately before or after it. internal punctuation marks found at the start or end of a marked up text component are included within its surrounding element; external punctuation marks found at the start or end of a marked up text component appear immediately before or after the surrounding element (tagging declaration) provides detailed information about the tagging applied to a document. [2.3.4. The Tagging Declaration 2.3. The Encoding Description] indicates whether the element types listed exhaustively include all those found within <text>, or represent only a subset. (element usage) documents the usage of a specific element within a specified document. [2.3.4. The Tagging Declaration] (generic identifier) specifies the name (generic identifier) of the element indicated by the tag, within the namespace indicated by the parent <namespace> element. specifies the number of occurrences of this element within the text. (with unique identifier) specifies the number of occurrences of this element within the text which bear a distinct value for the global @xml:id attribute. (namespace) supplies the formal name of the namespace to which the elements documented by its children belong. [2.3.4. The Tagging Declaration] specifies the full formal name of the namespace concerned. \S+ (rendition) supplies information about the rendition or appearance of one or more elements in the source text. [2.3.4. The Tagging Declaration] where CSS is used, provides a way of defining pseudo-elements, that is, styling rules applicable to specific sub-portions of an element. Sample values include: 1] first-line; 2] first-letter; 3] before; 4] after [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ contains a selector or series of selectors specifying the elements to which the contained style description applies, expressed in the language specified in the @scheme attribute. (style definition language declaration) specifies the name of the formal language in which style or renditional information is supplied elsewhere in the document. The specific version of the scheme may also be supplied. [2.3.5. The Default Style Definition Language Declaration] (references declaration) specifies how canonical references are constructed for this text. [2.3.6.3. Milestone Method 2.3. The Encoding Description 2.3.6. The Reference System Declaration] (citation structure) declares a structure and method for citing the current document. [3.11.4. Declaring Reference Systems 16.2.5.4. Citation Structures] (delimiter) supplies a delimiting string preceding the structural component. .+ (match) supplies an XPath selection pattern using the syntax defined in which identifies a set of nodes which are citable structural components. The expression may be absolute (beginning with `/`) or relative. @match on a <citeStructure> without a <citeStructure> parent must be an absolute XPath. If it is relative, its context is set by the @match of the parent <citeStructure>. An XPath in @match on the outer must start with '/'. An XPath in @match must not start with '/' except on the outer . (unit) describes the structural unit indicated by the <citeStructure>. Sample values include: 1] book; 2] chapter; 3] entry; 4] poem; 5] letter; 6] line; 7] section; 8] verse; 9] volume [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (citation data) specifies how information may be extracted from citation structures. [3.11.4. Declaring Reference Systems 16.2.5.4. Citation Structures] (property) A URI indicating a property definition. \S+ (canonical reference pattern) specifies an expression and replacement pattern for transforming a canonical reference into a URI. [2.3.6.3. Milestone Method 2.3.6. The Reference System Declaration 2.3.6.2. Search-and-Replace Method] (prefix definition) defines a prefixing scheme used in teidata.pointer values, showing how abbreviated URIs using the scheme may be expanded into full URIs. [16.2.3. Using Abbreviated Pointers] supplies a name which functions as the prefix for an abbreviated pointing scheme such as a private URI scheme. The prefix constitutes the text preceding the first colon. [a-z][a-z0-9\+\.\-]* (list of prefix definitions) contains a list of definitions of prefixing schemes used in teidata.pointer values, showing how abbreviated URIs using each scheme may be expanded into full URIs. [16.2.3. Using Abbreviated Pointers] (reference state) specifies one component of a canonical reference defined by the milestone method. [2.3.6.3. Milestone Method 2.3.6. The Reference System Declaration] specifies the fixed length of the reference component. (delimiter) supplies a delimiting string following the reference component. (classification declarations) contains one or more taxonomies defining any classificatory codes used elsewhere in the text. [2.3.7. The Classification Declaration 2.3. The Encoding Description] (taxonomy) defines a typology either implicitly, by means of a bibliographic citation, or explicitly by a structured taxonomy. [2.3.7. The Classification Declaration] (category) contains an individual descriptive category, possibly nested within a superordinate category, within a user-defined taxonomy. [2.3.7. The Classification Declaration] (category description) describes some category within a taxonomy or text typology, either in the form of a brief prose description or in terms of the situational parameters used by the TEI formal <textDesc>. [2.3.7. The Classification Declaration] (geographic coordinates declaration) documents the notation and the datum used for geographic coordinates expressed as content of the <geo> element elsewhere within the document. [2.3.8. The Geographic Coordinates Declaration] supplies a commonly used code name for the datum employed. Suggested values include: 1] WGS84 (World Geodetic System); 2] MGRS (Military Grid Reference System); 3] OSGB36 (ordnance survey great britain); 4] ED50 (European Datum coordinate system) WGS84 (World Geodetic System) a pair of numbers to be interpreted as latitude followed by longitude according to the World Geodetic System. MGRS (Military Grid Reference System) the values supplied are geospatial entity object codes, based on OSGB36 (ordnance survey great britain) the value supplied is to be interpreted as a British National Grid Reference. ED50 (European Datum coordinate system) the value supplied is to be interpreted as latitude followed by longitude according to the European Datum coordinate system. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (unit declarations) provides information about units of measurement that are not members of the International System of Units. [2.3.9. The Unit Declaration] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (unit definition) contains descriptive information related to a specific unit of measurement. [2.3.9. The Unit Declaration] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. defines how to calculate one unit of measure in terms of another. [2.3.9. The Unit Declaration] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. indicates a source unit of measure that is to be converted into another unit indicated in @toUnit. \S+ the target unit of measurement for a conversion from a source unit referenced in @fromUnit. \S+ (application information) records information about an application which has edited the TEI file. [2.3.11. The Application Information Element] provides information about an application which has acted upon the document. [2.3.11. The Application Information Element] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. supplies an identifier for the application, independent of its version number or display name. supplies a version number for the application, independent of its identifier or display name. [\d]+[a-z]*[\d]*(\.[\d]+[a-z]*[\d]*){0,3} (text-profile description) provides a detailed description of non-bibliographic aspects of a text, specifically the languages and sublanguages used, the situation in which it was produced, the participants and their setting. [2.4. The Profile Description 2.1.1. The TEI Header and Its Components] (note on hand) describes a particular style or hand distinguished within a manuscript. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] contains a summary or formal abstract prefixed to an existing source document by the encoder. [2.4.4. Abstracts] (creation) contains information about the creation of a text. [2.4.1. Creation 2.4. The Profile Description] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (language usage) describes the languages, sublanguages, registers, dialects, etc. represented within a text. [2.4.2. Language Usage 2.4. The Profile Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] (language) characterizes a single language or sublanguage used within a text. [2.4.2. Language Usage] (identifier) Supplies a language code constructed as defined in BCP 47 which is used to identify the language documented by this element, and which may be referenced by the global @xml:lang attribute. specifies the approximate percentage of the text which uses this language. (text classification) groups information which describes the nature or topic of a text in terms of a standard classification scheme, thesaurus, etc. [2.4.3. The Text Classification] (keywords) contains a list of keywords or phrases identifying the topic or nature of a text. [2.4.3. The Text Classification] identifies the controlled vocabulary within which the set of keywords concerned is defined, for example by a <taxonomy> element, or by some other resource. \S+ (classification code) contains the classification code used for this text in some standard classification system. [2.4.3. The Text Classification] identifies the classification system in use, as defined by, e.g. a <taxonomy> element, or some other resource. \S+ (category reference) specifies one or more defined categories within some taxonomy or text typology. [2.4.3. The Text Classification] identifies the classification scheme within which the set of categories concerned is defined, for example by a <taxonomy> element, or by some other resource. \S+ (calendar description) contains a description of the calendar system used in any dating expression found in the text. [2.4. The Profile Description 2.4.5. Calendar Description] (calendar) describes a calendar or dating system used in a dating formula in the text. [2.4.5. Calendar Description] (correspondence description) contains a description of the actions related to one act of correspondence. [2.4.6. Correspondence Description] (correspondence action) contains a structured description of the place, the name of a person/organization and the date related to the sending/receiving of a message or any other action related to the correspondence. [2.4.6. Correspondence Description] describes the nature of the action. Suggested values include: 1] sent; 2] received; 3] transmitted; 4] redirected; 5] forwarded sent information concerning the sending or dispatch of a message. received information concerning the receipt of a message. transmitted information concerning the transmission of a message, i.e. between the dispatch and the next receipt, redirect or forwarding. redirected information concerning the redirection of an unread message. forwarded information concerning the forwarding of a message. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (correspondence context) provides references to preceding or following correspondence related to this piece of correspondence. [2.4.6. Correspondence Description] (non-TEI metadata) provides a container element into which metadata in non-TEI formats may be placed. [2.5. Non-TEI Metadata] (revision description) summarizes the revision history for a file. [2.6. The Revision Description 2.1.1. The TEI Header and Its Components] (change) documents a change or set of changes made during the production of a source document, or during the revision of an electronic file. [2.6. The Revision Description 2.4.1. Creation 11.7. Identifying Changes and Revisions] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (target) points to one or more elements that belong to this change. \S+ describes a particular script distinguished within the description of a manuscript or similar resource. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] groups a number of change descriptions associated with either the creation of a source text or the revision of an encoded text. [2.6. The Revision Description 11.7. Identifying Changes and Revisions] indicates whether the ordering of its child <change> elements is to be considered significant or not indicates whether the passage being quoted is defective, i.e. incomplete through loss or damage. unknown inapplicable identifies the text types or classifications applicable to this item by pointing to other elements or resources defining the classification concerned. \S+ (manuscript description) contains a description of a single identifiable manuscript or other text-bearing object such as an early printed book. [10.1. Overview] Only one is allowed as a child of . (catchwords) describes the system used to ensure correct ordering of the quires or similar making up a codex, incunable, or other object typically by means of annotations at the foot of the page. [10.3.7. Catchwords, Signatures, Secundo Folio] The element should not be used outside of msDesc. (dimensions) contains a dimensional specification. [10.3.4. Dimensions] The element may appear once only The element may appear once only The element may appear once only indicates which aspect of the object is being measured. Sample values include: 1] leaves; 2] ruled; 3] pricked; 4] written; 5] miniatures; 6] binding; 7] box [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ contains any single measurement forming part of a dimensional specification of some sort. [10.3.4. Dimensions] (height) contains a measurement measured along the axis at a right angle to the bottom of the object. [10.3.4. Dimensions] (depth) contains a measurement from the front to the back of an object, perpendicular to the measurement given by the <width> element. [10.3.4. Dimensions] (width) contains a measurement of an object along the axis parallel to its bottom, e.g. perpendicular to the spine of a book or codex. [10.3.4. Dimensions] (heraldry) contains a heraldic formula or phrase, typically found as part of a blazon, coat of arms, etc. [10.3.8. Heraldry] (locus) defines a location within a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object typically as a (possibly discontinuous) sequence of folio references. [10.3.5. References to Locations within a Manuscript] (scheme) identifies the foliation scheme in terms of which the location is being specified by pointing to some <foliation> element defining it, or to some other equivalent resource. \S+ (from) specifies the starting point of the location in a normalized form, typically a page number. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (to) specifies the end-point of the location in a normalized form, typically as a page number. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (locus group) groups a number of locations which together form a distinct but discontinuous item within a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object. [10.3.5. References to Locations within a Manuscript] (scheme) identifies the foliation scheme in terms of which all the locations contained by the group are specified by pointing to some <foliation> element defining it, or to some other equivalent resource. \S+ (material) contains a word or phrase describing the material of which the object being described is composed. [10.3.2. Material and Object Type] describes the function or use of the material in relation to the object as a whole. Sample values include: 1] binding; 2] endband; 3] slipcase; 4] support; 5] tie [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ identifies one or more elements to which the metamark applies. \S+ (object type) contains a word or phrase describing the type of object being referred to. [10.3.2. Material and Object Type] (origin date) contains any form of date, used to identify the date of origin for a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object. [10.3.1. Origination] (origin place) contains any form of place name, used to identify the place of origin for a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object. [10.3.1. Origination] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (second folio) marks the word or words taken from a fixed point in a codex (typically the beginning of the second leaf) in order to provide a unique identifier for it. [10.3.7. Catchwords, Signatures, Secundo Folio] The element should not be used outside of msDesc. (signatures) contains discussion of the leaf or quire signatures found within a codex or similar object. [10.3.7. Catchwords, Signatures, Secundo Folio] The element should not be used outside of msDesc. (stamp) contains a word or phrase describing a stamp or similar device. [10.3.3. Watermarks and Stamps] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (watermark) contains a word or phrase describing a watermark or similar device. [10.3.3. Watermarks and Stamps] (manuscript identifier) contains the information required to identify the manuscript or similar object being described. [10.4. The Manuscript Identifier] An msIdentifier must contain either a repository or location. (institution) contains the name of an organization such as a university or library, with which a manuscript or other object is identified, generally its holding institution. [10.4. The Manuscript Identifier] (repository) contains the name of a repository within which manuscripts or other objects are stored, possibly forming part of an institution. [10.4. The Manuscript Identifier] (collection) contains the name of a collection of manuscripts or other objects, not necessarily located within a single repository. [10.4. The Manuscript Identifier] (alternative identifier) contains an alternative or former structured identifier used for a manuscript or other object, such as a former catalogue number. [10.4. The Manuscript Identifier] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (alternative name) contains any form of unstructured alternative name used for a manuscript or other object, such as an ocellus nominum, or nickname. [10.4. The Manuscript Identifier] (colophon) contains the colophon of an item: that is, a statement providing information regarding the date, place, agency, or reason for production of the manuscript or other object. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] (explicit) contains the explicit of a item, that is, the closing words of the text proper, exclusive of any rubric or colophon which might follow it. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] (filiation) contains information concerning the manuscript or other object's filiation, i.e. its relationship to other surviving manuscripts or other objects of the same text or contents, its protographs, antigraphs and apographs. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] (final rubric) contains the string of words that denotes the end of a text division, often with an assertion as to its author and title, usually set off from the text itself by red ink, by a different size or type of script, or by some other such visual device. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] contains the incipit of a manuscript or similar object item, that is the opening words of the text proper, exclusive of any rubric which might precede it, of sufficient length to identify the work uniquely; such incipits were, in former times, frequently used a means of reference to a work, in place of a title. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] (manuscript contents) describes the intellectual content of a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object either as a series of paragraphs or as a series of structured manuscript items. [10.6. Intellectual Content] (manuscript item) describes an individual work or item within the intellectual content of a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] (structured manuscript item) contains a structured description for an individual work or item within the intellectual content of a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] (rubric) contains the text of any rubric or heading attached to a particular manuscript item, that is, a string of words through which a manuscript or other object signals the beginning of a text division, often with an assertion as to its author and title, which is in some way set off from the text itself, typically in red ink, or by use of different size or type of script, or some other such visual device. [10.6.1. The msItem and msItemStruct Elements] contains an overview of the available information concerning some aspect of an item or object (for example, its intellectual content, history, layout, typography etc.) as a complement or alternative to the more detailed information carried by more specific elements. [10.6. Intellectual Content] (physical description) contains a full physical description of a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object optionally subdivided using more specialized elements from the model.physDescPart class. [10.7. Physical Description] (object description) contains a description of the physical components making up the object which is being described. [10.7.1. Object Description] (form) a short project-specific name identifying the physical form of the carrier, for example as a codex, roll, fragment, partial leaf, cutting etc. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (support description) groups elements describing the physical support for the written part of a manuscript or other object. [10.7.1. Object Description] (material) a short project-defined name for the material composing the majority of the support Suggested values include: 1] paper; 2] parch (parchment); 3] mixed paper parch (parchment) mixed [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (support) contains a description of the materials etc. which make up the physical support for the written part of a manuscript or other object. [10.7.1. Object Description] (collation) contains a description of how the leaves, bifolia, or similar objects are physically arranged. [10.7.1. Object Description] (foliation) describes the numbering system or systems used to count the leaves or pages in a codex or similar object. [10.7.1.4. Foliation] (condition) contains a description of the physical condition of the manuscript or object. [10.7.1.5. Condition] (layout description) collects the set of layout descriptions applicable to a manuscript or other object. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] (layout) describes how text is laid out on the page or surface of the object, including information about any ruling, pricking, or other evidence of page-preparation techniques. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] (columns) specifies the number of columns per page (textual streams) indicates the number of streams per page, each of which contains an independent textual stream (ruled lines) specifies the number of ruled lines per column (written lines) specifies the number of written lines per column (description of hands) contains a description of all the different hands used in a manuscript or other object. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] (hands) specifies the number of distinct hands identified within the manuscript (typeface description) contains a description of the typefaces or other aspects of the printing of an incunable or other printed source. [10.7.2.1. Writing] (typographic note) describes a particular font or other significant typographic feature distinguished within the description of a printed resource. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] (script description) contains a description of the scripts used in a manuscript or other object. [10.7.2.1. Writing] (music notation) contains description of type of musical notation. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] (decoration description) contains a description of the decoration of a manuscript or other object, either as in paragraphs, or as one or more <decoNote> elements. [10.7.3. Bindings, Seals, and Additional Material] (note on decoration) contains a note describing either a decorative component of a manuscript or other object, or a fairly homogenous class of such components. [10.7.3. Bindings, Seals, and Additional Material] (additions) contains a description of any significant additions found within a manuscript or other object, such as marginalia or other annotations. [10.7.2. Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations] (binding description) describes the present and former bindings of a manuscript or other object, either as a series of paragraphs or as a series of distinct <binding> elements, one for each binding of the manuscript. [10.7.3.1. Binding Descriptions] (binding) contains a description of one binding, i.e. type of covering, boards, etc. applied to a manuscript or other object. [10.7.3.1. Binding Descriptions] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (contemporary) specifies whether or not the binding is contemporary with the majority of its contents unknown inapplicable (seal description) describes the seals or similar items related to the object described, either as a series of paragraphs or as a series of <seal> elements. [10.7.3.2. Seals] (seal) contains a description of one seal or similar applied to the object described [10.7.3.2. Seals] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (contemporary) specifies whether or not the seal is contemporary with the item to which it is affixed unknown inapplicable (accompanying material) contains details of any significant additional material which may be closely associated with the manuscript or object being described, such as non-contemporaneous documents or fragments bound in with it at some earlier historical period. [10.7.3.3. Accompanying Material] (history) groups elements describing the full history of a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object. [10.8. History] (origin) contains any descriptive or other information concerning the origin of a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object. [10.8. History] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (provenance) contains any descriptive or other information concerning a single identifiable episode during the history of a manuscript, manuscript part, or other object after its creation but before its acquisition. [10.8. History] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (acquisition) contains any descriptive or other information concerning the process by which a manuscript or manuscript part or other object entered the holding institution. [10.8. History] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (additional) groups additional information, combining bibliographic information about a manuscript or other object, or surrogate copies of it, with curatorial or administrative information. [10.9. Additional Information] (administrative information) contains information about the present custody and availability of the manuscript or other object, and also about the record description itself. [10.9.1. Administrative Information] (recorded history) provides information about the source and revision status of the parent manuscript or object description itself. [10.9.1. Administrative Information] (source) describes the original source for the information contained with a manuscript or object description. [10.9.1.1. Record History] (custodial history) contains a description of a manuscript or other object's custodial history, either as running prose or as a series of dated custodial events. [10.9.1.2. Availability and Custodial History] (custodial event) describes a single event during the custodial history of a manuscript or other object. [10.9.1.2. Availability and Custodial History] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (surrogates) contains information about any representations of the manuscript or other object being described which may exist in the holding institution or elsewhere. [10.9. Additional Information] (manuscript part) contains information about an originally distinct manuscript or part of a manuscript, which is now part of a composite manuscript. [10.10. Manuscript Parts] (manuscript fragment) contains information about a fragment described in relation to a prior context, typically as a description of a virtual reconstruction of a manuscript or other object whose fragments were catalogued separately [10.11. Manuscript Fragments] supplies the value of a date or time in some custom standard form. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the earliest possible date for the event in some custom standard form. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the latest possible date for the event in some custom standard form. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates the starting point of the period in some custom standard form. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates the ending point of the period in some custom standard form. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ supplies a pointer to some location defining a named point in time with reference to which the datable item is understood to have occurred \S+ supplies a pointer to a <calendar> element or other means of interpreting the values of the custom dating attributes. \S+ supplies the value of a date or time in a standard form. [0-9.,DHMPRSTWYZ/:+\-]+ specifies the earliest possible date for the event in standard form, e.g. yyyy-mm-dd. [0-9.,DHMPRSTWYZ/:+\-]+ specifies the latest possible date for the event in standard form, e.g. yyyy-mm-dd. [0-9.,DHMPRSTWYZ/:+\-]+ indicates the starting point of the period in standard form. [0-9.,DHMPRSTWYZ/:+\-]+ indicates the ending point of the period in standard form. [0-9.,DHMPRSTWYZ/:+\-]+ (organization name) contains an organizational name. [13.2.2. Organizational Names] @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. Suggested values include: 1] #Baylor (Baylor University, Armstrong Browning Library | Holds 3 letters, among correspondence written and received by the Victorian poet); 2] #BerkshireRO (Berkshire Record Office | Holds 11 letters, as well as transcripts of Mitford papers--possibly of material); 3] #BL (British Library | After 1973, the British Library formally separated from the British Museum, but ); 4] #BostonPL (Boston Public Library | Holds 17 letters.); 5] #CambridgeFM (Cambridge University: Fitzwilliam Museum | Holdings unverified. No record at the Cambridge FW library archive. National Arc); 6] #Duke (Duke University Rubenstein Library | Holds unspecified number of letters from MRM to Sir John Easthope, from 1807 to ); 7] #EtonColl (Eton College | Holdings unverified. No record found at library, but National Archives lists the); 8] #FloridaSt (Florida State University Special Collections | Holds 4 letters from MRM to unspecified recipients.); 9] #GlasgowWL (The Women’s Library, Glasgow | 2 letters from MRM, 1835 and 1852.); 10] #HarvardHL (Houghton Library, Harvard | Holds over 300 letters, including letters from Benjamin Robert Haydon to Mitford); 11] #HuntingtonL (Huntington Library | Holds over 252 letters of MRM spanning 1821 to 1855, including letters to Franci); 12] #IowaSC (University of Iowa Special Collections | Possibly 50 letters here, both from and to MRM, including letters from Francis B); 13] #MassHS (Massachusetts Historical Society | 10 letters from Catherine Maria Sedgwick to MRM, apparently in microfilm.); 14] #NYPL (New York Public Library | 74 letters in 4 collections here, spanning 1814 to 1854. 70 letters in the Henry); 15] #OxfordBalliol (Oxford University, Balliol College Archives | 2 letters from Elizabeth Barrett Browning to MRM.); 16] #OxfordBodleian (Oxford University, Bodleian Library | 83 letters from MRM to Thomas Noon Talfourd.); 17] #ReadingCL (Reading Central Library | The principal archive of Mary Russell Mitford’s personal papers and related docu); 18] #RuskinL (John Ruskin Library, Lancaster | Holds 11 letters from John James Ruskin to MRM, written between 1848 and 1854.); 19] #Rylands (The John Rylands Library | The John Rylands Library at the University of Manchester holds 180 of Mitford’s ); 20] #ScotlandNL (National Library of Scotland, Manuscript Collections | Holdings unverified. No record found at this library, but the National Archives ); 21] #Texas (University of Texas, Ransom Center | 1 letter from Elizabeth Barrett Browning.); 22] #UReading (University of Reading Special Collections | Holdings unverified. Something may be here, but there’s an apparently erroneous ); 23] #UVa (University of Virginia Special Collections | 20+ letters from MRM to various recipients including William Cox Bennet and Fran); 24] #WellesleyL (Wellesley College, Margaret Clapp Library, Special Collections | Robert Browning's letters to Elizabeth Barrett, presumably some of which mention); 25] #WWTrust (Wordsworth Trust | 14 letters from MRM, spanning 1825 to 1843, 13 of which are to Francis Wrangham ); 26] #YaleL (Yale University, Beineke Library | Two collections: The first contains 119 letters spanning 1817 to 1851, from MRM ); 27] #Ackermann_pub (R. Ackermann | R. Ackermann was a publishing firm located in London founded by Rudolf Ackermann); 28] #AJValpy_pub (A. J. Valpy | A. J. Valpy was a publishing firm founded and run by A. J. (John) Valpy. The fir); 29] #Americans (Americans | People of the former British colonies recently become the United States in Mitfo); 30] #AMS_pub (AMS Press | AMS Press is a publishing firm located in New York. Publisher of a facsimile rep); 31] #Anstruthers (the Anstruther family | The family of Col. Anstruther. Associated with Reading. Includes Colonel Anstrut); 32] #Baldwin_Cradock_Joy_pub (Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy | Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy was a publishing firm founded by publisher, printer, a); 33] #Behr_pub (B. Behr's Library | B. Behr's Library was a publishing firm located in Berlin, mainly specializing i); 34] #Belfords_Clarke_pub (Belfords, Clarke & Co. | Belfords, Clarke & Co. was a publishing firm located in Chicago; American publis); 35] #Bell_Daldy_pub (Bell & Daldy | Bell & Daldy was a publishing firm located in London, founded by George Bell, wh); 36] #Bentley_pub (R. Bentley | R. Bentley was a publishing firm founded by Richard Bentley after the dissolutio); 37] #Billiard_Club (Billiard Club | A club in Readingof which George Mitford and Charles Fyshe Palmer are members.); 38] #Blackie_pub (Blackie and Son, Ltd. | Blackie and Son, Ltd. was a publishing firm with offices originally located in G); 39] #Blackwood_pub (William Blackwood and Sons | William Blackwood and Sons was a publishing firm located in Edinburgh and London); 40] #Bliss_pub (E. Bliss | E. Bliss was a publishing firm located in New York founded and run by Elam Bliss); 41] #Bluestockings (Bluestockings | A circle of female writers and intellectuals formed around the salons hosted by ); 42] #Bodys (the Body family | Mitford mentions the Bodys as a family in her Journal of 1819 - 1823. She visits); 43] #Bohn_pub (Henry G. Bohn | Henry G. Bohn was a publishing firm located in London and founded by George Henr); 44] #Books_for_Libraries_pub (Books for Libraries Press | Books for Libraries Press was a publishing firm located in Freeport, New York. P); 45] #Boston_Daily_Adv_pub (Press of the Boston Daily Advertiser | Press of the Boston Daily Advertiser (or Boston Daily Advertiser Press) was a pu); 46] #Bourbon (House of Bourbon | . Dynasty that ruled France from 1589 to 1792 and from 1814 to 30.); 47] #Bow_Street_Runners (Bow Street Runners | Considered the first professional police force in London, and a precursor to the); 48] #Brent_family_hist (Brent family | Includes Joel, Lucy, and Lizzy.); 49] #British_Army (British Army | The principal land warfare force of the United Kingdom.); 50] #Brocas_family (Prominent ancient English family whose chief estate, Beaurepaire House, was located near Bramley. The family traces its lineage back to the age of William the Conqueror, and was in possession of many acres of land and cottages in the environs of Bramley since the the sixteenth century, including Beaurepaire House, Wokefield Park. During Mitford's lifetime, family members included Bernard Brocas and Harriet Brocas. | Prominent ancient English family whose chief estate, Beaurepaire House, was loca); 51] #Brookes (the Brooke family | A family who lived at Moore House, Shinfield: Mr. Brooke, Mrs. Brooke and their ); 52] #BroughtonDas (Misses Broughton | Unmarried daughters of the Broughton family.); 53] #Cadell_Davies_pub (T. Cadell and W. Davies | T. Cadell and W. Davies was a publishing firm founded by Thomas Cadell the elder); 54] #Caldwell_pub (H. M. Caldwell | H. M. Caldwell was a publishing firm with offices in Boston and New York with pr); 55] #Cambridge_Univ (Cambridge University | The University in Cambridge. The school was established in 1209.); 56] #Carey_Lea_Blanchard_pub (Carey, Lea and Blanchard | Carey, Lea and Blanchard was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia. Publishe); 57] #Cassell_pub (Cassell & Co. | Cassell & Co. was a publishing firm with offices in London and New York. Flouris); 58] #Cavaliers (Cavaliers | Colloquialism for the Monarchist faction in the English Civil Wars.); 59] #Century_pub (Century Co. | Century Co. was a publishing firm located in New York, founded in 1881. It began); 60] #Chancery (Court of Chancery | Court founded in Norman England, adjudicating equity cases with a tradition of l); 61] #Chartist_demonstrators (Chartists | Members of the Chartist movement working for political reform in Great Britain b); 62] #Chas_Tilt_pub (Charles Tilt | Charles Tilt was a publishing firm located in London with premises at Fleet Stre); 63] #Chatto_Windus_pub (Chatto and Windus | Chatto and Windus was a publishing firm located in London. Publisher of an 1875 ); 64] #Church_of_E (Church of England | . The English national church, generally adhering to the Anglican (Protestant) C); 65] #Clarendon_Press (Clarendon Press | Today refers to an imprint of Oxford University Press that specializes in academ); 66] #CockneyS (the Cockney School | Satirical term coined by an anonymous Blackwood’s article of October 1817 target); 67] #Colburn_Bentley_pub (Henry Colburn & Richard Bentley | Henry Colburn & Richard Bentley was a publishing firm located in London with pre); 68] #ColonnaFamily (Colonna family | Powerful aristocratic family in medieval and early modern Rome. Originating in t); 69] #Constable_pub (Archibald Constable | Archibald Constable was a publishing firm located in Edinburgh founded by Archib); 70] #Council_of_Ten (Council of Ten | The Council of Ten, sometimes known as the Ten, was one of the main governing bo); 71] #Court_of_Kings_Bench (Court of King’s Bench | One of the high courts of England that heard both criminal and civil cases. Loca); 72] #Crissy_Markley_pub (Crissy & Markley | Crissy & Markley was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia; James Crissy was); 73] #Crissy_pub (James Crissy | James Crissy was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia with premises at 4 Mi); 74] #Crowthers (the Crowthers | Contains Mr. Crowther and Mrs. Crowther); 75] #Dearsleys (the Dearsley family | A family who lived at Moore House, Shinfield.); 76] #Dent_pub (J. M. Dent | J. M. Dent was a publishing firm located in London, founded in 1888 by Joseph Ma); 77] #Dickinsons (the Dickinsons | Contains Charles Dickinson and Mrs. Dickinson.); 78] #Drovers (the Drover family | A family who, according to Francis Needham’s notes, lived on Minster Street in R); 79] #Dutton_pub (E. P. Dutton | E. P. Dutton was a publishing firm founded in 1852 by Edward Payson Dutton in Bo); 80] #Eastburn_Kirk_pub (Eastburn, Kirk & co. | Eastburn, Kirk & co. was a publishing firm located in New York, founded by James); 81] #Elton_Perkins_pub (Elton & Perkins | Elton & Perkins was a publishing firm located in New York. American publisher of); 82] #Eton (Eton College | Boarding school for boys, located in Eton, Berkshire.); 83] #Fairbrother_pub (S. G. Fairbrother | S. G. Fairbrother was a publishing firm affiliated with the Lyceum Print Office,); 84] #Folio_Society_pub (Folio Society | Folio Society is a publishing firm located in London, specializing in hard cover); 85] #Garrards (the Garrard family | Associated with Reading.); 86] #Garrett_pub (Garrett Press | Garrett Press, Inc. was a publishing firm located in New York. Publisher of a re); 87] #Geo_Bell_pub (George Bell & Sons | George Bell & Sons was a publishing firm located in London, founded by George Be); 88] #Gilley_pub (W. B. Gilley | W. B. Gilley was a publishing firm founded by William B. Gilley (1785?-1830) tha); 89] #H_Colburn_pub (Henry Colburn | Henry Colburn was a publishing firm founded by Henry Colburn. The firm was locat); 90] #Hampden_Club (Hampden Club | An organization of radical men’s political clubs founded by Major John Cartwrigh); 91] #Harper_Bros_pub (Harper Bros. | Harper Brothers was a publishing firm located in New York, founded by brothers J); 92] #Harrap_pub (George G. Harrap & Co., Ltd. | George G. Harrap & Co., Ltd. was a publishing firm located in London, founded by); 93] #Havell_Lib (Havell's Library | Subscription library. George Mitford purchases a half year subscription for Mary); 94] #Hawkes_family (the Hawkes family | Associated with Reading. May include Miss Hawkes, whom Mitford visits in 1819. S); 95] #Haywards (the Hayward family | Likely includes Mr. William Hayward the elder & his spouse Mrs. W. Hayward, a br); 96] #High_Court_of_Justice (High Court of Justice | he Commissioners of the High Court of Justice tried Charles I for treason. Those); 97] #Holdens (the Holdens | Potentially includes Miss Holden, John Holden, and Henry Holden. Mentioned by Mi); 98] #Holland_House_set (Holland House circle | In Mitford's time, Holland House in Kensington was the home of Henry Richard Vas); 99] #Holtons (The Holton family | Includes Paul Holton and his spouse Mrs. Holton. They lived in Wokingham and wer); 100] #House_Commons (House of Commons | The lower house of the bicameral Parliament, the Commons was established in the ); 101] #House_Lords (House of Lords | In Mitford's time, the upper house of the bicameral Parliament, of Great Britain); 102] #Hurst_Blackett_pub (Hurst & Blackett Publishers | Hurst & Blackett Publishers was a publishing firm located in London with premise); 103] #Hurst_pub (Hurst and Co. | Hurst and Co. was a publishing firm located in New York. Flourished 1870s to 191); 104] #Ilsley-Coursing-Soc (Ilsley Coursing Society | Hunting club frequented by George Mitford and friends, presumably located in Ils); 105] #ISIS_pub (ISIS Publishing, Ltd. | ISIS Publishing, Ltd. is a publishing firm located in London, specializing in la); 106] #Italians (Italians | People from Italy); 107] #Jacobites (Jacobites | Supporters of the Stuart cause. Named after the line of Jacob, that is, the desc); 108] #James_Fam (the James Family); 109] #JBLippincott_pub (J. B. Lippincott | J. B. Lippincott was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia. Publisher of a 1); 110] #JDicks_pub (J. Dicks | J. Dicks was a publishing firm founded by John Dicks and located in London with ); 111] #JDuncombe_pub (John Duncombe and Co. | John Duncombe and Co. (or J. Duncombe) was a publishing firm founded by John Dun); 112] #Jesuits (The Society of Jesus | A male religious congregation of the Catholic Church. Their missionary efforts b); 113] #John_Cumberland_pub (John Cumberland | John Cumberland was a publishing firm founded by John Cumberland (1787-1866) and); 114] #Joliffes (the Joliffe family | Surname variously spelled Joliffe and Jolliffe. Associated with Reading.); 115] #JRobinson_pub (J. Robinson | J. Robinson was a publishing firm located in Baltimore. First American publisher); 116] #Kemble_family (the Kembles | Includes Charles Kemble, his brother John Phillip Kemble, his sister Sarah Siddo); 117] #Lancastrians (House of Lancaster | The House of Lancaster, which had as its insignia the Red Rose, fought the Wars ); 118] #LdChamberlainsOfc (Office of the Lord Chamberlain | From 1737 to 1968, the official theater censor's office, overseen by the Lord Ch); 119] #Liebensroods (the Liebensrood family | The family of Mr. Liebensrood.); 120] #Longman_Hurst_ROB_pub (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown | Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown was a publishing firm located in London with); 121] #Longman_Rees_OBG_pub (Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green | Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green was a publishing firm located in London with ); 122] #Lords_Cricket_Ground (Lord's Cricket Ground | A cricket venue in St. John's Wood founded by Thomas Lord. It houses the Maryleb); 123] #Macmillan_pub (Macmillan & Co. | Macmillan is a publishing firm founded in 1843 by Daniel Macmillan and Alexander); 124] #Marsh_family (the Marsh family | The family of Harry Marsh and his spouse Mrs. Marsh. Associated with Reading.); 125] #Marshs_shop (Marsh's | Retail shop Mitford mentions patronizing in 1819. Source: Journal.); 126] #Marylebone_Cricket_Club (Marylebone Cricket Club | Founded in Londonin 1787, the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) is still in existenc); 127] #Medici (House of Medici | Dynasty that ruled various territories in Italy from 1434 to 1737, excepting in ); 128] #Minerva_Press (Minerva Press | Press operated by William Lane from 1790 to 1820. Minerva Press was a major publ); 129] #Mitfords (the Mitford family | Mary Russell Mitford and her parents.); 130] #Mitfords_Ma_Pa (George and Mary Mitford | Mary Russell Mitford's parents, George and Mary.); 131] #Monck_family (the Monck family | The family of John Berkeley Monck.); 132] #MPs (Members of Parliament | Members of Parliament); 133] #Murray_pub (John Murray | John Murray was a publishing firm located in London with premises at Fleet Stree); 134] #New_Model_Army (New Model Army | Parliamentary army founded in 1645; victor in the English Civil War.); 135] #Newberys (the Newbery family | The family of Jacob Newbery. Surname variously spelled Newbery and Newberry, alt); 136] #Newells (the Newells | Includes Mr. Newell and Mrs. Newell.); 137] #Nimmo_pub (William P. Nimmo & Co. | William P. Nimmo & Co. was a publishing firm located in Edinburgh; flourished 18); 138] #OxfordUP_pub (Oxford University Press | Oxford University Press is a publishing firm located in Oxford and London, the l); 139] #Palmerite (Palmerites | Supporters of Charles Fyshe Palmer in the Reading elections of March 16, 1820.); 140] #Parfitt_family (the Parfitt family | Lived at Farley Hill, where Mitford visited them.); 141] #Parliament_UK (Parliament | Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland; supreme ); 142] #Parliamentarians (Parlimentarians | Supporters of Cromwell and the parliamentary cause in the English Civil Wars. Al); 143] #Penguin_pub (Penguin Books | Penguin Books is a publishing firm with offices in London, New York, and through); 144] #Perrys (the Perrys | Likely includes James Perry and, before November 1821, his daughter Horatia Perr); 145] #Pius7_Court (Court of Pope Pius VII | Pope Pius VII and his Cardinals, from 1800 to 1823. The court was driven to exil); 146] #Prelacy (Prelacy | Colloquially, the Archbishops and bishops of the Church of England. Source: Brit); 147] #PrenticeHall_pub (Prentice Hall | Prentice Hall is a publishing firm located in New York, founded by Dr. Charles G); 148] #Presbyters (the Presybterian faction | Faction in Parliament during the English Civil War that sought peace and negotia); 149] #Privy_Council (Privy Council | Councillors to the British monarch.); 150] #Puritans (Puritans | Began in the 16th century as members of an anti-Catholic reform movement within ); 151] #regicides (Regicides | The Commissioners of the trial of Charles I who signed his death warrant on Janu); 152] #Richmond_Coach (Richmond Coach | Stage coach that travelled to Richmond.); 153] #Rigby_family (the Rigby family | Lived at Farley Hill, where Mitford visited them.); 154] #Rolandi_pub (Pierre Rolandi | Pierre Rolandi was a publishing firm located in Brussels. Publisher of Fragments); 155] #Royal_Academy (Royal Academy of Arts | The private arts institution The Royal Academy of Arts was founded by George III); 156] #Royalists (Royalists | Supporters of Charles I and the Crown in the English Civil Wars. Also called Cav); 157] #SampsonLow_MSR_pub (Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington | Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington was a publishing firm located in London); 158] #Saunders_Otley_pub (Saunders & Otley | Saunders & Otley was a publishing firm located in London. Flourished 1820s to 18); 159] #Schloss_pub (A. Schloss | A. Schloss was a publishing firm located in London founded by Albert Schloss. Pu); 160] #Scots (the people of Scotland); 161] #Scriblerians (Scriblerus Club | London organization of prominent writers, including Jonathan Swift, Alexander Po); 162] #Seeley_pub (Seeley and Co. | Seeley and Co. was a publishing firm located in London, active from the 1840s. I); 163] #Senate_Venetian (Venetian Senate | The upper chamber of the legislature in the Republic of Venice.); 164] #SFrench_pub (Samuel French | Samuel French is a publishing firm located in New York, founded by Samuel French); 165] #Sherwoods (the Sherwood family | The family of Mr. Sherwood, a local doctor. Associated with Reading.); 166] #Shuters (the Shuter family | Associated with Reading.); 167] #Sidgwick_Jackson_pub (Sidgwick & Jackson | Sidgwick & Jackson is a publishing firm located in London, founded in 1908. It i); 168] #Simms_MIntyre_pub (Simms and M'Intyre | Simms and M'Intyre was a publishing firm located in London. Publisher of an 1850); 169] #Simonds (the Simonds | Potentially the Symonds mentioned on December 19 1820. Containing Elizabeth Blac); 170] #Slades (the Slades | Mitford mentions the Slades in her letter to Thomas Noon Talfourd of June 21, 18); 171] #T_Egerton_pub (T. Egerton | T. Egerton was a publishing firm founded by publisher and bookseller Thomas Eger); 172] #T_Hookham_Jr_pub (T. Hookham, Jr. | T. Hookham, Jr. was a publishing firm founded by publisher, bookseller, and circ); 173] #T_Lowndes_pub (T. Lowndes | T. Lowndes was a publishing firm founded by Thomas Lowndes (1719-1784) and conti); 174] #Taylor_Hessey (Taylor and Hessey | London publishers at 93 Fleet Street, began around 1819. The firm included John ); 175] #THLacy_pub (T. H. [Thomas Hailes] Lacy | T. H. Lacy was a publishing firm founded by Thomas Hailes Lacy and located in Lo); 176] #Ticknor_Fields_pub (Ticknor & Fields | Ticknor & Fields was a publishing firm located in Boston, the successor to Tickn); 177] #Ticknor_Reed_Fields_pub (Ticknor, Reed, and Fields | Ticknor, Reed, and Fields was a publishing firm located in Boston founded by Wil); 178] #Tory (Tory Party | Originally, a 17th-century insulting nickname for those who supported James II’s); 179] #Tuppens (the Tuppen Family | The Tuppens include Captain William Tuppen and his spouse Mrs. Tuppen.); 180] #Twickenham_Coach (Twickenham Coach | Stage coach that travelled to Twickenham.); 181] #TWLaurie_pub (T. Werner Laurie | T. Werner Laurie was a publishing firm located in London. Publisher of a reprint); 182] #UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles); 183] #UnitLibrary_pub (Unit Library, Ltd. | The Unit Library, Ltd. was a publishing firm located in London and New York. Pub); 184] #Valpys (the Valpys | Dr. Richard Valpy and his family, including his first and second wife, his daugh); 185] #Voules (The Voules family); 186] #Walter_Scott_pub (Walter Scott Publishing Co. | Walter Scott Publishing Co. was a publishing firm located in London specializing); 187] #Webbs (the Webbs); 188] #Westbrooks (the Westbrooks | As recorded in her Journal, Mitford met the Westbrooks on 26 July 1820, and dine); 189] #Weylandite (Weylandites | Weyland supporters. On March 16, 1820, an election in Reading was held. There we); 190] #Whigs (the Whig party | In Mitford's lifetime, the Whigs developed into a formalized political party und); 191] #WhiteLion_pub (White Lion Publishers | White Lion Publishers was a publishing firm located in London. Flourished 1920s ); 192] #Whites (the White family | Associated with Reading.); 193] #Whittaker_GB_pub (G. B. Whittaker | G. B. Whittaker was a publishing firm located in London, founded and run by Geor); 194] #Whittaker_Treacher_pub (Whittaker, Treacher & Co. | Whittaker, Treacher & Co. was a publishing firm located in London. This company ); 195] #Whittakers_ALL (Whittaker publishing firms | Includes G. B. Whittaker, G. & W. B. Whittaker, Whittaker, Treacher & Co. publis); 196] #Whittakers_pub (G. & W. B. Whittaker | G. & W. B. Whittaker was a publishing firm located in London, founded and run by); 197] #Woodstock_Books_pub (Woodstock Books | Woodstock Books is a publishing firm located in Poole, England, and in New York,); 198] #Yorks (House of York | The House of York, symbolized by the White Rose, fought the Wars of the Roses wi); 199] #Attendants_R (attendants | Attendants and group of other unnamed characters in Rienzi.); 200] #Balfours_WS (Balfours of Burley | The Balfours of Burley are a family of characters in Walter Scott’s Old Mortalit); 201] #BlacksmithsChildren_OV (blacksmith's children | The blacksmith, a character introduced in the first sketch of Our Village , is s); 202] #BricklayersOV (bricklayers | Group of unnamed bricklayers who work for the whimsical man who renovates his ho); 203] #BustlingDamesChildren_OV (bustling dame's children | Group of unnamed children in Our Village.); 204] #Cabinet_makersOV (cabinetmakers | Characters who work for the whimsical wealthy man who renovates his house in Our); 205] #CarpentersOV (carpenters | Group of unnamed characters who work for the whimsical wealthy man who renovates); 206] #Chorus_R (Chorus | Group of unnamed characters who make up the Chorus in Rienzi.); 207] #Citizens_R (Citizens | Group of unnamed characters who are citizens of Rome in Rienzi.); 208] #Council_of_Ten_F (Council of Ten in Foscari | Fictional version of the historical Council of Tenas represented in Mitford's pl); 209] #CountryBoys_OV (country boys | Characters who appear in several Our Village stories. The narrator mentions her ); 210] #Cricketers_OV (cricketers | Characters who appear in the Our Village stories A Country Cricket Match and The); 211] #curatesFamily_OV (curate's family | Group of unnamed characters mentioned in the first sketch of Our Village . The c); 212] #Gardeners_OV (gardeners | Unnamed group of gardeners who appear throughout Our Village.); 213] #Guards_Jul (Guards | Group of unnamed characters who are guards in Julian.); 214] #Guards_R (Guards | Group of unnamed characters who are guards in Rienzi.); 215] #journeyman_shoemakers_OV (journeyman shoemakers | Group of three characters who are unnamed journeymen employed by the shoemaker i); 216] #Ladies_R (Ladies | Group of unnamed characters who are noble Ladies in Rienzi.); 217] #Lieutenants_children_OV (Lieutenant's children | Unnamed group of characters who are small children of the Lieutenant who watch t); 218] #Nobles_Jul (Nobles | Group of unnamed characters who are Nobles (i.e., noble gentlemen) in Julian.); 219] #Nobles_R (Nobles | Group of unnamed characters who are Nobles (i.e., noble gentlemen) of Rome in Ri); 220] #officer_Ch1 (Officers | Group of unnamed characters who are officers in Charles I.); 221] #Officers_family_OV (officer's family | Group of characters who are family members of the officer, introduced in the fir); 222] #Prelates_Jul (Prelates | Group of unnamed characters who are Prelates in Julian.); 223] #riders_OV (riders | Unnamed group of characters who are horseback, coach, and chaise riders whom the); 224] #Senate_Venetian_F (Venetian Senate in Foscari | Fictional version of the historical Venetian Senate as represented in Mitford's ); 225] #skating_spectators_OV (skating spectators | Unnamed group of characters who watch the Lieutenant skate on the pond in Frost ); 226] #sliding_urchins_OV (sliding urchins | The group of characters who are half a dozen ragged urchins, including Jack Rapl); 227] #TomC_hanged_men_OV; 228] #walkers_OV (walkers | Unnamed group of characters who walk on a cold day whom the narrator describes i); 229] #WheelersChildren_OV (wheeler's children | Group of unnamed characters who are children of the wheeler. In the titular sket); 230] #workmen_OV (workmen | Unnamed group of workmen in Our Village whom the renovator hires to work on his ); 231] #Danaides (the Danaides | In Greek mythology, the fifty daughters of Danaus. They are to condemned to spen); 232] #Muses (the Muses | In Greek (and later Roman) mythology, the nine goddesses who live on Mount Helic); 233] #Seraphim (Seraphim | The highest order of angel according to the Christian religion.) #Baylor (Baylor University, Armstrong Browning Library | Holds 3 letters, among correspondence written and received by the Victorian poet) #BerkshireRO (Berkshire Record Office | Holds 11 letters, as well as transcripts of Mitford papers--possibly of material) #BL (British Library | After 1973, the British Library formally separated from the British Museum, but ) #BostonPL (Boston Public Library | Holds 17 letters.) #CambridgeFM (Cambridge University: Fitzwilliam Museum | Holdings unverified. No record at the Cambridge FW library archive. National Arc) #Duke (Duke University Rubenstein Library | Holds unspecified number of letters from MRM to Sir John Easthope, from 1807 to ) #EtonColl (Eton College | Holdings unverified. No record found at library, but National Archives lists the) #FloridaSt (Florida State University Special Collections | Holds 4 letters from MRM to unspecified recipients.) #GlasgowWL (The Women’s Library, Glasgow | 2 letters from MRM, 1835 and 1852.) #HarvardHL (Houghton Library, Harvard | Holds over 300 letters, including letters from Benjamin Robert Haydon to Mitford) #HuntingtonL (Huntington Library | Holds over 252 letters of MRM spanning 1821 to 1855, including letters to Franci) #IowaSC (University of Iowa Special Collections | Possibly 50 letters here, both from and to MRM, including letters from Francis B) #MassHS (Massachusetts Historical Society | 10 letters from Catherine Maria Sedgwick to MRM, apparently in microfilm.) #NYPL (New York Public Library | 74 letters in 4 collections here, spanning 1814 to 1854. 70 letters in the Henry) #OxfordBalliol (Oxford University, Balliol College Archives | 2 letters from Elizabeth Barrett Browning to MRM.) #OxfordBodleian (Oxford University, Bodleian Library | 83 letters from MRM to Thomas Noon Talfourd.) #ReadingCL (Reading Central Library | The principal archive of Mary Russell Mitford’s personal papers and related docu) #RuskinL (John Ruskin Library, Lancaster | Holds 11 letters from John James Ruskin to MRM, written between 1848 and 1854.) #Rylands (The John Rylands Library | The John Rylands Library at the University of Manchester holds 180 of Mitford’s ) #ScotlandNL (National Library of Scotland, Manuscript Collections | Holdings unverified. No record found at this library, but the National Archives ) #Texas (University of Texas, Ransom Center | 1 letter from Elizabeth Barrett Browning.) #UReading (University of Reading Special Collections | Holdings unverified. Something may be here, but there’s an apparently erroneous ) #UVa (University of Virginia Special Collections | 20+ letters from MRM to various recipients including William Cox Bennet and Fran) #WellesleyL (Wellesley College, Margaret Clapp Library, Special Collections | Robert Browning's letters to Elizabeth Barrett, presumably some of which mention) #WWTrust (Wordsworth Trust | 14 letters from MRM, spanning 1825 to 1843, 13 of which are to Francis Wrangham ) #YaleL (Yale University, Beineke Library | Two collections: The first contains 119 letters spanning 1817 to 1851, from MRM ) #Ackermann_pub (R. Ackermann | R. Ackermann was a publishing firm located in London founded by Rudolf Ackermann) #AJValpy_pub (A. J. Valpy | A. J. Valpy was a publishing firm founded and run by A. J. (John) Valpy. The fir) #Americans (Americans | People of the former British colonies recently become the United States in Mitfo) #AMS_pub (AMS Press | AMS Press is a publishing firm located in New York. Publisher of a facsimile rep) #Anstruthers (the Anstruther family | The family of Col. Anstruther. Associated with Reading. Includes Colonel Anstrut) #Baldwin_Cradock_Joy_pub (Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy | Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy was a publishing firm founded by publisher, printer, a) #Behr_pub (B. Behr's Library | B. Behr's Library was a publishing firm located in Berlin, mainly specializing i) #Belfords_Clarke_pub (Belfords, Clarke & Co. | Belfords, Clarke & Co. was a publishing firm located in Chicago; American publis) #Bell_Daldy_pub (Bell & Daldy | Bell & Daldy was a publishing firm located in London, founded by George Bell, wh) #Bentley_pub (R. Bentley | R. Bentley was a publishing firm founded by Richard Bentley after the dissolutio) #Billiard_Club (Billiard Club | A club in Readingof which George Mitford and Charles Fyshe Palmer are members.) #Blackie_pub (Blackie and Son, Ltd. | Blackie and Son, Ltd. was a publishing firm with offices originally located in G) #Blackwood_pub (William Blackwood and Sons | William Blackwood and Sons was a publishing firm located in Edinburgh and London) #Bliss_pub (E. Bliss | E. Bliss was a publishing firm located in New York founded and run by Elam Bliss) #Bluestockings (Bluestockings | A circle of female writers and intellectuals formed around the salons hosted by ) #Bodys (the Body family | Mitford mentions the Bodys as a family in her Journal of 1819 - 1823. She visits) #Bohn_pub (Henry G. Bohn | Henry G. Bohn was a publishing firm located in London and founded by George Henr) #Books_for_Libraries_pub (Books for Libraries Press | Books for Libraries Press was a publishing firm located in Freeport, New York. P) #Boston_Daily_Adv_pub (Press of the Boston Daily Advertiser | Press of the Boston Daily Advertiser (or Boston Daily Advertiser Press) was a pu) #Bourbon (House of Bourbon | . Dynasty that ruled France from 1589 to 1792 and from 1814 to 30.) #Bow_Street_Runners (Bow Street Runners | Considered the first professional police force in London, and a precursor to the) #Brent_family_hist (Brent family | Includes Joel, Lucy, and Lizzy.) #British_Army (British Army | The principal land warfare force of the United Kingdom.) #Brocas_family (Prominent ancient English family whose chief estate, Beaurepaire House, was located near Bramley. The family traces its lineage back to the age of William the Conqueror, and was in possession of many acres of land and cottages in the environs of Bramley since the the sixteenth century, including Beaurepaire House, Wokefield Park. During Mitford's lifetime, family members included Bernard Brocas and Harriet Brocas. | Prominent ancient English family whose chief estate, Beaurepaire House, was loca) #Brookes (the Brooke family | A family who lived at Moore House, Shinfield: Mr. Brooke, Mrs. Brooke and their ) #BroughtonDas (Misses Broughton | Unmarried daughters of the Broughton family.) #Cadell_Davies_pub (T. Cadell and W. Davies | T. Cadell and W. Davies was a publishing firm founded by Thomas Cadell the elder) #Caldwell_pub (H. M. Caldwell | H. M. Caldwell was a publishing firm with offices in Boston and New York with pr) #Cambridge_Univ (Cambridge University | The University in Cambridge. The school was established in 1209.) #Carey_Lea_Blanchard_pub (Carey, Lea and Blanchard | Carey, Lea and Blanchard was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia. Publishe) #Cassell_pub (Cassell & Co. | Cassell & Co. was a publishing firm with offices in London and New York. Flouris) #Cavaliers (Cavaliers | Colloquialism for the Monarchist faction in the English Civil Wars.) #Century_pub (Century Co. | Century Co. was a publishing firm located in New York, founded in 1881. It began) #Chancery (Court of Chancery | Court founded in Norman England, adjudicating equity cases with a tradition of l) #Chartist_demonstrators (Chartists | Members of the Chartist movement working for political reform in Great Britain b) #Chas_Tilt_pub (Charles Tilt | Charles Tilt was a publishing firm located in London with premises at Fleet Stre) #Chatto_Windus_pub (Chatto and Windus | Chatto and Windus was a publishing firm located in London. Publisher of an 1875 ) #Church_of_E (Church of England | . The English national church, generally adhering to the Anglican (Protestant) C) #Clarendon_Press (Clarendon Press | Today refers to an imprint of Oxford University Press that specializes in academ) #CockneyS (the Cockney School | Satirical term coined by an anonymous Blackwood’s article of October 1817 target) #Colburn_Bentley_pub (Henry Colburn & Richard Bentley | Henry Colburn & Richard Bentley was a publishing firm located in London with pre) #ColonnaFamily (Colonna family | Powerful aristocratic family in medieval and early modern Rome. Originating in t) #Constable_pub (Archibald Constable | Archibald Constable was a publishing firm located in Edinburgh founded by Archib) #Council_of_Ten (Council of Ten | The Council of Ten, sometimes known as the Ten, was one of the main governing bo) #Court_of_Kings_Bench (Court of King’s Bench | One of the high courts of England that heard both criminal and civil cases. Loca) #Crissy_Markley_pub (Crissy & Markley | Crissy & Markley was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia; James Crissy was) #Crissy_pub (James Crissy | James Crissy was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia with premises at 4 Mi) #Crowthers (the Crowthers | Contains Mr. Crowther and Mrs. Crowther) #Dearsleys (the Dearsley family | A family who lived at Moore House, Shinfield.) #Dent_pub (J. M. Dent | J. M. Dent was a publishing firm located in London, founded in 1888 by Joseph Ma) #Dickinsons (the Dickinsons | Contains Charles Dickinson and Mrs. Dickinson.) #Drovers (the Drover family | A family who, according to Francis Needham’s notes, lived on Minster Street in R) #Dutton_pub (E. P. Dutton | E. P. Dutton was a publishing firm founded in 1852 by Edward Payson Dutton in Bo) #Eastburn_Kirk_pub (Eastburn, Kirk & co. | Eastburn, Kirk & co. was a publishing firm located in New York, founded by James) #Elton_Perkins_pub (Elton & Perkins | Elton & Perkins was a publishing firm located in New York. American publisher of) #Eton (Eton College | Boarding school for boys, located in Eton, Berkshire.) #Fairbrother_pub (S. G. Fairbrother | S. G. Fairbrother was a publishing firm affiliated with the Lyceum Print Office,) #Folio_Society_pub (Folio Society | Folio Society is a publishing firm located in London, specializing in hard cover) #Garrards (the Garrard family | Associated with Reading.) #Garrett_pub (Garrett Press | Garrett Press, Inc. was a publishing firm located in New York. Publisher of a re) #Geo_Bell_pub (George Bell & Sons | George Bell & Sons was a publishing firm located in London, founded by George Be) #Gilley_pub (W. B. Gilley | W. B. Gilley was a publishing firm founded by William B. Gilley (1785?-1830) tha) #H_Colburn_pub (Henry Colburn | Henry Colburn was a publishing firm founded by Henry Colburn. The firm was locat) #Hampden_Club (Hampden Club | An organization of radical men’s political clubs founded by Major John Cartwrigh) #Harper_Bros_pub (Harper Bros. | Harper Brothers was a publishing firm located in New York, founded by brothers J) #Harrap_pub (George G. Harrap & Co., Ltd. | George G. Harrap & Co., Ltd. was a publishing firm located in London, founded by) #Havell_Lib (Havell's Library | Subscription library. George Mitford purchases a half year subscription for Mary) #Hawkes_family (the Hawkes family | Associated with Reading. May include Miss Hawkes, whom Mitford visits in 1819. S) #Haywards (the Hayward family | Likely includes Mr. William Hayward the elder & his spouse Mrs. W. Hayward, a br) #High_Court_of_Justice (High Court of Justice | he Commissioners of the High Court of Justice tried Charles I for treason. Those) #Holdens (the Holdens | Potentially includes Miss Holden, John Holden, and Henry Holden. Mentioned by Mi) #Holland_House_set (Holland House circle | In Mitford's time, Holland House in Kensington was the home of Henry Richard Vas) #Holtons (The Holton family | Includes Paul Holton and his spouse Mrs. Holton. They lived in Wokingham and wer) #House_Commons (House of Commons | The lower house of the bicameral Parliament, the Commons was established in the ) #House_Lords (House of Lords | In Mitford's time, the upper house of the bicameral Parliament, of Great Britain) #Hurst_Blackett_pub (Hurst & Blackett Publishers | Hurst & Blackett Publishers was a publishing firm located in London with premise) #Hurst_pub (Hurst and Co. | Hurst and Co. was a publishing firm located in New York. Flourished 1870s to 191) #Ilsley-Coursing-Soc (Ilsley Coursing Society | Hunting club frequented by George Mitford and friends, presumably located in Ils) #ISIS_pub (ISIS Publishing, Ltd. | ISIS Publishing, Ltd. is a publishing firm located in London, specializing in la) #Italians (Italians | People from Italy) #Jacobites (Jacobites | Supporters of the Stuart cause. Named after the line of Jacob, that is, the desc) #James_Fam (the James Family) #JBLippincott_pub (J. B. Lippincott | J. B. Lippincott was a publishing firm located in Philadelphia. Publisher of a 1) #JDicks_pub (J. Dicks | J. Dicks was a publishing firm founded by John Dicks and located in London with ) #JDuncombe_pub (John Duncombe and Co. | John Duncombe and Co. (or J. Duncombe) was a publishing firm founded by John Dun) #Jesuits (The Society of Jesus | A male religious congregation of the Catholic Church. Their missionary efforts b) #John_Cumberland_pub (John Cumberland | John Cumberland was a publishing firm founded by John Cumberland (1787-1866) and) #Joliffes (the Joliffe family | Surname variously spelled Joliffe and Jolliffe. Associated with Reading.) #JRobinson_pub (J. Robinson | J. Robinson was a publishing firm located in Baltimore. First American publisher) #Kemble_family (the Kembles | Includes Charles Kemble, his brother John Phillip Kemble, his sister Sarah Siddo) #Lancastrians (House of Lancaster | The House of Lancaster, which had as its insignia the Red Rose, fought the Wars ) #LdChamberlainsOfc (Office of the Lord Chamberlain | From 1737 to 1968, the official theater censor's office, overseen by the Lord Ch) #Liebensroods (the Liebensrood family | The family of Mr. Liebensrood.) #Longman_Hurst_ROB_pub (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown | Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown was a publishing firm located in London with) #Longman_Rees_OBG_pub (Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green | Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green was a publishing firm located in London with ) #Lords_Cricket_Ground (Lord's Cricket Ground | A cricket venue in St. John's Wood founded by Thomas Lord. It houses the Maryleb) #Macmillan_pub (Macmillan & Co. | Macmillan is a publishing firm founded in 1843 by Daniel Macmillan and Alexander) #Marsh_family (the Marsh family | The family of Harry Marsh and his spouse Mrs. Marsh. Associated with Reading.) #Marshs_shop (Marsh's | Retail shop Mitford mentions patronizing in 1819. Source: Journal.) #Marylebone_Cricket_Club (Marylebone Cricket Club | Founded in Londonin 1787, the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) is still in existenc) #Medici (House of Medici | Dynasty that ruled various territories in Italy from 1434 to 1737, excepting in ) #Minerva_Press (Minerva Press | Press operated by William Lane from 1790 to 1820. Minerva Press was a major publ) #Mitfords (the Mitford family | Mary Russell Mitford and her parents.) #Mitfords_Ma_Pa (George and Mary Mitford | Mary Russell Mitford's parents, George and Mary.) #Monck_family (the Monck family | The family of John Berkeley Monck.) #MPs (Members of Parliament | Members of Parliament) #Murray_pub (John Murray | John Murray was a publishing firm located in London with premises at Fleet Stree) #New_Model_Army (New Model Army | Parliamentary army founded in 1645; victor in the English Civil War.) #Newberys (the Newbery family | The family of Jacob Newbery. Surname variously spelled Newbery and Newberry, alt) #Newells (the Newells | Includes Mr. Newell and Mrs. Newell.) #Nimmo_pub (William P. Nimmo & Co. | William P. Nimmo & Co. was a publishing firm located in Edinburgh; flourished 18) #OxfordUP_pub (Oxford University Press | Oxford University Press is a publishing firm located in Oxford and London, the l) #Palmerite (Palmerites | Supporters of Charles Fyshe Palmer in the Reading elections of March 16, 1820.) #Parfitt_family (the Parfitt family | Lived at Farley Hill, where Mitford visited them.) #Parliament_UK (Parliament | Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland; supreme ) #Parliamentarians (Parlimentarians | Supporters of Cromwell and the parliamentary cause in the English Civil Wars. Al) #Penguin_pub (Penguin Books | Penguin Books is a publishing firm with offices in London, New York, and through) #Perrys (the Perrys | Likely includes James Perry and, before November 1821, his daughter Horatia Perr) #Pius7_Court (Court of Pope Pius VII | Pope Pius VII and his Cardinals, from 1800 to 1823. The court was driven to exil) #Prelacy (Prelacy | Colloquially, the Archbishops and bishops of the Church of England. Source: Brit) #PrenticeHall_pub (Prentice Hall | Prentice Hall is a publishing firm located in New York, founded by Dr. Charles G) #Presbyters (the Presybterian faction | Faction in Parliament during the English Civil War that sought peace and negotia) #Privy_Council (Privy Council | Councillors to the British monarch.) #Puritans (Puritans | Began in the 16th century as members of an anti-Catholic reform movement within ) #regicides (Regicides | The Commissioners of the trial of Charles I who signed his death warrant on Janu) #Richmond_Coach (Richmond Coach | Stage coach that travelled to Richmond.) #Rigby_family (the Rigby family | Lived at Farley Hill, where Mitford visited them.) #Rolandi_pub (Pierre Rolandi | Pierre Rolandi was a publishing firm located in Brussels. Publisher of Fragments) #Royal_Academy (Royal Academy of Arts | The private arts institution The Royal Academy of Arts was founded by George III) #Royalists (Royalists | Supporters of Charles I and the Crown in the English Civil Wars. Also called Cav) #SampsonLow_MSR_pub (Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington | Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington was a publishing firm located in London) #Saunders_Otley_pub (Saunders & Otley | Saunders & Otley was a publishing firm located in London. Flourished 1820s to 18) #Schloss_pub (A. Schloss | A. Schloss was a publishing firm located in London founded by Albert Schloss. Pu) #Scots (the people of Scotland) #Scriblerians (Scriblerus Club | London organization of prominent writers, including Jonathan Swift, Alexander Po) #Seeley_pub (Seeley and Co. | Seeley and Co. was a publishing firm located in London, active from the 1840s. I) #Senate_Venetian (Venetian Senate | The upper chamber of the legislature in the Republic of Venice.) #SFrench_pub (Samuel French | Samuel French is a publishing firm located in New York, founded by Samuel French) #Sherwoods (the Sherwood family | The family of Mr. Sherwood, a local doctor. Associated with Reading.) #Shuters (the Shuter family | Associated with Reading.) #Sidgwick_Jackson_pub (Sidgwick & Jackson | Sidgwick & Jackson is a publishing firm located in London, founded in 1908. It i) #Simms_MIntyre_pub (Simms and M'Intyre | Simms and M'Intyre was a publishing firm located in London. Publisher of an 1850) #Simonds (the Simonds | Potentially the Symonds mentioned on December 19 1820. Containing Elizabeth Blac) #Slades (the Slades | Mitford mentions the Slades in her letter to Thomas Noon Talfourd of June 21, 18) #T_Egerton_pub (T. Egerton | T. Egerton was a publishing firm founded by publisher and bookseller Thomas Eger) #T_Hookham_Jr_pub (T. Hookham, Jr. | T. Hookham, Jr. was a publishing firm founded by publisher, bookseller, and circ) #T_Lowndes_pub (T. Lowndes | T. Lowndes was a publishing firm founded by Thomas Lowndes (1719-1784) and conti) #Taylor_Hessey (Taylor and Hessey | London publishers at 93 Fleet Street, began around 1819. The firm included John ) #THLacy_pub (T. H. [Thomas Hailes] Lacy | T. H. Lacy was a publishing firm founded by Thomas Hailes Lacy and located in Lo) #Ticknor_Fields_pub (Ticknor & Fields | Ticknor & Fields was a publishing firm located in Boston, the successor to Tickn) #Ticknor_Reed_Fields_pub (Ticknor, Reed, and Fields | Ticknor, Reed, and Fields was a publishing firm located in Boston founded by Wil) #Tory (Tory Party | Originally, a 17th-century insulting nickname for those who supported James II’s) #Tuppens (the Tuppen Family | The Tuppens include Captain William Tuppen and his spouse Mrs. Tuppen.) #Twickenham_Coach (Twickenham Coach | Stage coach that travelled to Twickenham.) #TWLaurie_pub (T. Werner Laurie | T. Werner Laurie was a publishing firm located in London. Publisher of a reprint) #UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) #UnitLibrary_pub (Unit Library, Ltd. | The Unit Library, Ltd. was a publishing firm located in London and New York. Pub) #Valpys (the Valpys | Dr. Richard Valpy and his family, including his first and second wife, his daugh) #Voules (The Voules family) #Walter_Scott_pub (Walter Scott Publishing Co. | Walter Scott Publishing Co. was a publishing firm located in London specializing) #Webbs (the Webbs) #Westbrooks (the Westbrooks | As recorded in her Journal, Mitford met the Westbrooks on 26 July 1820, and dine) #Weylandite (Weylandites | Weyland supporters. On March 16, 1820, an election in Reading was held. There we) #Whigs (the Whig party | In Mitford's lifetime, the Whigs developed into a formalized political party und) #WhiteLion_pub (White Lion Publishers | White Lion Publishers was a publishing firm located in London. Flourished 1920s ) #Whites (the White family | Associated with Reading.) #Whittaker_GB_pub (G. B. Whittaker | G. B. Whittaker was a publishing firm located in London, founded and run by Geor) #Whittaker_Treacher_pub (Whittaker, Treacher & Co. | Whittaker, Treacher & Co. was a publishing firm located in London. This company ) #Whittakers_ALL (Whittaker publishing firms | Includes G. B. Whittaker, G. & W. B. Whittaker, Whittaker, Treacher & Co. publis) #Whittakers_pub (G. & W. B. Whittaker | G. & W. B. Whittaker was a publishing firm located in London, founded and run by) #Woodstock_Books_pub (Woodstock Books | Woodstock Books is a publishing firm located in Poole, England, and in New York,) #Yorks (House of York | The House of York, symbolized by the White Rose, fought the Wars of the Roses wi) #Attendants_R (attendants | Attendants and group of other unnamed characters in Rienzi.) #Balfours_WS (Balfours of Burley | The Balfours of Burley are a family of characters in Walter Scott’s Old Mortalit) #BlacksmithsChildren_OV (blacksmith's children | The blacksmith, a character introduced in the first sketch of Our Village , is s) #BricklayersOV (bricklayers | Group of unnamed bricklayers who work for the whimsical man who renovates his ho) #BustlingDamesChildren_OV (bustling dame's children | Group of unnamed children in Our Village.) #Cabinet_makersOV (cabinetmakers | Characters who work for the whimsical wealthy man who renovates his house in Our) #CarpentersOV (carpenters | Group of unnamed characters who work for the whimsical wealthy man who renovates) #Chorus_R (Chorus | Group of unnamed characters who make up the Chorus in Rienzi.) #Citizens_R (Citizens | Group of unnamed characters who are citizens of Rome in Rienzi.) #Council_of_Ten_F (Council of Ten in Foscari | Fictional version of the historical Council of Tenas represented in Mitford's pl) #CountryBoys_OV (country boys | Characters who appear in several Our Village stories. The narrator mentions her ) #Cricketers_OV (cricketers | Characters who appear in the Our Village stories A Country Cricket Match and The) #curatesFamily_OV (curate's family | Group of unnamed characters mentioned in the first sketch of Our Village . The c) #Gardeners_OV (gardeners | Unnamed group of gardeners who appear throughout Our Village.) #Guards_Jul (Guards | Group of unnamed characters who are guards in Julian.) #Guards_R (Guards | Group of unnamed characters who are guards in Rienzi.) #journeyman_shoemakers_OV (journeyman shoemakers | Group of three characters who are unnamed journeymen employed by the shoemaker i) #Ladies_R (Ladies | Group of unnamed characters who are noble Ladies in Rienzi.) #Lieutenants_children_OV (Lieutenant's children | Unnamed group of characters who are small children of the Lieutenant who watch t) #Nobles_Jul (Nobles | Group of unnamed characters who are Nobles (i.e., noble gentlemen) in Julian.) #Nobles_R (Nobles | Group of unnamed characters who are Nobles (i.e., noble gentlemen) of Rome in Ri) #officer_Ch1 (Officers | Group of unnamed characters who are officers in Charles I.) #Officers_family_OV (officer's family | Group of characters who are family members of the officer, introduced in the fir) #Prelates_Jul (Prelates | Group of unnamed characters who are Prelates in Julian.) #riders_OV (riders | Unnamed group of characters who are horseback, coach, and chaise riders whom the) #Senate_Venetian_F (Venetian Senate in Foscari | Fictional version of the historical Venetian Senate as represented in Mitford's ) #skating_spectators_OV (skating spectators | Unnamed group of characters who watch the Lieutenant skate on the pond in Frost ) #sliding_urchins_OV (sliding urchins | The group of characters who are half a dozen ragged urchins, including Jack Rapl) #TomC_hanged_men_OV #walkers_OV (walkers | Unnamed group of characters who walk on a cold day whom the narrator describes i) #WheelersChildren_OV (wheeler's children | Group of unnamed characters who are children of the wheeler. In the titular sket) #workmen_OV (workmen | Unnamed group of workmen in Our Village whom the renovator hires to work on his ) #Danaides (the Danaides | In Greek mythology, the fifty daughters of Danaus. They are to condemned to spen) #Muses (the Muses | In Greek (and later Roman) mythology, the nine goddesses who live on Mount Helic) #Seraphim (Seraphim | The highest order of angel according to the Christian religion.) indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (personal name) contains a proper noun or proper-noun phrase referring to a person, possibly including one or more of the person's forenames, surnames, honorifics, added names, etc. [13.2.1. Personal Names] @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. Suggested values include: 1] #ab (Booth Alison Advisory Board | Brown-Forman Professor of English and Faculty Director of the Digital Humanities); 2] #ad (Drayton Alexandra Ph.D. Consultant | One of the Digital Mitford project’s founding editors, Alexandra Drayton earned ); 3] #adi (Dia Aliou Research Assistant | Ali Dia graduates in 2025 with a B.A. in Communication from the State University); 4] #ahm (Algee-Hewitt Mark Consultant: Data Visualization Group Advisory Board); 5] #ajc (Colombo Amy Consultant); 6] #ajn (Normington Alyssa Research Assistant | Alyssa Normington graduates in 2025 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the S); 7] #alg (Gates Amy L. Ph.D. Editor | Amy L. Gates is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English and Philosop); 8] #aol (Longmuir Anne Editor | Anne Longmuir is Professor of English at Kansas State University. Anne specializ); 9] #cjb (Bolton Carol Advisory Board); 10] #cmp (Parisian Catherine M. Consultant | Catherine M. Parisian is a book historian and bibliographer whose research has f); 11] #csc (Cox Catherine S. Consultant | Catherine S. Cox teaches at the University of Pittsburgh’s Johnstown campus, off); 12] #daver (Robinson David Consultant); 13] #djb (Birnbaum David J. Consultant: Data Visualization Group Advisory Board); 14] #ds (Schierenbeck Daniel Consultant | Daniel Schierenbeck has published essays on Romantic authors including Jane Aust); 15] #dsa (Saglia Diego Advisory Board); 16] #du (Ulin Don Consultant | Don Ulin attended the Digital Mitford Coding School in May 2019 and contributed ); 17] #ebb (Beshero-Bondar Elisa Principal Investigator and Technical Coordinator Founding Editor Poetry | Elisa Beshero-Bondar organized the Digital Mitford project in the spring of 2013); 18] #efp (Parsons Elaine Frantz Consultant); 19] #err (Raisanen Elizabeth Ph.D. Drama Founding Editor | Elizabeth Raisanen is the Assistant Dean of Advising & Strategic Partnerships an); 20] #ghb (Bondar Gregory Manuscript Archaeology Founding Editor | Greg Bondar has photographed over 800 of Mitford’s letters in the Reading Centra); 21] #had (Denis Hayley Research Assistant | Hayley Denis graduates in 2025 with a B.A. in Creative Writing and a minor in Fi); 22] #ham (Hammer Nathan Louis Research Assistant | Nathan Hammer is a student at Penn State Behrend. Started working on Mitford’s J); 23] #hjb (Bills Hadleigh Jae Research Assistant | Hadleigh Jae Bills is a student at Penn State Behrend. Started working on Mitfor); 24] #jb (Bawden John Ph.D Associate Professor of History Consultant | John Bawden is Associate Professor of History at the University of Montevallo. H); 25] #jjr (Rovira James Ph.D. Editor | James Rovira is founder of the Anazoa Educational Project and Bright Futures Edu); 26] #jmh (Horanic Jonathan Michael Consultant | Jonathan M. Horanic completed a bachelor’s degree with double majors in English ); 27] #kab (Bourrier Karen Consultant | Karen Bourrier is a professor at the University of Calgary. She is working on a ); 28] #kdc (Donovan-Condron Kellie Ph.D. Founding Editor Advisory Board | Kellie Donovan-Condron writes primarily about the intersection of urban literatu); 29] #lmw (Wilson Lisa M. Managing Editor Bibliography and Correspondence Founding Editor | Lisa M. Wilson is Professor in the Department of English at SUNY Potsdam, where ); 30] #mah (Hughes Megan Abigail Consultant | Megan Hughes was Elisa Beshero-Bondar’s Green Scholar (or research assistant) be); 31] #mc (Creech Melinda Consultant | Independent scholar with PhD in English and MA in Museum Studies at Baylor Unive); 32] #mez (Zimmer Mary Erica Consultant: Data Visualization Group | Mary Erica Zimmer is Lecturer in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Conco); 33] #mms (Spaulding Meghan Research Assistant | Meghan Spaulding graduates in 2025 with a B.S. in Childhood Education/Early Chil); 34] #mns (Smith Martha Nell Advisory Board | The founding Director of the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities); 35] #msm (Murray M. Stephanie Consultant); 36] #naj (Joukovsky Nicholas Advisory Board); 37] #pmd (Duck Patricia M. Advisory Board); 38] #qar (Reed Quinton A. Consultant | Quinton Reed is an alumnus of the University of Montevallo, where he attended fr); 39] #rjp (Parker Rebecca Jeanne Editor | Rebecca Parker completed an M.A. in Digital Humanities at Loyola University in C); 40] #scw (Webb Samantha Ph.D Professor Emeritus of English Founding Editor Fiction | Samantha Webb is Professor Emritus of English, specializing in British Romantic ); 41] #slc (Cantwell Sara Active Consultant | Sara Cantwell received her M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Vermont College o); 42] #srr (Ricks Savannah R. Research Assistant | Savannah Ricks is a coding research assistant who started in October 2022 workin); 43] #st (Triplette Stacey Ph.D. Consultant | Earned her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. She studies the li); 44] #tel (Lombardi Thomas Consultant: Data Visualization Group); 45] #TSA (Akam Tyler S. Research Assistant | Tyler Akam is a student filmmmaker and coding research assistant who started in ); 46] #amp (Peddicord Amber M. Research Assistant | Amber Peddicord sorted image files and encoded different editions of Mitford's l); 47] #bas (Stewart Brooke Ann Consultant | Brooke A. Stewart transcribed, researched, encoded, and proofed the Mitford lett); 48] #ctm (McCabe Cailey Active Consultant | Cailey McCabe has assisted the editing team through completing and checking lett); 49] #drl (Lint Dorothea Editor | Dorothea Lint joined the Digital Mitford project in 2018 as a Green Scholar rese); 50] #esh (Hood Eric Ph.D. Founding Editor | Eric Hood is an Assistant Professor at Michigan State University and holds a PhD); 51] #fbur (Burwick Frederick Advisory Board | b. 1936-03-17 | d. 2022-03-16 | Besides benefiting from his tireless research on 18th- and 19th-century drama an); 52] #mco (O’Donnell Molly C. Editor | Molly O’Donnell was the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, President’s Foundation ); 53] #mjk (Klamer Melissa Editor | Melissa Klamer earned a Ph.D. in English at Michigan State University, and serve); 54] #rnes (Nesvet Rebecca Ph.D. Founding Editor | Rebecca Nesvet’s other digital humanities projects include the general editorshi); 55] #abp (Parker Ashante Research Assistant | Ashante Parker graduated in December 2015 with a B.A., majoring in both in Liter); 56] #adp (Phoenix Anaya Research Assistant | Anaya Phoenix graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the State); 57] #alw (Aymee Lynn Woody Woody Aymee Lynn Research Assistant | Aymee Lynn Woody received her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Monte); 58] #apc (Calderwood Austin Research Assistant | Austin Calderwood was enrolled in the M.A. in English and Communication from SUN); 59] #avg (Annie Gill Gill Annie Research Assistant | Annie Gill was a Theatre major and English minor at the University of Montevallo); 60] #avm (McConlogue Allison Research Assistant | Allison McConlogue graduated in 2018 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing and in 20); 61] #bal (Laird Brytney Research Assistant | Brytney Laird graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing and Psychology); 62] #cay (Collins Younes Courtney Research Assistant | Courtney Younes Collins graduated in 2017 with a B.A. in English Literature from); 63] #cfc (Carey Collin Research Assistant | Collin Carey graduated in 2023 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the State ); 64] #cmm (Murray Chelsie Research Assistant | Chelsie Murray received her B.A. in Psychology and her M.A. in English & Communi); 65] #cvk (LaSalle Corie Research Assistant | Corie LaSalle was enrolled in the M.A. in English and Communication from SUNY Po); 66] #cyh (Huang Chi-Ya Research Assistant | In 2014, Chi-Ya Huang was studying undergraduate psychology in UCLA. She also wo); 67] #dms (Shembesh Danya Research Assistant | Danya Shembesh graduated in 2022 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Stat); 68] #ejb (Beckman Ella Research Assistant | Ella Beckman was an undergraduate at UCLA in 2014, double majoring in Political ); 69] #ga (Amos Gracia Research Assistant | In 2014, Gracia Amos was a fourth year undergraduate at UCLA, wprlomg a degree i); 70] #hbl (Lown Hailey Research Assistant | In 2014, Hailey Lown was a third year transfer student at UCLA. She is originall); 71] #hl (Long Heather Research Assistant | Heather Long completed a B.A. in English and was enrolled in the M.S.T. program ); 72] #hmk (Kellogg Hannah Research Assistant | Hannah Kellogg graduates in 2025 with a B.S. in Biology from LeMoyne College. Sh); 73] #hsar (Sarsfield Heather Research Assistant | Heather Sarsfield received her B.A. in English Literature from the State Univers); 74] #jap (Price Jordan Research Assistant | Jordan Price earned his Bachelor’s degree in English at the University of Montev); 75] #jbb (Burwell Jaime Breanna Research Assistant | Jaime Burwell received her B.A. in English Literature from the State University ); 76] #jbl (Langer Jessica Research Assistant | Jessica Langer graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the Stat); 77] #jcm (Mostales Joshua Research Assistant | Joshua Mostales was an undergraduate student in the Robert D. Clark Honors Colle); 78] #jgf (Fish Julie Research Assistant | Julie Fish graduated in 2017 with a B.A. in English Literature from the State Un); 79] #kkl (Lampart Kemton Research Assistant | Kemton Lampart graduated in 2022 with a B.S. in Business Administration from the); 80] #knm (Murphy Kristen Research Assistant | Kristen Murphy completed an M.A. in English and Communication from SUNY Potsdam.); 81] #kyh (Hastings Kyanna Research Assistant | Kyanna Hastings graduated in 2023 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Sta); 82] #led (Dingman Lindsay Research Assistant | Lindsay Dingman graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the Sta); 83] #lrs (Spillar Lindsey R. Research Assistant | Lindsey Spillar was enrolled in the Robert D. Clark Honors College at the Univer); 84] #mbn (Nardoci Matthew Blake Research Assistant | Matt Nardoci was enrolled in the biochemistry major at the University of Oregon ); 85] #md (Das May Research Assistant | May Das graduated in 2019 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the State Unive); 86] #mgp (Peterson Martha Research Assistant | Martha Peterson graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in English: Literature from the St); 87] #mq (Kohli Mehaque Research Assistant | In 2014, Mehaque Kohli was a fourth year International Development Studies major); 88] #ms (Scott Madelyn N. Research Assistant | Madelyn N. Scott plans to graduate in 2020 with a B.S. in Chemistry from the Rob); 89] #msp (Paine Margo Research Assistant | Margo Paine graduatedMay 2015 from the State University of New York at Potsdam w); 90] #ncl (LoRusso Natalie Claire Research Assistant | Natalie LoRusso graduated in May 2015 with a B.A. in English Literature from the); 91] #nlh (Hebert Nathaniel Research Assistant | Nathan Hebert graduated in December 2015 with a B.A., majoring in both in Litera); 92] #ntcy (Young Nate Research Assistant | Nate Young graduated in 2022 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the State Un); 93] #oa (Allard Olivia Research Assistant | In 2015, Olivia Allard was enrolled in the B.A. in Communication and minor in Wo); 94] #ps (Sasu Perdita Research Assistant | Perdita Sasu graduated in 2016 with a B.A. in Communication from the State Unive); 95] #rct (Tang Rebecca Research Assistant | In 2014, Rebecca Tang was a fourth-year student at UCLA, majoring in English wit); 96] #sbb (Sylvan Baker Baker Sylvan Research Assistant | Sylvan Baker graduated with a B.A. in English from the University of Montevallo ); 97] #SCR (Susannah Ritchey Ritchey Susannah Research Assistant | Originally from Maylene, Alabama, Susannah Ritchey earned her Bachelor’s degree ); 98] #sg (Gemelas Sophia Research Assistant | In 2017, Sophia Gemelas was an undergraduate student in the Robert D. Clark Hono); 99] #sm (Morelli Sophia Research Assistant | Sophie Morelli graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the Stat); 100] #SMG (Garrett Shekneko Research Assistant | Shekneko Garrett was enrolled in the Master’s degree in Secondary Education in E); 101] #SMP (Sara Perry Perry Sara Research Assistant | In 2017, Sara Perry was an English major and Game Studies and Design minor at th); 102] #ssc (Courtney Shawntel Research Assistant | Shawntel Courtney graduated in 2018 with a B.A. in English: Writing and a minor ); 103] #TEAC (Cameron Tyler E. A. Research Assistant | Tyler Cameron assisted in Fall 2022 with Mitford’s Journal of 1819-1823 on trans); 104] #tfb (Beck Temani Research Assistant | In 2017, Temani Beck was enrolled in the Master’s degree in Education at the Uni); 105] #tlh (Harnish Tracy Lynn Research Assistant | Tracy Harnish received her B.F.A. in Creative Writing and her M.A. in English an); 106] #tnh (Hays Toni Research Assistant | In 2014, Toni Hays was a student at UCLA, majoring in English Literature with a ); 107] #wnb (Barr William Research Assistant | William Barr graduated in 2016 with a B.A. in English Literature, History, and S); 108] #ws (Sainbert Wilmina Research Assistant | Wilmina Sainbert graduated in 2016 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the St); 109] #xjw (Xiong Robin Research Assistant | Robin Xiong is Xiong Junwen from China. In 2014, she was an undergraduate studen); 110] #ztd (Deroche Zakiya Research Assistant | Zakiya Deroche graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Communication and a minor in Bus); 111] #coles (William Allan Coles | Wrote his PhD Dissertation to the Dept. of English at Harvard University of Augu); 112] #Harness_Wm (Rev. William Harness | b. 1790-03-14 | d. 1869-11-11 | A lifelong friend of Mary Russell Mitford who knew her from their childhood in t); 113] #Lestrange (A. G. K. L’Estrange | b. 1832 | d. 1915 | L’Estrange was a curate working for William Harness, and assisted him with the f); 114] #Needham_Francis (Francis Needham | Francis R. Needham was librarian and secretary to the Duke Wellington, while bas); 115] #penAnnot_RCL (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, who occasionally left notes in a spidery); 116] #pencil (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford who left grey pencil marks on her letters); 117] #pencil_Yale (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, perhaps cataloging letters and describin); 118] #pencilRy (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, perhaps cataloging letters and describin); 119] #rc (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, perhaps cataloging letters and describin); 120] #Roberts_Wm (William J. Roberts | Early twentieth-century Mitford biographer and author of Mary Russell Mitford: T); 121] #Watson_Vera (Vera Watson | Early Mitford critic and author of the biography Mary Russell Mitford); 122] #Abbott_Wm (William Abbott | b. 1790-06-12 | d. 1843-06-01 | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays, Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823 a); 123] #Acerbi_J (Joseph Acerbi | b. 1773-05-03 | d. 1846-08-25 | Author of Travels through Sweden, Finland, and Lapland to the North Cape, in the); 124] #Adams_GP (General Sir George Pownall Adams | b. 1779-01-01 | d. 1856-04 | Husband of Elizabeth Elford, second daughter of Dr. Richard Valpy. Adams was bap); 125] #Addison_Joseph (Joseph Addison | b. 1672-05-01 | d. 1719-06-17 | English politician and writer who, with his friend Sir Richard Steele, edited th); 126] #Addison_Mr (Mr. Addison | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 127] #Adolphus_JL (John Leycester Adolphus | b. 1795 | d. 1862 | Author of a literary essay in which he speculates on the identity of the author ); 128] #Aeschylus (Aeschylus | b. -0525 | d. -0455 | Ancient writer of tragedies, the earliest of the three celebrated progenitors of); 129] #Aesop (Aesop | b. -0620 | d. -0564 | Ancient-world storyteller and purported author of Greek fables and tales. Mentio); 130] #Aikin_J (John Aikin | b. 1747-01-15 | d. 1822-12-07 | Brother of Anna Laetitia Aikin Barbauld and father of Lucy Aikin. Mitford read h); 131] #Aikin_Lucy (Lucy Aikin | b. 1781-11-06 | d. 1864-01-29 | Daughter of John Aikin and niece of Anna Laetitia Barbauld. Prolific author of v); 132] #Ainsworth (William Harrison Ainsworth | b. 1805-02-04 | d. 1882-01-03 | Prolific novelist and journalist in the early nineteenth century. Author of Rook); 133] #Aitken_Mr (Mr. Aitken | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 134] #Albert_SaxeCbrg (Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | b. 1819-08-26 | d. 1861-12-14 | Queen Victoria's first cousin and spouse, whose death at the age of forty-eight ); 135] #Alexander_I_Rus (Alexander I of Russia | b. 1777-12-12 | d. 1825-12-01 | Emperor of Russia, 1801-1825.); 136] #Alfieri_Vittorio (Count Alfieri Vittorio | b. 1749-01-16 | d. 1803-10-08 | Credited with reviving Italian tragedy in the eighteenth century, Alfieri's play); 137] #Alfred (Alfred I, King of the West Saxons | b. 0848—0849 | d. 0899-10-26 | King of the West Saxons, of the House of Wessex, later styled King of the Anglo-); 138] #Allan_SrWm (Sir William Allan | b. 1782 | d. 1850-02-23 | Artist who painted portraits of Scott, Byron, and Burns, as well as Scottish, En); 139] #Allaway_Frank (Frank Allaway | Manservant at Bertram House in 1819. He and his brother George buried Mossy.); 140] #Allaway_Mary (Mary Allaway | Maidservant at Bertram House in 1819.); 141] #Allen_Mrs (Mrs. Allen | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Date unknown. Dates unknown.); 142] #Allin_Miss (Miss Allin | Corresponded with Mitford in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 143] #Allingham_Mrs (Mrs. Allingham | Likely the mother of Catherine Dickinson. Mitford visited them at Farley Hill in); 144] #Amyot_Thos (Thomas Amyot | b. 1775-01-07 | d. 1850-09-28 | Mitford read his collection of William Windham speeches.); 145] #Anacreon (Anacreon | b. -0560 | d. -0478 | Ionian lyric poet of the ancient world, later considered one of nine canonical G); 146] #Anderdon_LOH (Lucy Olivia Hobart Anderdon | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1837 and 1854. Spouse of the Rev); 147] #Anne_servant (Anne | Cook at Bertram House in 1820. Surname unknown.); 148] #Annesley_Francis (Francis Annesley | b. 1734-05-02 | d. 1812-04-12 | First Master of Downing College, Cambridge University from 1800 until his death ); 149] #Annie (Annie | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Surname unknown. Dates un); 150] #Anstruther_Col (Colonel Anstruther | b. 1750 | d. 1825 | ); 151] #Anstruther_Miss (Miss Anstruther | Daughter of Colonel Anstruther. Mitford visited her in Reading in 1819. Forename); 152] #Anstruther_Mrs (Mary Donaldson | b. 1760 | d. 1827-07-20 | ); 153] #Antinous (Antinous | b. 0111-11-27 | d. 0130-10-30 | Beautiful young man who was a court favorite of the Roman emperor Hadrian. Hadri); 154] #Antony (Mark Antony | b. -0083 | d. -0030 | Historic figure rendered as the famous persuasive speaker in Shakespeare's play ); 155] #Ariosto (Ariosto | b. 1474-09-08 | d. 1533-07-06 | Poet, courtier, and diplomat; Author of the epic Orlando Furioso (1516), a seque); 156] #Armstrong_Mr (Mr. Armstrong | Dined at Bertram House with the Mitfords and Mr. Parfitt in 1819. Forename unkno); 157] #Ashburton_Lord (Alexander Baring, Baron Ashburton | b. 1774-10-27 | d. 1848-05-13 | Influential financier, politician, and government official. Head of Baring Broth); 158] #Aubrey_John (John Aubrey | b. 1626-12-03 | d. 1897-07-06 | Seventeenth-century antiquarian, naturalist, and writer. By the nineteenth centu); 159] #Austen_Jane (Jane Austen | b. 1775-12-16 | d. 1817-07-18 | Novelist celebrated for her wit and style, whose works investigated women's soci); 160] #Babo (Joseph Marius Babo | b. 1756-01-14 | d. 1822-02-05 | German playwright, author of the tragedy Otto von Wittelsbach.); 161] #Bacon (Sir Francis Bacon | b. 1561-01-22 | d. 1626-04-09 | A writer and philosopher who made important methodological contributions to scie); 162] #Bacon_Mr (Mr. Bacon | Mitford corresponded with him in 1819. Original member of the Ilsley Coursing So); 163] #Bailey_Mr (Mr. Bailey | An acquaintance of Mitford in 1819. May be the relation of Maria Bailey Kirby. D); 164] #Bailley_Dr (Dr. Bailley | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 165] #Baillie_Joanna (Joanna Baillie | b. 1762-09-11 | d. 1851-02-23 | Successful playwright, authored Poems: Wherein It Is Attempted to Describe Certa); 166] #Baker_Mr (Mr. Baker | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays, Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ); 167] #Baldwin_R (Robert Baldwin | b. 1780 | d. 1858-01-29 | Printer of the London Magazine; London printer and bookseller. Partners with Cha); 168] #Bannister_Jack (John (Jack) Bannister | b. 1760-05-12 | d. 1836-11-07 | Actor who performed at Haymarket and Drury Lane. Specialized in low comic roles.); 169] #BarbauldAL (Anna Laetitia Aikin Barbauld | b. 1743-06-20 | d. 1825-03-09 | Poet, prose writer, author of children's books, and sometime member of the Blues); 170] #Barrett_E (Elizabeth Barrett Browning | b. 1806-03-06 | d. 1861-06-29 | Victorian poet, long-time correspondent, mentee, and friend of Mary Russell Mitf); 171] #Barrie_JM (Sir James Barrie | b. 1860-05-09 | d. 1937-06-19 | Author of Peter Pan Quality Street, and The Admirable Crichton.); 172] #Barrow_John (Sir John Barrow | b. 1764-06-19 | d. 1848-11-23 | Served as comptroller to Lord Macartney’s embassy to China (1792-4). Known for w); 173] #BarrowJ (John Barrow | Mitford read his Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions.); 174] #Bassett_Mr (Mr. Bassett | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford around the 1830s. Forename unknown. Date); 175] #Bath_Mrs (Mrs. Bath | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 176] #Bayley_Mrs (Mrs. Bayley | Mrs. Bayley, spouse of Peter Bayley. After his sudden death in 1823, she arrange); 177] #Bayley_P (Peter Bayley | b. 1778 | d. 1823-01-25 | Solicitor, poet, playwright, and editor of the The Museum. Married to the Mrs. B); 178] #Beaumont_Fr (Francis Beaumont | b. 1584 | d. 1616-03-06 | Contributor to a corpus of plays published in the seventeenth century as the col); 179] #Beaumont_Sir_Geo (Sir George Beaumont | b. 1753-11-06 | d. 1827-02-07 | Art collector, patron of the arts, and amateur painter. He donated the first col); 180] #Becket_Thos (Thomas Becket | b. 1118-12-21 | d. 1170-01-29 | As Archbishop of Canterbury, Becket quarreled with King Henry II over the balanc); 181] #Beckford_William (William Beckford | b. 1760-10-01 | d. 1844-04-01 | Author of the groundbreaking gothic novel, Vathek, art collector, and Member of ); 182] #Beechey_W (Sir William Beechey | b. 1753-12-12 | d. 1839-01-28 | Official portrait painter to Queen Charlotte and member of the Royal Academy; he); 183] #Bell_Geo (George Bell | b. 1814 | d. 1890 | Founder of publishing firm George Bell & Sons In 1856 Bell took Frederick Daldy ); 184] #Bellamy_John (John Bellamy | b. 1755 | d. 1842 | Hebraicist and author of The Holy Bible newly translated from the original Hebre); 185] #Belzoni_Gio (Giovanni Battista Belzoni | b. 1778-11-05 | d. 1823-12-03 | An Italian explorer and archaeologist. Wrote Narrative of the Operations and Rec); 186] #Bender_Mr (Mr. Bender | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 187] #Benger_ElizO (Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger | b. 1775-06 | d. 1827-01-09 | Mitford read her Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton.); 188] #Bennet_G (Henry (Grey) Bennet | b. 1777-12-02 | d. 1836-05-29 | Known as Grey Bennett, the brother of Charles Augustus Bennet (1776-1854) who sh); 189] #Bennett_AM (Anna Maria Evans Bennett | b. 1750 | d. 1808-02-12 | Published under Mrs. Bennett and sometimes catalogued as Agnes rather than Anna.); 190] #Bennett_GJ (George John Bennett | b. 1800 | d. 1879 | Versatile actor who played both comic and tragic roles with success. Performed i); 191] #Bennett_Mr (Mr. Bennett | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ); 192] #Bennett_Wm_Cox (William Cox Bennett | b. 1820-10-14 | d. 1895-03-04 | Friend of Mitford's late in her life, William Cox Bennett addressed a sonnet to ); 193] #Bennoch_Fr (Francis Bennoch | b. 1812 | d. 1890 | Scottish wholesale silk merchant, amateur poet, and literary and art patron. Ded); 194] #Bennoch_M (Margaret Bennoch | Spouse of Francis Bennoch. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1855. Date); 195] #Bentley_R (Richard Bentley | b. 1794-10-24 | d. 1871-09-10 | Publisher and founder of the publishing firm R. Bentley and partner in the firm ); 196] #Benwell_M (Mary Benwell Valpy | b. 1760 | d. 1816 | Second wife of of Dr. Richard Valpy. They were married on July 22, 1781.); 197] #Benyon_R (Richard Benyon | b. 1769-04-28 | d. 1854-03-22 | One of the wealthiest commoners in Berkshire and a major landowner and philanthr); 198] #Benyon_RF (Richard Fellowes Benyon | b. 1811-11-17 | d. 1897-07-26 | Conservative Member of Parliament, High Sheriff of Berkshire, and Chairman of th); 199] #Berengaria (Berengaria of England | b. 1165 | d. 1230 | Queen Consort of Richard I of England, 1191-1199. Eldest daughter of King Sancho); 200] #Beresford_James (James Beresford | b. 1764-05-28 | d. 1840-11-29 | Clergyman and writer, best known as the author of the satirical work The Miserie); 201] #Berghem (Nicholaes Berghem | b. 1620 | d. 1683 | Dutch landscape painter known for his pastoral subjects and scenes of rural vill); 202] #Bess_of_Hardwick (Elizabeth of Hardwick, Countess of Shrewsbury | b. 1521 | d. 1608-02-13 | A very rich and powerful woman in Elizabethan England, Bess of Hardwick married ); 203] #Bewick_Thos (Thomas Bewick | b. 1752-08-11 | d. 1828-11-08 | Bewick is one of the most important practitioners of modern wood engraving. He i); 204] #Bewick_Wm (William Bewick | b. 1795-10-20 | d. 1866-06-08 | Pupil of the painter Benjamin Robert Haydon for about three years and attended t); 205] #Bickerstaff_Is (Isaac Bickerstaffe | b. 1733-09-26 | d. 1808 | Irish librettist and writer of musical theater and comic operas in London and fo); 206] #Biggs_Miss (Miss Biggs | Associated with Mr. Johnson and Miss Johnson. Mitford dined with them at Seymour); 207] #Bint_Hannah (Hannah Bint | b. 1804-09-16 | Daughter of Thomas Bint and Sarah Bint. Baptised in Shinfield Parish on Septembe); 208] #Birkbeck_M (Morris Birkbeck | b. 1764-01-23 | d. 1825-06-04 | Quaker, abolitionist, radical reformer in politics and religion, and an agricult); 209] #Bisset_R (Robert Bisset | b. 1759 | d. 1805-05-14 | Author of biographical sketches of contributors to The Spectator as well as a bi); 210] #Blackford_Mar (Lady Isabella Moncrieff Stoddart | b. 1775 | d. 1846 | Daughter of Rev. Henry Moncrieff-Wellwood and spouse of Sir John Stoddart. Autho); 211] #Blackwood_Wm (William Blackwood | b. 1776-11-20 | d. 1834-09-16 | Founder of publishing house of William Blackwood and Sons and of Blackwood's Edi); 212] #Blake_Wm (William Blake | b. 1757-11-28 | d. 1827-08-12 | First-generation British Romantic poet, artist, engraver, and religious visionar); 213] #Bland_Mr (Mr. Bland | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Active 18); 214] #Blandy_Mrs (Mrs. Blandy | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u); 215] #Blewitt_O (Octavian Blewitt | b. 1810-10-03 | d. 1884-11 | Travel writer, essayist, and Secretary of the Royal Literary Fund after 1839. A ); 216] #Body_Ann (Ann Body | A local farmer of Shinfield, farmed at Hyde End farm. Listed among the traders o); 217] #Body_Richard (Richard Body | b. 1776-11-17 | d. 1842 | Needham tentatively identifies him as Mitford's landlord. Listed in 1841 census ); 218] #Bogue_David (David Bogue | b. 1808 | d. 1856 | Publisher, bookseller, and writer of children's fiction. Business partner of Cha); 219] #Bohn_GH (George H. Bohn | b. 1796-01-04 | d. 1884-08-22 | George Henry Bohn was born in London, the son of a German bookbinder. He began h); 220] #Bolinbroke (Henry St. John, Lord Bolingbroke | b. 1678-09-16 | d. 1751-12-12 | Tory politician, political philosopher, and supporter of the 1715 Jacobiterebell); 221] #Boner_Chas (Charles Boner | b. 1815-04-29 | d. 1870-04-09 | A mentee and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1845 and 1855. Author); 222] #Bonviese_Mr (Mr. Bonviese | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 223] #Booth_John (John Booth | b. 1768 | d. 1840 | Mitford read his Biographical Memoir of the Public and Private Life of the Much ); 224] #Booth_Mr (Mr. Booth | An actor whom Mitford critiqued for his performance as Cassius.); 225] #Boscawen_Col (Colonel Boscawen | Mitford corresponded with him in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown. Source: ); 226] #Boswell (James Boswell | b. 1740-10-29 | d. 1795-05-19 | Best known as the companion and biographer of Samuel Johnson, Boswell travelled ); 227] #Bowdich_TE (Thomas Edward Bowdich | b. 1791-06-20 | d. 1824-01-20 | Mitford read his Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee.); 228] #Bowles_Wm (William Lisles Bowles | b. 1762-09-24 | d. 1850-04-07 | Known for his sonnets as well as for his long poems including The Missionary pub); 229] #Boyd_Mrs (Mrs. Boyd | Lived in Reading, where Mitford called upon her in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates); 230] #Bradshaw_hist (John Bradshaw | b. 1602-07-15 | d. 1659-10-31 | English Republican politician. Appointed Judge of the Sheriff's Court at the Gui); 231] #Brent_George (George Brent | Proprietor or innkeeper of the George and Dragon Inn, Three Mile Cross. Listed a); 232] #Brent_Joel (Joel Brent | b. 1800-04-20 | d. 1876-07-18 | Son of John and Anne Brent. Baptismal data as noted by Needham on a list of othe); 233] #Brent_Lizzy (Eliza (Lizzy) Brent | b. 1818-01-31 | d. 1827-09-27 | There is no family information provided by Needham for Lizzy Brent, but she is l); 234] #Brenton_Howard (Howard Brenton | b. 1942-12-13 | English playwright. Brenton's plays include The Romans in Britain, Anne Boleyn, ); 235] #Bridgwater_Mr (Mr. Bridgwater | Local owner of a meadows in Shinfield parish. Forename unknown. Dates unknown. S); 236] #Brightwell_CL (Lucy Brightwell | b. 1811-02-27 | d. 1875-04-17 | Sketcher and lithographer; author of Memorials of the Life of Amelia Opie, as we); 237] #Brocas_Bernard (Bernard Brocas | b. 1730 | d. 1777-11-08 | Member of the Brocas family, owner of Beaurepaire House and Wokefield Park, whos); 238] #Brocas_H (Harriet Hunter Brocas | d. 1819 | She married Bernard Brocas in 1769, and renovated Wokefield Park after her husba); 239] #Broghill (Roger Boyle, Lord Broghill | b. 1621-04-25 | d. 1679-10-16 | Broghill defended his ancestral estate, Lismore Castle against an Irish rebellio); 240] #Bromley_William (William Bromley | Baker and shopkeeper of Three Mile Cross. Listed among the traders of Shinfieldi); 241] #Bronte_E (Emily Brontë | b. 1818-07-30 | d. 1848-12-19 | Yorkshire novelist and poet. Her novel Wuthering Heights was printed together wi); 242] #Brooke_Miss (Miss Brooke | A correspondent of Mitford's, to whom she writes at 11 East Cliff, Brighton. Wil); 243] #Brooke_Mr (Mr. Brooke | d. 1820-04 | Forename unknown. The father of Miss Brooke and spouse of Mrs. Brooke. A Mr. Bro); 244] #Brooke_Mrs (Mrs. Brooke | Forename unknown. Dates unknown. Possibly the mother of Miss Brooke and spouse o); 245] #BrookeFrances (Frances Moore Brooke | b. 1724-01-12 | d. 1789-01-23 | Mitford read her Manners: A Novel. Not related to the Brooke family, who were no); 246] #Brooks_Miss (Miss Brooks | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u); 247] #Brougham_H (Henry Peter Brougham | b. 1778-09-19 | d. 1868-05-07 | One of the founders of the Edinburgh Review. Practiced law in Edinburgh and Lond); 248] #Broughton_Betsy (Betsy Broughton | Local beauty from Three Mile Cross, engaged to Mr. Hawley through Mrs. Dickinson); 249] #Brown_Benjamin (Benjamin Brown | Listed as a blacksmith and postmaster of Three Mile Crossin the 1854 Post Office); 250] #Brown_DrT (Thomas Brown | b. 1778-01-09 | d. 1820-04-02 | M.D. and Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh. Mitford r); 251] #Brown_Thos (Thomas Browne | b. 1605-10-19 | d. 1682-10-19 | Physician, philosopher, and theologian who made considerable contributions to En); 252] #Browne_Martha (Martha Browne | Sister of poet Mary Ann Browne (1812-1844). Mary Russell Mitford wrote in an alb); 253] #Browning_Rob (Robert Browning | b. 1812-05-07 | d. 1889-12-12 | Victorian poet, later married to Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Important philsophe); 254] #Bruce_James (James Bruce of Kinnaird | b. 1730-12-14 | d. 1794-04-26 | Bruce was only the second European to visit the isolated mountain kingdom of Aby); 255] #Brumoy_Pierre (Pierre Brumoy | b. 1688 | d. 1742 | French author and Jesuit priest, called le pere Brumoy or Father Brumoy, author ); 256] #Brunton_Alexander (Alexander Brunton | b. 1772-10-02 | d. 1854-02-09 | Spouse of Mary Balfour Brunton. Church of Scotland clergyman and Moderator of th); 257] #Brunton_Mary (Mary Balfour Brunton | b. 1778-11-01 | d. 1818-12-07 | Author of novels Self Control and Discipline. Mitford pokes gentle fun at her un); 258] #Brutus (Brutus | b. -0085-06 | d. 0042-10-23 | Marcus Junius Brutus minor or the younger was the son of Marcus Junius Brutus ma); 259] #Budd_Mrs (Mrs. Budd | d. 1819 | Mitford's Journal entry of April 28, 1819 records that she lived in Bedford and ); 260] #BuddenM (Maria Elizabeth Halsey Budden | b. 1780 | d. 1832 | Author of books for children, including a True Stories series on historical and ); 261] #Bullard_Mrs (Mrs. Bullard | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 262] #Bulley_F (Frederick Bulley | b. 1810 | d. 1885-09-03 | Third son of John Bulley and Charlotte Pocock. He obtained his BA (1829), MA (18); 263] #Bullock_Wm (William Bullock | b. 1773 | d. 1849-03-07 | Collector and systematic organizer of museums, including the Liverpool Museum at); 264] #Bulwer_Lytton (Edward Bulwer-Lytton | b. 1803-05-25 | d. 1873-01-18 | Whig and reformist Member of Parliament between 1831 and 1841 for constituencies); 265] #Burckhardt_JL (Johann Ludwig Burckhardt | b. 1784-11-24 | d. 1817-10-15 | Travelled throughout the near East under a variety of pseudonyms, studying Musli); 266] #Burdett_F (Sir Francis Burdett | b. 1770-01-25 | d. 1844-01-23 | Famous and frequently-caricatured radical and reformist politician, and member o); 267] #Burdon_Wm (William Burdon | b. 1764 | d. 1818-05-30 | Wealthy mine owner and writer on political, moral, and literary subjects. Mitfor); 268] #Burgess (Mr. Burgess | Forename unknown. Dates unknown. The person who recommended to Mitford a particu); 269] #Burke_E (Edmund Burke | b. 1729-12-01 | d. 1797-09-07 | Member of Parliament within the conservative wing of the Whig Party, he supporte); 270] #Burke_J (J. Burke | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1834. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 271] #Burnet_Gil (Gilbert Burnet | b. 1643-09-18 | d. 1716-03-17 | Whig clergyman and scholar who became Bishop of Salisbury and advisor to William); 272] #Burney_F (Frances Burney d' Arblay | b. 1752-06-13 | d. 1840-01-06 | Author of satirical comedies, blank verse tragedies, and novels of manners as we); 273] #Burney_SH (Sarah Harriet Burney | b. 1772-08-29 | d. 1844-02-08 | Daughter of Charles Burney by his second wife, Elizabeth Allen. Half sister to F); 274] #Burns_Rob (Robert Burns | b. 1759-01-25 | d. 1796-07-21 | Scottish poet, author of Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect (1786). Rented a); 275] #Butler_Mr (Mr. Butler | A Reading shop owner and Palmerite mentioned in Mitford's discussion of the Read); 276] #Butler_Sam (Samuel Butler | b. 1613-02-14 | d. 1680-09-25 | This poet fought on the Parliamentary side in the English Civil Wars and is best); 277] #Byron (George Gordon, Lord Byron | b. 1788-01-22 | d. 1824-04-19 | Romantic-era poet, playwright, and celebrity. English peer after he inherited th); 278] #Byron_Annab (Anne Isabella (Annabella) Noel Byron | b. 1792-05-17 | d. 1860-05-16 | The spouse of George Gordon, Lord Byron, and mother of mathematician Ada Augusta); 279] #Campbell_Thos (Thomas Campbell | b. 1777-07-27 | d. 1844-06-15 | Scottish poet and editor: author of The Pleasures of Hope (1799) and Gertrude of); 280] #Canning_George (George Canning | b. 1770-04-11 | d. 1827-08-08 | Tory politician, supporter of William Pitt the Younger, and one of the founders ); 281] #Carter_Mr (Mr. Carter | Mitford met him at the Webbs in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown. Source: J); 282] #Cartwright_Maj (Major John Cartwright | b. 1740-09-17 | d. 1824-09-23 | Royal Navy officer who supported the aims of the American Revolution and radical); 283] #Cary_HF (Henry Francis Cary | b. 1772-12-06 | d. 1844-08-14 | Mitford read his translation of Dante.); 284] #Cary_Mrs (Mrs. Cary | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1844. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 285] #Cassius (Cassius | b. -0085 | d. -0042 | Brother-in-law of Brutus and the leader of the assassination plot to kill Julius); 286] #Castlereagh_RS (Robert Stewart, Lord Castlereagh | b. 1769-06-18 | d. 1822-08-12 | Peer, politician, diplomat, and government official. From 1812,he helped organiz); 287] #Cathcart_Mr (Mr. Cathcart | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 288] #Cecil_Henry (Henry Cecil | b. 1754-03-14 | d. 1804-05-01 | First Marquess of Exeter, and later tenth Earl of Exeter, to which he succeeded ); 289] #Cervantes (Don Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra | b. 1547-09-29 | d. 1616-04-23 | Spanish poet and novelist. A soldier in his youth, he was wounded at Lepanto dur); 290] #Chalk_Mr (Mr. Chalk | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 291] #Chalmers_Alex (Alexander Chalmers | b. 1759-03-29 | d. 1834-12-29 | An important nineteenth-century editor of collections of literary works from the); 292] #Chalmers_T (Thamas Chalmers | b. 1780-03-17 | d. 1847-05-31 | Evangelical Presybterian minister of the Church of Scotland who sought reform of); 293] #Chamberlaine_Jeremy (Chamberlaine Jeremy | Brought Mitford wildflowers in pots in 1819. Dates unknown. Source: Journal.); 294] #Chamberlayne_Wm (William Chamberlayne | b. 1760-12-04 | d. 1829-10-10 | Heir to his father's property at Coley Park, Berkshire and at Weston Grove, Hamp); 295] #Champernowne_Mr (Arthur Harrington Champernowne | b. 1767 | d. 1819 | Son of Rev. Richard Harrington and Jane Champernowne who took the name and arms ); 296] #Chantrey_F (Francis Chantrey | b. 1781-04-07 | d. 1841-11-25 | Important and celebrated sculptor in early-nineteenth-century Britain. Mitford m); 297] #Chapone_Hester (Hester Mulso Chapone | b. 1727-10-27 | d. 1801-12-25 | Author and member of the Bluestocking Circle.); 298] #CharlesSpencer (Charles Spencer | b. 1955-03-04 | Since 1991, Charles Spencer has been a theater critic for the conservative Londo); 299] #Charlotte_Duchess (Friederike Charlotte Ulrike Katharina, Duchess of York and Albany | b. 1767-05-07 | d. 1820-08-06 | Mitford mentions that she was working on a black gown for the death of the Duche); 300] #Chas_SpencerChurchill (Lord Charles Spencer-Churchill | b. 1794-12-03 | d. 1840-04-28 | Second son of George Spencer-Churchill. Army officer and Member of Parliament fo); 301] #ChasI (Charles I | b. 1600-11-19 | d. 1649-01-30 | The only English king to have been tried and executed by the British people, Cha); 302] #ChasII (Charles II | b. 1630-05-29 | d. 1685-02-06 | The son of the executed King Charles I, Charles II was restored to his father's ); 303] #Chatfield_Mr (Edward Chatfield | b. 1802 | d. 1839-01-22 | Chatfield was a pupil of Haydonat the same time as William Bewick. When Haydon w); 304] #Chaucer (Geoffrey Chaucer | b. 1343 | d. 1400-10-25 | Medieval English poet, philsopher, and astronomer. Author of Canterbury Tales.); 305] #Chippendale_Mr (Mr. Chippendale | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 306] #Chorley_HF (Henry Fothergill Chorley | b. 1808-12-15 | d. 1872-02-16 | Of Quaker parentage, Chorley worked unhappily in clerical positions and cultivat); 307] #Christie_JH (Jonathan Henry Christie | b. 1793-11-04 | d. 1876-04-15 | Fought the duel on 27 February 1821 with John Scott that resulted in Scott's dea); 308] #Clare_J (John Clare | b. 1793-07-13 | d. 1864-05-20 | Called the peasant poet, Clare worked as an agricultural laborer and manservant.); 309] #Clargo_Meremoth (Meremoth Clargo | Possibly a shopkeeper in Three Mile Cross. Name uncertain. Dates unknown.); 310] #Clark_Rupert (Rupert Clark | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Dates unknown.); 311] #Clarke_ED (Edward Daniel Clarke | b. 1769-06-05 | d. 1822-03-09 | Traveller, writer, and naturalist. Author of Travels in Various Countries of Eur); 312] #Clarke_Mrs (Mrs. Clarke | The daughter of Colonel Anstruther who lived in Reading. An associate of the Pal); 313] #Clarke_William (William Clarke | Listed as a shopkeeper in Three Mile Crossin the 1854 Post Office Directory of B); 314] #Clement6_Pope (Pope Clement VI | b. 1291 | d. 1352-12-06 | Clement the VI reigned the Pope, or patriarch of the Catholic Church, from 1329 ); 315] #ClementWI (William Innell Clement | d. 1852 | Newspaper proprietor and journalist. Mitford read his Report of the Action, Wrig); 316] #Cliff_Jesse (Jesse Cliff | Jesse Cliff gave the Mitford family elderly bantams (chickens) in 1819. Source: ); 317] #Cobbett_Wm (William Cobbett | b. 1763-03-09 | d. 1835-06-18 | Politician, reformer, and journalist. Founded weekly newspaper The Political Reg); 318] #Cockburn_Mrs (Mrs. Cockburn | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1840 and 1847. Forename unknown.); 319] #Cockle_Gen (General Cockle | Comes to view Bertram House while it is for sale in 1819. May be Brigadier Gener); 320] #Coffin_Mrs (Mrs. Coffin | Mentioned in a letter to Mary Webb of January 10, 1819 as a woman who talked of ); 321] #Colburn_H (Henry Colburn | b. 1784 | d. 1855-08-16 | Publisher and founder of the publishing firm Henry Colburn, later Henry Colburn ); 322] #Coleridge_ST (Samuel Taylor Coleridge | b. 1772-10-21 | d. 1834-07-25 | Key Romantic-era poet and writer and lecturer on aesthetics. Early collaborator ); 323] #Collier_Margaret (Margaret Collier | b. 1719 | d. 1794 | Correspondent of Samuel Richardson, companion and friend of Sarah and Henry Fiel); 324] #Collins_little (Thomas Collins | b. 1775 | d. 1806 | Comic actor at Drury Lane, called little Collins. Acted under Mr. Collins. Accor); 325] #Collins_Wm (William Collins | b. 1721-12-25 | d. 1759-06-12 | Important poet of the mid eighteenth century, known for his lyrical Odes; he was); 326] #Colman_the_Elder (George Colman the Elder | b. 1732-04 | d. 1794-08-14 | George Colman the Elder (so named to distinquish him from his son George Colman ); 327] #Colman_the_Younger (George Colman the younger | b. 1762-10-21 | d. 1836-10-26 | Son of George Colman the Elder, he produced his first play at Haymarket Theater ); 328] #Comber_Thos (Thomas Comber | b. 1765 | d. 1835 | Likely the Rev. Thomas Comber, vicar of Creech St. Michael, Somerset and then re); 329] #Comer_Mr (Mr. Comer | Actor who appeared in Julian at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, February 1823.); 330] #Congreve_Wm (William Congreve | b. 1670-01-24 | d. 1729-01-19 | Playwright and poet of the Restoration period, known for his satirical comedy, i); 331] #Cook_CaptJ (Captain James Cook | b. 1728-10-27 | d. 1779-02-14 | Mapped Newfoundland and explored the Pacific, including New Zealand and Australi); 332] #Cook_J (John Cook | b. 1608-09-18 | d. 1660-10-16 | As Solicitor General for the High Court of Justice, he led the prosecution of Ch); 333] #Cooper_John (John Cooper | b. 1793 | d. 1870-07-13 | Actor active between 1811 and 1859; played at Drury Lane and other London theatr); 334] #Cooper_Mr (Mr. Cooper | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Mitford c); 335] #Corneille (Pierre Corneille | b. 1606-06-06 | d. 1684-10-01 | Seventeenth-century French tragedian. Author of The Cid and Cinna.); 336] #Correard_A (Alexandre Corréard | b. 1788-10-08 | d. 1857-02-16 | Civil and military engineer and geographer. Mitford read a translation of his Na); 337] #Cosway_Rich (Richard Cosway | b. 1742-11-05 | d. 1821-07-04 | Portrait painter and miniaturist; the husband of painter Maria Cosway. Member of); 338] #Coutts_HM (Harriot Mellon Coutts Beauclerk, Duchess of St. Albans | b. 1777-11-11 | d. 1837-08-06 | Mrs. Coutts was the second wife of Thomas Coutts, banker; she was the former act); 339] #Coutts_T (Thomas Coutts | b. 1735-09-07 | d. 1822-02-24 | Director of the banking firm of Coutts & Co. in London.); 340] #Cowley_H (Hannah Cowley | b. 1743-03-14 | d. 1809-03-11 | Successful playwright at Drury Lane and Covent Garden from the 1770s to the 1790); 341] #Cowper (William Cowper | b. 1731-11-26 | d. 1800-04-25 | Poet, hymnodist, and author of the most important translations of Homer since Po); 342] #Cowslade_F (Francis (Frank) Cowslade | As Coles notes, Francis or Frank Cowslade was one of the publishers of the Readi); 343] #Coxe_Wm (William Coxe | b. 1748 | d. 1828-05-08 | Author of Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough.); 344] #Crabbe (George Crabbe | b. 1754-12-24 | d. 1832-02-03 | Mentored by Edmund Burke and friend of Scott and Wordsworth. Mitford read his Ta); 345] #Crawfurd_J (John Crawfurd | b. 1783-08-13 | d. 1868-05-11 | British colonial administrator to Southeast Asia, where he studied Malaysian lan); 346] #Cripps_JM (John Marten Cripps | b. 1780 | d. 1853 | E.D. Clarke was his tutor; Clarke accompanied Cripps on his travels. Both attend); 347] #Croker_JW (John Wilson Croker | b. 1780-12-20 | d. 1857-10-08 | Tory politician and Member of Parliament. Founding editor and writer for the Qua); 348] #Croly_G (George Croly | b. 1780-08-17 | d. 1860-11-24 | An Irish writer and cleric who held the living of St. Stephen Walbrook in the Ci); 349] #Cromwell (Oliver Cromwell | b. 1599-04-25 | d. 1658-09-03 | English Republican military leader, politician, and dictator. The effective prot); 350] #Cromwell_Hen (Henry Cromwell | b. 1628-12-26 | d. 1674-03-23 | The fourth of Oliver Cromwell's five sons (out of nine children total), Henry se); 351] #Crook_N (Nora Crook | b. 1940 | Emeritus Professor of English Literature at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridg); 352] #Cropp_Mrs (Elizabeth (Croppy) Cropp | d. 1803 | Longtime servant in the Mitford household, who came to the family with Mitford's); 353] #Crowther_Mr (Mr. Crowther | The dandy Mitford pokes fun at in her letters of 9 and 10 January, 1819 . Possib); 354] #Crowther_Mrs (Mrs. Crowther | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1855. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 355] #Cruikshank_Geo (George Cruikshank | b. 1792-09-27 | d. 1878-02-01 | Book illustrator and caricaturist. Son of illustrator Isaac Cruikshank and broth); 356] #Culpepper_Mr (William Alleyne Culpeper | b. 1794 | d. 1870-01-29 | William Alleyn Culpeper of Barbadoes (second of that name), was the second husba); 357] #Culpepper_Mrs (Martha Carteretta Cornelia Valpy Straker Culpeper | b. 1779-11-16 | Dr. Valpy's eldest daughter by his first wife, Martha Cornelia de Cartaret. She ); 358] #Cumberland_J (John Cumberland | b. 1787 | d. 1866 | John Cumberland was the publisher of Cumberland's British Theatre and Cumberland); 359] #Cumberland_Rich (Richard Cumberland | b. 1732-02-19 | d. 1811-05-07 | Older brother of poet Mary Alcock. Author of The West Indian (play, 1771) and Th); 360] #Cunningham_JW (John William Cunningham | b. 1780-01-03 | d. 1861-09-30 | Follower of the evangelical Clapham sect of the Church of England, which worked ); 361] #d_Aubigné_Françoise (Françoise d'Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon | b. 1635-11-27 | d. 1719-04-15 | Aristocrat and second morganatic wife of Louis XIV of France (1635-1719); her fi); 362] #Dacre_Lady (Barbarina Brand, Lady Dacre | b. 1768-05-09 | d. 1854-05-17 | Playwright, poet, translator, and editor. A correspondent of Mitford between 183); 363] #Dallas_RC (R. C. Dallas | b. 1756-10-16 | d. 1824 | R.C. Dallas was a prominent barrister and judge who worked on many parliamentary); 364] #Dante (Dante | b. 1265 | d. 1321-09-14 | Medieval poet, author of The Divine Comedy.); 365] #Daphne_pet (Daphne | Mitford's dog, a female greyhound. However, there is also a pug named Daphne in ); 366] #Dapuy_Mrs (Mrs. Dapuy | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 367] #Davenport_MA (Mary Ann Davenport | b. 1759 | d. 1843-05-08 | Performed at Covent Garden and retired from the stage in 1830 after a career of ); 368] #Davenport_RA (Richard Alfred Davenport | b. 1777-01-18 | d. 1852 | Prolific miscellaneous writer and editor, spouse of novelist Selina Davenport. A); 369] #Davenport_Sel (Selina Davenport | b. 1779-06-27 | d. 1859-07-14 | Author of 11 novels between the 1810s and 1830s. Friend of Anna Maria and Jane P); 370] #Davie_William (William Davie | Noted by Needham as a beer retailer and possibly a butcher. His source is the 18); 371] #Davies_Mr (Thomas Davies | Lived in Earley. Owned a neighboring meadow near Bertram House); 372] #Dawson_GeoP (George Pelsant Dawson | b. 1804 | d. 1873 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837 and one of the signatories on he); 373] #de_Chaboulon (Pierre Fleury de Chaboulon | b. 1779 | d. 1835-09-28 | Cabinet secretary of Napoleon after his return from Elba. In 1820 he published M); 374] #Deacon_WF (William Frederick Deacon | b. 1799 | d. 1845 | Attended Reading School at the same time as Talfourd. Newspaper and magazine edi); 375] #Dearesley_Mr (Mr. Dearesley | ); 376] #Dearsley_Is (Isabella Eastwood Dearsley | b. 1796 | d. 1875 | Spouse of William Hanson Dearsley and lived with him at Moore Place, Shinfield u); 377] #Dearsley_Wm (William Hanson Dearsley | b. 1769 | d. 1825-10-13 | Inherited Moore Place estate in Shinfield from his father William. After his dea); 378] #Debar_Mr (Mr. Debar | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 379] #deChaboulon (Pierre Alexandre Edouard Fleury de Chaboulon | Mitford read his Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de la vie privée, du retour, ); 380] #Defoe_D (Daniel Defoe | b. 1660 | d. 1731-04-24 | Early practitioner of the English novel, admired by Mitford for the vivid realis); 381] #deGenlis_Mme (Stéphanie Félicité de Genlis | b. 1746-01-25 | d. 1830-12-30 | French author of sensibility novels as well as works for children based on the p); 382] #deGoodrich_Miss (Miss de Goodrich | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1852. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 383] #DeJoinville (Jean de Joinville | b. 1224—1225 | d. 1317-12-24 | Author of Life of St. Louis in 1309 , chronicling the life of the crusading King); 384] #Dekker_Thos (Thomas Dekker | b. 1572 | d. 1632 | Elizabethan poet, playwright, and political pamphleteer.); 385] #delaMotte_F (Friedrich de la Motte, Baron Fouqué | b. 1777-02-12 | d. 1843-01-23 | German Romantic writer of works of medieval chivalry and Northern mythology, inc); 386] #Denman_Marg (Margaret Denman Croft | b. 1771-07-09 | d. 1847-09-24 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Daughter of eminent physician a); 387] #DeQuincey_Thos (Thomas de Quincey | b. 1785-08-15 | d. 1859-12-08 | Best known for Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1822). Also wrote Klosterh); 388] #deStael (Germaine de Staël | b. 1766-04-22 | d. 1817-07-14 | Franco-Swiss salonierre, celebrity and writer. Author of Corinne, a novel about ); 389] #Deverell_John (John Deverell | In a July 1819 both Mr. John Deverell and a Mr. Deverell appear. John could be t); 390] #Deverell_Mr (Mr. Deverell | In July 1819, Mitford's journal mentions both a Mr. John Deverell and then a Mr.); 391] #Dibdin_TJ (Thomas John Dibdin | b. 1771-03-21 | d. 1841-09-16 | English author, actor, and theater manager (1771-1841) Author of Something New (); 392] #Dickens (Charles Dickens | b. 1812-02-07 | d. 1870-06-09 | English journalist and editor, novelist, and lecturer. Considered one of the mos); 393] #Dickinson_Charles (Charles Dickinson | b. 1755-03-06 | d. 1827 | Friend of the Mitford family. He was the son of Vikris Dickinson and Elizabeth M); 394] #Dickinson_Daughter (Frances Vikris Dickinson Elliott | b. 1820-03-07 | d. 1898-10-26 | Frances Dickinson was the only child of Charles Dickinson and Catherine Allingha); 395] #Dickinson_Grandmama (Grandmama Dickinson | Identity unknown. Frances Dickinson's paternal grandmother, Elizabeth Marchant D); 396] #Dickinson_Mrs (Mrs. Dickinson | b. 1787 | d. 1861-09-02 | Catherine Allingham was the daughter of Thomas Allingham. She married Charles Di); 397] #Dickinson_Nurse (Nurse | Nurse who worked for Charles Dickinson's family. Proper name unidentified. Dates); 398] #Disraeli_I (Isaac D'Israeli | b. 1766-05-11 | d. 1848-01-19 | Satirical author and book collector. Mitford read his Calamities of Authors.); 399] #Dobbs_Mr (Mr. Dobbs | An acquaintance of Mitford in 1819. The spouse of Mrs. Dobbs. She lists their ad); 400] #Dobbs_Mrs (Mrs. Dobbs | An associate of both Mitford and Miss James, presumably older than both. The spo); 401] #Dodd_Anne (Anne Dodd | b. 1800-06-27 | Married Henry Hayward on December 27, 1819, which is mentioned by Mitford in her); 402] #DoddCE (Charles Dodd | Legal writer, active in the 1830s. Mitford read his An Autumn Near the Rhine. Da); 403] #Dodington_Geo (George Bubb Dodington, 1st Baron Melcombe | b. 1691 | d. 1762-07-28 | Whig M.P. from 1715 to 1761 and government minister. Mitford read his posthumous); 404] #Doge_F_hist (Francesco Foscari | Historical Doge of Venice on whom Mitford based her Doge in Foscari. Mitford's d); 405] #Donato_hist (Donato Senator | Historical personage on whom Mitford based Senator Donato in her play, Foscari. ); 406] #Doria_Andrea (Andrea Doria | b. 1466-11-30 | d. 1560-11-25 | A fifteenth-century Genoese military commander and statemen of interest in Mary ); 407] #Downes_J (John Downes | d. 1660 | Trained in the law, he served as Member of Parliament for Arundel, Sussex. He wa); 408] #Doyne_Mr (Mr. Doyne | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 409] #Drake_Nathan (Nathan Drake | b. 1766-01-15 | d. 1836 | Essayist and physician; his most ambitious work was Shakespeare and his Times. D); 410] #Drover_Elizabeth (Elizabeth Drover | b. 1766-01-06 | d. 1789 | Second wife of James Drover, Sr., whom she married in 1789, and mother of James ); 411] #Drover_JamesJr (Mr. Drover | b. 1791 | d. 1823 | Shopkeeper in Reading, son of James Drover, Sr. and Elizabeth Drover. He took ov); 412] #Drover_JamesSr (James Drover | b. 1762 | d. 1816-03-15 | James Drover, Sr., and later his son, James Drover, Jr., operated a China shop a); 413] #Drover_Miss (Miss Drover | Lived with her parents and brother on Minster Street. Forename and relationship ); 414] #Drover_Mrs (Mrs. Drover | Lived with her family on Minster Street. Forename unknown.); 415] #Drummond_Wm (William Drummond | b. 1585-12-13 | d. 1649-12-04 | Called Drummond of Hawthornden, Drummond was a Scottish lyric poet with royalist); 416] #Dryden (John Dryden | b. 1631-08-09 | d. 1700-05-01 | Named Poet Laureate in 1668 , Dryden authored Annus mirabilis: the Year of Wonde); 417] #Dubois_JA (Jean-Antoine Dubois | b. 1765-01 | d. 1848-02-17 | A French Catholic Missionary in India. Member of the Missions Etrangères de Pari); 418] #Duke_Montrose (James Graham, Duke of Montrose | b. 1755-09-08 | d. 1836-12-30 | Lord Chamberlain who appointed George Colman the Younger to be the Examiner of p); 419] #Duke_of_Devonshire (William George Spencer Cavendish, Duke of Devonshire | b. 1790-05-21 | d. 1858-01-18 | British peer and Whig politician who supported his family's traditionally reform); 420] #Dukinfield_Henry (Rev. Sir Henry Dukinfield | Reverend Sir Henry Dukinfield, Mitford correspondent and Vicar of St. Giles in R); 421] #Dukinfield_Mr (Mr. Dukinfield | A patient of Mr. Sherwood. May be Henry Duckinfield (note alternate spelling), v); 422] #Duncan_MR (Maria Rebecca Duncan Davison | b. 1780—1783 | d. 1858-05-30 | British actor, reported to have been born in Liverpool. Although she had acted i); 423] #Dundas_C (Charles Dundas | b. 1751-08-05 | d. 1832-07-07 | Member of Parliament for Berkshire from 1794 to 1832. He generally sided with li); 424] #DundasHen (Henry Dundas, Lord Melville | b. 1742-04-28 | d. 1811-05-28 | Minister who held several important posts in William Pitt's government, includin); 425] #Dyce_Alex (Alexander Dyce | b. 1798-06-30 | d. 1869-05-15 | Clergyman and prolific editor, translator, literary historian, and book collecto); 426] #Easthope_John (John Easthope | b. 1784-10-29 | d. 1865-12-11 | Began his career as a bank clerk and stockbroker and became wealthy through inve); 427] #Edgeworth_Maria (Maria Edgeworth | b. 1768-01-01 | d. 1849-05-22 | British author and educator. Best known for Castle Rackrent (1800); also wrote c); 428] #EdgeworthRL (Richard Lovell Edgeworth | b. 1744-05-31 | d. 1817-06-13 | Anglo-Irish landowner and father of Maria Edgeworth by his first wife, Anna Mari); 429] #Edwards_Bryan (Bryan Edwards | b. 1743 | d. 1800 | West Indian planter and politician. Mitford read his History of the West Indies.); 430] #Egerton_Dan (Daniel Egerton | b. 1772 | d. 1835 | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Foscari at Covent Garden Theatre in 1828;); 431] #Elford_Elizabeth (Elizabeth Elford Adams | b. 1782-03-11 | d. 1837 | Second daughter of Sir William Elford by his first wife, Mary Davies Elford. On ); 432] #Elford_Grace (Grace Chard Elford | b. 1781-11-05 | d. 1856-02-24 | Elder daughter of Sir William Elford and Mary Davies Elford; she was baptised at); 433] #Elford_J (Jonathan Elford | b. 1776-11-05 | d. 1823-03-11 | The only son of Sir William Elford and his first wife Mary Davies Elford. He joi); 434] #Elford_MrsC (Charlotte Wynne Elford | Daughter of John Wynne of Abercynlleth, Denbigh. Married Jonathan Elford on May ); 435] #Elford_MrsE (Elizabeth Hall Walrond Elford | b. 1780 | d. 1839 | Elizabeth Walrond was the second wife of Sir William Elford; they married on Jul); 436] #Elford_MrsM (Mary Davies Elford | b. 1753 | d. 1807-08-02 | Mary Davies was the first wife of Sir William Elford; they married on January 20); 437] #Elford_SirWm (Sir William Elford | b. 1749-08 | d. 1837-11-30 | According to L’Estrange, Sir William was first a friend of Mitford’s father, and); 438] #ElizI (Elizabeth I | b. 1533-09-07 | d. 1603-03-24 | The last of the Tudor monarchs, and defender of father’s instition of a Protesta); 439] #Elliott_John (John Elliott | Son of Mr. Elliot, mentioned by Mitford as coming to look at their home at Bertr); 440] #Elliott_Mr (Mr. Elliott | Father of John Elliot, mentioned by Mitford as coming to look at their home at B); 441] #Ellis_Hen (Sir Henry Ellis | b. 1788-09-01 | d. 1855-09-28 | A commissioner in Lord Amherst’s embassy to China 1816-17. Author of Journal of ); 442] #Elliston_Robt (Robert Elliston | b. 1774 | d. 1831 | English actor and theater manager. Managed Drury Lane and and other theaters. Me); 443] #Emery_John (John Emery | b. 1777-09-22 | d. 1822-07-25 | English actor and musician. Performed Covent Garden Theater. Acted under Mr. Eme); 444] #Esther_Ozoro (Ozoro Esther | According to James Bruce in Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Y); 445] #Euripides (Euripides | b. -0480 | d. -0406 | Ancient world playwright, considered together with Aeschylus and Sophocles as es); 446] #EvelynJ (John Evelyn | b. 1620-10-31 | d. 1706-02-27 | Diarist; collector and writer on painting, sculpture, and medals; garden archite); 447] #Fairfax_hist (Thomas Fairfax, Lord Fairfax | b. 1612-01-17 | d. 1671-11-12 | Lord General of the New Model Army. Fairfax was the commanding officer of Oliver); 448] #Falmore_Mrs (Mrs. Falmore | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 449] #Farquhar_George (George Farquhar | b. 1676-01-01—1677-12-31 | d. 1707-05-23 | Playwright, author of numerous plays, including The Recruiting Officer and The B); 450] #FarquharsonG (George Farquharson | Legal journalist. Mitford read his Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for ); 451] #Faucit_Mrs (Mrs. Faucit | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 452] #Fawcett_John (John Fawcett | b. 1768-08-29 | d. 1837 | English actor and dramatist. Mitford likely refers to the younger Fawcett, a con); 453] #Fearon_HB (Henry Bradshaw Fearon | b. 1770 | English surgeon who wrote Sketches of America. A Narrative of a Journey of Five ); 454] #Fellowes_W (William Fellowes | b. 1769 | d. 1852 | Mitford read his A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe, in 1817. Source: VIAF, W); 455] #Ferdinand_I (Ferdinand I | b. 1751-01-12 | d. 1825-01-04 | Deposed by Napoleon in 1805, and earlier by the short-lived (6-months) Parthenop); 456] #FerdinandVII (Ferdinand VII of Spain | b. 1784 | d. 1833 | Ferdinand VII was King of Spain in 1808, when he was overthrown by Napoleon , an); 457] #Ferrier_Susan (Susan Ferrier | b. 1782-09-07 | d. 1854-11-05 | Scottish novelist. Mitford admired her novel Marriage.); 458] #Fielding_Henry (Henry Fielding | b. 1707-04-22 | d. 1754-10-08 | Satirical novelist and playwright, Fielding was a member of the Scriblerus Club ); 459] #Fielding_Sarah (Sarah Fielding | b. 1710-11-08 | d. 1768-04-09 | Author of novels for adults and children, including The Adventures of David Simp); 460] #Fields_JT (James T. Fields | b. 1817-12-31 | d. 1881-04-24 | James T. Fields was junior partner in the Boston publishing firm Ticknor and Fie); 461] #Fieschi_GL (Giovanni Luigi Fieschi | b. 1522 | d. 1547-01-02 | Giovanni Luigi Fieschi (or Fiesco), count of Lavagna was a nobleman of Genoa and); 462] #Filleul_A (Adélaïde-Émilie Filleul, Marquise de Souza-Botelho | b. 1761-05-14 | d. 1836-04-19 | Author of Mademoiselle de Tournon which Mitford mentions reading in her Journal ); 463] #Finden_Ed (Edward Finden | b. 1791 | d. 1857-02-09 | Engraver and printmaker, younger brother and partner to William Finden in his en); 464] #Finden_Wm (William Finden | b. 1787 | d. 1852-09-20 | Line engraver, printmaker, and founder of the gift book/annual Finden's Tableaux); 465] #Fisher_John (John Fisher | b. 1748 | d. 1825-05-08 | Bishop of Exeter and then Bishop of Salisbury from 1807-1825. Art collector and ); 466] #Fisher_Mrs (Mrs. Fisher | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 467] #Fitzclarence_Geo (George Fitzclarence | Eldest son of William IV and his mistress Dorothea Jordan. Mitford read his Jour); 468] #Fitzharris (Mr. Fitzharris | An Irish actor who began his career in Reading before going to London. He played); 469] #Fleming_Mr (Mr. Fleming | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 470] #Fletcher_John (John Fletcher | b. 1579 | d. 1625 | Playwright following Shakespeare, contemporary of Ben Jonson in the early sevent); 471] #Florry_Mrs (Sarah Florry | b. 1744 | d. 1832 | An acquaintance of Mitford and friend of Elizabeth James, who is remembered in h); 472] #Flush_pet (Flush | The Mitfordsappear to owned a series of spaniels, all named Flush.); 473] #Fly_pet (Fly | Female dog given as a gift to Mitford by Farmer Webb in February 1819 and marrie); 474] #Foote_Maria (Maria Foote Stanhope | b. 1797-07-24 | d. 1867-12-27 | Well-known English theater actor. She was the daughter of Samuel Foote. She play); 475] #Foote_Samuel (Samuel Foote | b. 1720-01-27 | d. 1777-10-21 | English author, actor, and Haymarket Theater manager. Comic actor and satirical ); 476] #Forbes_Capt (Captain John Forbes | British theater proprietor and Royal Navy officer, and a former Grand Jury acqua); 477] #Ford_John (John Ford | b. 1586 | d. 1639—1640 | English playwright and poet, wrote 'Tis Pity She's a Whore (printed 1633)); 478] #Forrester_Mr (Mr. Forrester | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 479] #Forsyth_Jos (Joseph Forsyth | b. 1763-02-18 | d. 1815-09-20 | Schoolmaster and author of Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, during an ); 480] #Foscari_son_hist (Jacopo Foscari | b. 1416 | d. 1457 | Historical personage on whom Mitford based the character of Francesco Foscari in); 481] #Foscolo_Ugo (Ugo Foscolo | b. 1778-02-06 | d. 1827-09-27 | Venetian author and playwright who spent the last years of his life in England i); 482] #Fox_ChasJ (Charles James Fox | b. 1749-01-24 | d. 1806-09-13 | Whig politician and leader of the House of Commons. Fox was an outspoken opponen); 483] #Fox_HRV (Henry Richard Vassall Fox, 3rd Baron of Holland | b. 1773-11-21 | d. 1840-10-22 | Grandson of Henry Fox, first Baron Holland, and nephew of Charles James Fox. He ); 484] #Francis_Philip (Sir Philip Francis | b. 1740-10-22 | d. 1818-12-23 | Whig Member of Parliament. Strong candidate to have been Junius, the pseudonymou); 485] #Frankland_Mrs (Mrs. Frankland | A friend of Mrs. Mitford. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 486] #Franklin_Ben (Benjamin Franklin | b. 1706-01-17 | d. 1790-04-17 | Polymath, naturalist and inventor. Newspaper editor, printer and postmaster in P); 487] #Franklin_Eleanor (Eleanor Porden Franklin | b. 1795-07-14 | d. 1825-02-22 | Poet. Author of The Veils; or the Triumph of Constancy and Coeur de Lion; or the); 488] #Franklin_John (Sir John Franklin | b. 1786-04-16 | d. 1847-06-11 | Royal navy officer and explorer. Served in French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleo); 489] #Frere_JH (John Hookham Frere | b. 1769-05-21 | d. 1846-01-07 | John Hookham Frere, diplomat and author, was a founder of the Quarterly Review a); 490] #Froissart (Jean Froissart | b. 1337 | d. 1405 | Medieval poet and historian.); 491] #Fuseli_H (Henry Fuseli | b. 1741-02-07 | d. 1825-04-17 | Swiss painter and author who later emigrated to England. Served as Professor of ); 492] #Fuseli_Sophia (Sophia Rawlins Fuseli | Spouse and former model of Henry Fuseli; they married in 1788.); 493] #Gandy_Ed (Edward Gandy | b. 1792 | d. 1859 | Playwright active between 1823 and 1827. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford); 494] #Garrick_David (David Garrick | b. 1717-02-19 | d. 1779-01-20 | English actor and theatrical manager, considered the greatest actor of his era, ); 495] #Gaskell_Eliz (Elizabeth Gaskell | b. 1810-09-29 | d. 1865-11-12 | Author of condition of England social problem novels such as Mary Barton and Rut); 496] #GaspeyT (Thomas Gaspey | b. 1788-03-31 | d. 1871-12-08 | Mitford read his Mystery, or Forty Years Ago: A Novel.); 497] #GastonII (Gaston II and IX | b. 1308 | d. 1343-09 | ); 498] #GastonIII (Gaston III and X | b. 1331 | d. 1391 | Son of Gaston II, nicknamed Gaston Fébus or Phoebus, he wrote a famous Book of t); 499] #Geesin_Mrs (Mrs. Geesin | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 500] #Geo_SpencerChurchill (George Spencer-Churchill, Duke of Marlborough | b. 1793-12-27 | d. 1857-01-07 | Tory Member of Parliament and celebrated collector of books, art, and antiquitie); 501] #GeoII (George II of Great Britain and Ireland and Elector of Hanover | b. 1683-11-09 | d. 1760-10-25 | King of Great Britain and Ireland and Elector of Hanover from 1727, the eldest s); 502] #GeoIII (George III, King of Great Britain and King of Ireland | b. 1738-06-04 | d. 1820-01-29 | The king who lost the American colonies, and suffered porphyria and mental illne); 503] #GeoIV (George IV, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | b. 1762-08-12 | d. 1830-06-26 | King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and King of Hanover. Ho); 504] #George (Allaway George | Manservant at Bertram House in 1819; dismissed on September 15, 1820, when the M); 505] #Gibbon_Edward (Edward Gibbon | b. 1737-05-08 | d. 1794-01-16 | Best known for writing The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ); 506] #Gifford_William (William Gifford | Tory editor of the Anti-Jacobin in the late 1790s as well as the Quarterly Revie); 507] #Gillies_Rob (Robert Gillies | b. 1788 | d. 1858-11-28 | A contributor to Blackwood's Magazine.); 508] #Glennig_Mr (Mr. Glennig | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u); 509] #Glenny_Geo (George Glenny | b. 1793-11-01 | d. 1874-05-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1831 and 1832. Writer, editor an); 510] #Goddard_Mr (Mr. Goddard | Gave Lucy Hill away at wedding.); 511] #Godwin_Wm (William Godwin | b. 1756-03-03 | d. 1836-04-07 | Political philosopher and novelist, married to Mary Wollstonecraft and biographe); 512] #Goethe (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe | b. 1749-08-28 | d. 1832-03-22 | Highly influential 18th-century novelist and dramatist, the author of Faust and ); 513] #Goldsmid_AM (Anna Maria Goldsmid | b. 1805-09-17 | d. 1889-02-08 | Expert linguist and translator in Italian, French, German, and Hebrew. Founded t); 514] #Goldsmith (Oliver Goldsmith | b. 1728-11-10 | d. 1774-04-04 | Poet, novelist, and playwright. Friend of Samuel Johnson. His works were admired); 515] #Goodchild_J (Joseph Goodchild | Farmer of Hill House farm, which is mentioned in Our Village. Goodchild is noted); 516] #Graham_Maria (Maria Dundas Graham, Lady Callcott | b. 1785-07-19 | d. 1842-11-21 | Mitford writes of this adventurous woman as Mrs. Graham and references her trave); 517] #Gray_Thos (Thomas Gray | b. 1716-12-26 | d. 1771-07-30 | Poet and classicist. Author of Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard and Ode on ); 518] #Green_Mr (Mr. Green | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 519] #Green_Mr_Berks (Mr. Green | Local man who visited the Mitfords at Bertram House and dined at Three Mile Cros); 520] #Greene_JH (John Hooke Greene | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1831.); 521] #Greenwell_Mrs (Mrs. Greenwell | Friend and visitor of the Mitfords, frequently associated with Mrs. Raggett. Liv); 522] #Griffin_Rich (Richard Griffin, Baron Braybrooke | Until 1797, known as Richard Aldworth-Neville or Richard Aldworth Griffin-Nevill); 523] #Groby (Thomas Grey, Lord Grey of Groby | b. 1623 | d. 1657 | Parliamentary Commander-in-Chief in the English Midlands and Leicester during th); 524] #Guiccioli_T (Teresa Guiccioli | b. 1800 | d. 1873 | Lord Byron was her cavaliere serviente, just after she had married Count Alessan); 525] #Gulson_Mrs (Mrs. Gulson | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 526] #Gutch_John (John Gutch | b. 1746-10-01 | d. 1831-01-07 | Clergy and antiquarian. Author of Collectanea Curiosa, or Miscellaneous Tracts: ); 527] #Hackett_J (James Hackett | Mitford read his Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, ); 528] #Halford_SrHen (Sir Henry Halford | b. 1766-10-02 | d. 1844-03-09 | Appointed physician-extraordinary to George III in 1793; he also attended George); 529] #Hall_AM (Anna Maria Fielding Hall | b. 1800-01-06 | d. 1881-01-30 | Novelist and short story writer; her stories and sketches set in Ireland were co); 530] #HallamH (Henry Hallam | b. 1777-07-09 | d. 1859-01-21 | Proponent of Whig causes such as the abolition of the slave trade. Wrote for the); 531] #Hamilton_S (Samuel Hamilton | Publisher and editor of the Lady’s Magazine. He took over the publishing busines); 532] #Hammond_T (Thomas Hammond | b. 1600 | d. 1660 | An officer in the New Model Army. A Commissioner at the High Court of Justicein ); 533] #Handel (George Frederick Handel | b. 1685-03-05 | d. 1759-04-14 | Anglo-German composer, influenced by the Italian Baroque. Settled in London in 1); 534] #Hanmer_Mrs (Mrs. Hanmer | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1835. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 535] #Hanson_John (John Hanton | b. 1755 | d. 1841-09-21 | Solicitor for Byron as well as solicitor and trustee for John Charles Walopp, 3r); 536] #Hanson_MA (Mary Ann Hanson | d. 1867 | Mary Ann Hanson was the daughter of solicitor John Hanson. She was the second wi); 537] #Harley_Miss (Miss Harley | Friend of Mitford's who made her a purse and who received a presentation copy of); 538] #Harmer_J (James Harmer | b. 1777 | d. 1853-06-12 | Attorney, legal reformer, and later an alderman and Sheriff of London. Helped es); 539] #Harness_John (Dr. John Harness | b. 1754-11-15 | d. 1823-01-03 | Naval surgeon, father of William Harness. Dr. Harness was friend of the Mitfords); 540] #Harness_Mary (Mary Harness | b. 1801-02-04 | d. 1873-04-13 | Mary Harness was the daughter of John Harness, M.D. and Sarah Dredge; she was ba); 541] #Harris_Anna (Anna Harris Valpy | b. 1793 | d. 1878 | Spouse of Anthony Valpy, married on 15 December 1818 at St. Giles Church, Readin); 542] #Harris_Henry (Henry Harris | At the time of Foscari’s composition, Henry Harris was manager of Covent Garden ); 543] #Harris_Mr (Mr. Harris | Dates unknown. Local doctor, not the same person as Henry Harris, the Covent Gar); 544] #Harrison_hist (Thomas Harrison | d. 1660 | Trained to the legal profession, Major-General Thomas Harrison was a Parliamenta); 545] #Hassall_Joan (Joan Hassall | b. 1906-03-03 | d. 1988-03-06 | Wood engraver and book and commercial illustrator, Joan Hassall began her career); 546] #Hatch_John (John Hatch | b. 1805-11-24 | d. 1884-12-24 | Son of George and Sarah Hatch. Baptismal data as noted by Needham along with oth); 547] #Havard_Wm (William Havard | b. 1710-07-12 | d. 1778-02-20 | Minor actor, poet, and playwright. A colleague of David Garrick but of reportedl); 548] #Havell_Mrs (Mrs. Havell | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 549] #Hawkes_Miss (Miss Hawkes | Lived in Reading, where Mitford visits her in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unkn); 550] #Hawkins_L (Laetitia Matilda Hawkins | b. 1759 | d. 1835-11-22 | Author of Heraline; or, Opposite Proceedings.); 551] #Hawley_GeneralSr (General Hawley | Possibly Lieutenant General Henry Hawley (c. 1679 to 24 March 1759), British arm); 552] #Hawley_Mr (Mr. Hawley | Descendant of General Hawley, engaged to Betsy Broughton through Mrs. Dickinson’); 553] #Hawthorne_N (Nathaniel Hawthorne | b. 1804-07-04 | d. 1864-05-19 | New England author whose work Mitford admired and promoted by featuring him in h); 554] #Haydn (Franz Joseph Haydn | b. 1732-04-01 | d. 1809-05-31 | Austrian composer popular in England; he visited London twice in the 1790s and b); 555] #Haydon (Haydon Benjamin Robert | b. 1786-01-26 | d. 1846-06-22 | Benjamin Robert Haydon was a painter educated at the Royal Academy, who was famo); 556] #Haydon_Father (Benjamin Robert Haydon Sr. | b. 1758 | d. 1813 | Haydon Sr. was the father of painter Benjamin Robert Haydon and was a printer, p); 557] #Haydon_Mother (Sarah Haydon | d. 1808 | Sarah Haydon was the mother of painter Benjamin Robert Haydon Source: ODNB.); 558] #Haydon_Mrs (Mary Hyman Haydon | The daughter of the Rev. Benjamin Cobley, the Rector of Dodbrooke, Kingsbridge, ); 559] #Hayward_Abraham (Abraham Hayward | b. 1801-11-22 | d. 1884-02-02 | Solicitor and prolific editor, translator, and essayist. A correspondent of Mitf); 560] #Hayward_da (Mrs. Hayward’s little girl | b. 1820-01-02 | Likely the hild of Mrs. Hayward and William Hayward. Mentioned by Mitford in her); 561] #Hayward_H (Henry Hayward | b. 1795 | d. 1875-01 | Married Anne Dodd on December 27, 1819, which is mentioned by Mitford in her jou); 562] #Hayward_John (John Hayward | A Watlington brewer, the brother of William Hayward.); 563] #Hayward_MrsW (Mary Ann Hayward | b. 1762 | Likely the spouse of William Hayward the elder. Lived in Watlington. Mother of H); 564] #Hayward_Wm_father (William Hayward | b. 1761-03-05 | d. 1822-12-26 | A Watlington brewer, the spouse of Mrs. Hayward and father of William Hayward an); 565] #Hayward_Wm_son (William Hayward | b. 1794 | d. 1863 | With his father, he ran a brewing establishment in Watlington. He married Jane W); 566] #Hazlitt_Wm (William Hazlitt | b. 1778-04-10 | d. 1830-09-18 | Essayist and critic, acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford. Author of Table Talk ); 567] #Hearne_Thos (Thomas Hearne | b. 1678-07 | d. 1735-06-10 | ); 568] #Heath_C (Charles Heath | b. 1785-03-01 | d. 1848-11-18 | Son of engraver James Heath. He studied under his father and became an accomplis); 569] #Heath_J (James Heath | b. 1757-04-19 | d. 1834-11-15 | An accomplished engraver, he produced many prints over his lifetime, and worked ); 570] #Heber_Rich (Richard Heber | b. 1773-01-05 | d. 1833-10-04 | Heber was a book collector and one of the founders of the Roxburghe club. Member); 571] #Helme_Eliz (Elizabeth Helme | b. 1743-08-08 | d. 1814 | Writer of educational works for children and translator from the French and the ); 572] #Hemans_Felicia (Felicia Hemans | b. 1793-09-25 | d. 1835-05-16 | Best-known for sentimental and nationalistic poetry such as Casabianca (The boy ); 573] #Henry_Miss (Miss Henry | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Foscari at Covent Garden Theatre in 1828. ); 574] #Henry_V (Henry V | b. 1386-09-16 | d. 1422-08-31 | King of England and of France and Lord of Ireland from 1413 to 1422, second mona); 575] #HenryII (Henry II | b. 1133 | d. 1189-07-06 | Henry II, the son of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Empress Matilda, was denominat); 576] #HenryVI (Henry VI | b. 1421-12-06 | d. 1471-05-21 | The only child of Henry V, Henry VI succeeded his father as King of England and ); 577] #Herbert_T (Sir Thomas Herbert | b. 1606 | d. 1682-03-01 | Herbert was a Parliamentarian during the English Civil Wars. He served as Charle); 578] #Herbert_Wm (William Herbert | b. 1778-01-12 | d. 1847-05-28 | Clergyman, poet, translator, naturalist, and botanical illustrator. Member of Pa); 579] #Hervey_Wm (William Hervey | b. 1732-05-13 | d. 1815-01-15 | ); 580] #Hessey_J (James Hessey | London bookseller and printer with John Taylor, Taylor and Hessey. Hessey owned ); 581] #Heude_Wm (William Heude | b. 1789 | d. 1825 | Mitford read his A Voyage up the Persian Gulf, and a Journey Overland from India); 582] #Highmore_Susanna (Susanna Highmore Duncombe | b. 1725-12-05 | d. 1812-10-28 | An intimate of Samuel Richardson, who admired her literary skills, and of Hester); 583] #Hill_Charles (Charles Hill | Schoolmaster at Silchester, Berkshire, England. Spouse of Mitford servant Lucy H); 584] #Hill_Lucy (Lucy Sweetser Hill | b. 1790-05-02 | Beloved servant for twelve years in the Mitford household who, on 7 August 1820 ); 585] #Hill_Mr (Mr. Hill | Received one of Molly's two puppies, born in 1819. Unknown whether this person i); 586] #Hoare_MA (Mary Anne Pratt Hoare | b. 1818 | d. 1872 | Short story writer for Household Words and other periodicals. Wrote under Mrs. H); 587] #Hoare_RC (Richard Colt Hoare | b. 1758-12-09 | d. 1846-05-19 | Hoare took several tours to continental Europe as well as to Ireland, Wales, and); 588] #Hobbema_M (Meindart Hobbema | b. 1638-10-31 | d. 1709-12-17 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, a student of .); 589] #Hobbes (Thomas Hobbes | b. 1588-05-04 | d. 1679-04-12 | ); 590] #Hobhouse_JC (John Cam Hobhouse | b. 1786-06-27 | d. 1869-06-03 | A friend and traveling companion of Lord Byron who contributed notes to the four); 591] #Hodgkinson_Mrs (Mrs. Hodgkinson | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1829; letter is addressed to her at A); 592] #Hodgskin_Thos (Thomas Hodgskin | b. 1787-12-12 | d. 1869-08-21 | Mitford read his Travels in the North of Germany. Anti-capitalist and utilitaria); 593] #Hofland_B (Barbara Wreaks Hofland | b. 1770 | d. 1844-11-04 | Frequent correspondent of Mitford's, mentioned often in her Journal of 1819-1823); 594] #Hofland_TC (Thomas Christopher Hofland | b. 1777-12-25 | d. 1843-01-03 | Landscape painter, and second husband of the author Barbara Hofland.); 595] #Hogarth (William Hogarth | b. 1697-11-10 | d. 1764-10-26 | Painter, printmaker, and caricaturist.); 596] #Hogg_J (James Hogg | b. 1770 | d. 1835-11-21 | Scottish ballad collector, poet, and novelist who wrote in Scots and English and); 597] #Hoggins_Sarah (Sarah Hoggins Cecil | b. 1773-01-01—1773-12-31 | d. 1797-01-01—1797-12-31 | Known as the Cottage Countess, Sarah Hoggins was a farmer's daughter who married); 598] #Holcroft_Thos (Thomas Holcroft | b. 1745-12-10 | d. 1809-03-23 | British author and journalist, friend and associate of literary-political radica); 599] #Holden_Henry (Henry Holden | b. 1596 | d. 1662-03 | Roman Catholic Doctor of Divinity, theologian and professor at the Sorbonne. Whe); 600] #Holden_John (John Holden | Mitford sent him a puppy that she got from Mr. Webb on July 1 1819.); 601] #Holden_Miss (Miss Holden | Potentially related to John Holden. Mitford sent poems to her on July 1 1819.); 602] #Holford_Marg_younger (Margaret Holford Hodgson | b. 1778-06-01 | d. 1852-09-11 | Associated with Joanna Baillie and Robert Southey. Her mother, also named Margar); 603] #Holland_Mrs (Mrs. Holland | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1838. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 604] #Holton_Mrs (Mrs. Holton | Spouse of . They lived in Wokingham and were friends with the Webbs. Source: Jou); 605] #Holton_Paul (Paul Holton | Wine and spirits merchant at Wokingham. Spouse of . They were friends with the W); 606] #Home_John (John Home | b. 1722-09-13 | d. 1808-09-04 | Scottish clergyman and playwright, author of the tragedy Douglas.); 607] #Homer (Homer | d. | Considered the first and greatest epic poet; In Mitford’s time, considered to be); 608] #Hone_Wm (William Hone | b. 1780-06-03 | d. 1842-11-08 | Writer and publisher of social, political, and religious satire, investigative j); 609] #Hood_Thos (Thomas Hood | b. 1799-05-23 | d. 1845-05-03 | Poet, humorist, and frequent contributor to periodicals such as The London Magaz); 610] #HookhamT (Thomas Hookham | b. 1739 | d. 1819 | Proprietor of Hookham's Circulating Library in London from 1764 into the 19th ce); 611] #Horace (Horace | b. -0065-12-08 | d. -0008-11-27 | Ancient Roman politician, military leader, poet, and critic.); 612] #Horne_RH (Richard Hengist Horne | b. 1802-12-31 | d. 1884-03-13 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1839 and 1849.); 613] #Horrebow_Mr (Mr. Horrebow | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Foscari at Covent Garden Theatre in 1828. ); 614] #Howard_John (John Howard | b. 1726-02-09 | d. 1790-01-20 | As High Sheriff of Bedfordshire, John Howard dedicated himself to inspecting Eng); 615] #Howard_SirRob (Sir Robert Howard | b. 1626-01 | d. 1698-09-03 | A Royalist sympathizer knighted in the field and imprisoned during the English C); 616] #Howard_Tho (Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk | b. 1538-03-10 | d. 1572-06-02 | Convicted of treason and executed for the charge of involvement in the Ridolfi p); 617] #Howell_Mrs (Mrs. Howell | Likely a neighbor of Mitford either at Bertram House or Three Mile Cross, where ); 618] #Howell_W (Will Howell | Mitford mentions Will Howell in her Journal on August 13, 1820, and he appears t); 619] #Howitt_Mary (Mary Howitt | b. 1799-03-12 | d. 1888-01-30 | Prolific poet, short story writer, translator, editor, and memoirist; her husban); 620] #Hudswell_Mrs (Mrs. Hudswell | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 621] #Hughes_John (John Hughes | b. 1790-01-02 | d. 1857-12-13 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of Margaret Wilkinson Hughes and); 622] #Hughes_Marg (Margaret Wilkinson Hughes | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of John Hughes. Second daughter ); 623] #Hugo_Victor (Victor Hugo | b. 1802-02-26 | d. 1885-05-22 | French novelist, poet, and artist. Member of the Senate and the National Assembl); 624] #hume (David Hume | b. 1711-05-07 | d. 1776-08-25 | The most influential philosopher of the Scottish Enlightenment, Hume championed ); 625] #Hume_Jos (Joseph Hume | b. 1777-01-22 | d. 1855-02-20 | Known as the Apothecary, a radical M.P. who represented Aberdeen in the House of); 626] #Hunt (Leigh Hunt | b. 1784-10-19 | d. 1859-08-28 | One of the founders and editors of The Examiner.); 627] #Hunt_Mrs (Hannah Cooper | ); 628] #Hunt_Robert (Robert Hunt | Brother of Leigh Hunt and John Hunt who founded The Examiner. One of the earlies); 629] #Hutchinson_John (John Hutchinson | b. 1615-01—1616-12 | d. 1664-09-11 | A Cambridge-educated Parliamentarian leader of Puritan convictions during the En); 630] #Hutchinson_Julius (Julius Hutchinson | b. 1750 | d. 1811 | A lateral descendant of Sir John Hutchinson through his brother Charles (1637-16); 631] #Hutchinson_Lucy (Lucy Hutchinson | b. 1620 | d. 1681 | An exceptionally well-educated and self-assured early modern woman whose literar); 632] #Hutchinson_Thos (Thomas Hutchinson | b. 1704 | d. 1744-05-07 | A lateral descendant of Sir John Hutchinson through his brother Charles (1637-16); 633] #Hutton_Cath (Catherine Hutton | b. 1756-02-11 | d. 1846-03-13 | Mitford read her The Miser Married: A Novel. Her letters were published posthumo); 634] #Hyde_Anne (Anne Hyde, Duchess of York and Albany | b. 1637-03-12 | d. 1771-03-31 | Anne Hyde was the wife of King James II, and sister of Henry Hyde. Like her brot); 635] #Hyde_Henry (Henry Hyde, Second Earl of Clarendon | b. 1638-06-02 | d. 1709-10-31 | Spent much of his childhood in Belgium and the Netherlands because of his father); 636] #Inchbald_E (Elizabeth Inchbald | b. 1753-10-15 | d. 1821-08-01 | Author of A Simple Story, which Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on Octob); 637] #Ingoldsby (Sir Richard Ingoldsby | b. 1617-08-10 | d. 1685-09-09 | A Colonel in the New Model Army, Member of Parliament representing Buckinghamshi); 638] #Ireton_hist (Henry Ireton | b. 1611 | d. 1651 | A prominent leader of the Parliamentary faction against Charles I and, after the); 639] #Irving_Wash (Washington Irving | b. 1783-04-03 | d. 1859-11-28 | American author and early adopter of the linked story collection mode of publica); 640] #Jack_boy (Jack | Mitford calls him the droll boy who lived at Mr. Body's 2 years ago & then went ); 641] #Jackson_Mr (Mr. Jackson | In Mitford’s letter of July 5, 1819, she mentions Mr. Jackson as the surgeon who); 642] #James_Emily (Emily James | b. 1782 | d. 1863-08-29 | Friend of Mary Russell Mitford, and sister to Elizabeth James and Susan James an); 643] #James_Miss (Elizabeth James | b. 1775 | d. 1861-11-25 | Close friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. She was the eldest daugh); 644] #James_Mrs (Susan Haycock James | b. 1754-10-17 | d. 1841 | Susan or Susannah Haycock, wife of Thomas James and mother of Elizabeth Mary Jam); 645] #James_oldPretender (James Francis Edward Stuart | b. 1688-06-10 | d. 1755-01-01 | Son of the deposed James II of England and Ireland and James VII of Scotland. As); 646] #James_Susan (Susan James | b. 1788 | d. 1860-12-27 | Friend of Mary Russell Mitford, and sister to Elizabeth James and Emily James an); 647] #JamesI (James I of England and Ireland, and James VI of Scotland | b. 1566-06-19 | d. 1625-03-27 | James VI of Scotland from 24 July 1567 and James I of England and Ireland from 2); 648] #JamesII (James II of England and Ireland, and James VII of Scotland | b. 1633-10-14 | d. 1701-09-16 | Last Roman Catholic and Stuart king of England, he succeeded the throne after th); 649] #Jameson_Anna (Anna Jameson | b. 1794-05-17 | d. 1860-03-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1838 and also a friend of Elizabeth B); 650] #Jane (Jane | Maidservant at Bertram House, who left the Mitford's service in early . Surname ); 651] #Jenkins_Mrs (Mrs. Jenkins | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 652] #Jennings_Ag (Agnes Jennings | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in the 1850s. She wrote to her at Portla); 653] #Jephson_Em (Emily Jephson | b. 1802 | d. 1861-12-05 | A friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1829 and 1855. Mitfor); 654] #Jeremy_Caro (Caroline Jeremy | b. 1786-07-01 | d. 1863-11-15 | An acquaintance of Mitfordin 1819. Mitford visited her in Wokingham, along with ); 655] #Jeremy_H (Henry Jeremy | b. 1787-07-06 | d. 1849-02-15 | Brother of Mitford friend Caroline Jeremy. Called to the bar in 1818 at Middle T); 656] #Jerrold_Doug (Douglas William Jerrold | b. 1803-01-03 | d. 1857-06-08 | Playwright, novelist, and editor. Contributor to the Monthly Magazine , Blackwoo); 657] #Jesus (Jesus | b. 0001 | d. 0034 | Hebrew preacher and religious leader and the most important figure of the Christ); 658] #Johnson (Samuel Johnson | b. 1709-09-18 | d. 1784-12-13 | English author, lexicographer, biographer, essayist and travel writer. His works); 659] #Johnson_Miss (Miss Johnson | Friend of Mitford’s. Unmarried sister of Mr. Johnson. Mitford helps her sort out); 660] #Johnson_Mr (John Johnson | d. 1821-04-05 | Friend who leaves his collection of political books to Northmore upon his death ); 661] #Johnson_Mrs (Mrs. Johnson | The sister by marriage of Mr. Johnson and an acquaintance of Mitford.); 662] #Johnstone_CI (Christian Todd M'Leish Johnstone | b. 1781-06-12 | d. 1857-08-26 | Author of the anonymous novel, Clan-Albin, the pseudonymous Cook and Housewife M); 663] #Johnstone_Jack (John (Jack) Johnstone | b. 1749-08-01 | d. 1828-12-26 | Irish actor, primarily a comedian; also a singer of tenors parts, called Jack or); 664] #Joliffe_Mrs (Mrs. Joliffe | Mitford mentions in her Journal on February 10, 1820 that she corrected some poo); 665] #Jolliffe_Mr (Mr. Jolliffe | Friend of the Mitford family, who offered the family lumber to build a cottage i); 666] #Jolliffe_Mrs (Mrs. Jolliffe | Likely the spouse of Mr. JolliffeForename unknown. Dates unknown.); 667] #Jolliffe_Thos (Rev. Thomas Jolliffe | b. 1780 | d. 1872 | Alumni of Reading School and Trinity College, Cambridge. Rector of Babington fro); 668] #Jones_C (Mr. C. Jones | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Active la); 669] #Jones_John (Major General Sir John Thomas Jones | b. 1783-03-25 | d. 1843-02-26 | First-class cricketer and British army officer in the Royal Engineers during the); 670] #Jones_Thomas (Thomas Jones | A saddler of Three Mile Cross. Noted by Needham on a list of local tradespeople ); 671] #Jonson_B (Ben Jonson | b. 1572-06-11 | d. 1637-08-06 | Early modern English playwright and contemporary of William Shakespeare. Jonson ); 672] #Jordan_Dorothea (Dorothea (Dolly) Jordan | b. 1761-11-22 | d. 1816-07-05 | Actor specializing in comic roles and breeches parts. Born Dorothea Bland, frequ); 673] #Josephine_Miss (Miss Josephine | Child actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in); 674] #Joy_Miss (Miss Joy | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1836. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 675] #Julius_Caesar (Julius Caesar | b. -0100-07-13 | d. -0044-03-15 | Roman military commander and emperor, assassinated on the Ides of March, as docu); 676] #Junius (Junius | b. | d. -0509 | ); 677] #Junius_pseudo (Junius | Pseudonymous author of The Letters of Junius, active during the 1770s. Still uni); 678] #Kean_Edmund (Edmund Kean | b. 1787-11-04 | d. 1833-05-15 | Considered one of the greatest actors of Mitford's era; known for performing tra); 679] #Keats (John Keats | b. 1795-10-31 | d. 1821-02-23 | Romantic-era poet, known for his Odes. Trained in the field of medicine, he work); 680] #Keep_Harriet (Harriet Keep | Servant in the Mitford household from around 1822-1830. Source: Needham Papers, ); 681] #Keep_William (William Keep | Last name is supplied byNeedham; name appears among other local tradespeople, ta); 682] #Kelly_FH (Miss Kelly | b. 1805-06-30 | d. 1887-03-19 | Mitford mentions traveling to London to see Miss Kelly perform in her Journal on); 683] #Kemble_C (Charles Kemble | b. 1775-11-25 | d. 1854-11-12 | British actor, the younger brother of John Phillip Kemble and Sarah Siddons. Alt); 684] #Kemble_Frances (Frances (Fanny) Kemble | b. 1809-11-27 | d. 1893-01-15 | Frances or Fanny Kemble was a member of the Kemble acting clan, the daughter of ); 685] #Kemble_JP (John Philip Kemble | b. 1757-02-01 | d. 1823-02-26 | Member of Kemble acting clan, brother of Sarah Siddons. One of the best-known ac); 686] #Kemble_MrsC (Maria Thérèse de Camp Kemble | b. 1777-01-17 | d. 1838-09-03 | Actor, later Mrs. Charles Kemble. Likely born Marie Thérèse de Camp or du Fleury); 687] #KempeAJ (Alfred John Kempe | b. 1785 | d. 1846 | Mitford read his Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony.); 688] #Kenyon_John (John Kenyon | b. 1784 | d. 1856 | A friend of Mary Russell Mitford and soi-distant cousin of Elizabeth Barrett Bro); 689] #Kerridge_Mr (Mr. Kerridge | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 690] #Kettle_Dr (Dr. Ralph Kettle | b. 1563 | d. 1643-07-17 | Kettle Hall, Oxford, built during his reign as head of Trinity College, Oxford.); 691] #King_Wm (Dr. William King | b. 1685-03-16 | d. 1763 | Principal of St. Mary's Hall, University of Oxford, and leader of the Jacobite i); 692] #Kingsley_Chas (Charles Kingsley | b. 1819-06-12 | d. 1875-01-23 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1853. Spouse of Fanny Grenfell Kingsl); 693] #Kingsley_Fanny (Frances (Fanny) Grenfell Kingsley | b. 1814 | d. 1891 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of Charles Kingsley.); 694] #Kinsey_Wm (William Morgan Kinsey | b. 1788 | d. 1851-04-06 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Trinity College, Oxford scholar and Chu); 695] #Kirby_Benjamin (Benjamin (Ben) Kirby | b. 1811-07-11 | Son of John and Sarah Kirby, and brother of Joseph Kirby, he developed a close r); 696] #Kirby_Joseph (Kirby Joseph | b. 1807-08-09 | d. 1877-09-23 | Son of John and Sarah Kirby, and brother of Benjamin Kirby. Married Maria Bailey); 697] #Kirkby_James (James Kirkby | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1845. Unidentified. Dates unknown.); 698] #Kirkland_C (Caroline Stansbury Kirkland | b. 1801-01-11 | d. 1864-04-06 | Author of three books on American frontier life, including New Home; Who'll Foll); 699] #Knowles_Sheridan (James Sheridan Knowles | b. 1784-05-12 | d. 1862-11-30 | Actor and author, known as Sheridan Knowles. Friend of William Hazlitt, Charles ); 700] #Knox_Rbt (Robert Knox | b. 1641-02-08 | d. 1720-06-19 | Merchant sea captain for the British East India Company, along with his father. ); 701] #Knyvett_Chas (Charles Knyvett | Young clergyman to whom Mitfordlends six of Dr. Russell's sermons in 1819. Sourc); 702] #Knyvett_MissH (Miss H. Knyvett | Mitford visited her in 1819. Lived on the Isle of Wight. Possible relation of Ch); 703] #Kotzebue (August von Kotzebue | b. 1761-05-03 | d. 1819-03-23 | Author and diplomat. Kotzebue was a prolific playwright. Charles Kemble adapted ); 704] #LabaumeE (Eugène Labaume | b. 1783-08-14 | d. 1849-02-05 | According to title pages of his works, he was Captain of the [French] Royal Geog); 705] #Lacy_Miss (Miss Lacy | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 706] #Lady_Fairfax_hist (Anne, Lady Fairfax | b. 1618 | d. 1665-10-16 | Anne was the fourth daughter of Horace Vere, first Baron Vere of Tilbury and Mar); 707] #Lamb_Caro (Caroline Ponsonby Lamb | b. 1785-11-13 | d. 1828-01-25 | English author. Daughter of Frederick Ponsonby, 3rd Earl of Bessborough and Lady); 708] #Lamb_Chas (Charles Lamb | b. 1775-02-10 | d. 1834-12-27 | British author, best known for his Essays of Elia (1823-1833), many of which ori); 709] #Lamb_Mary (Mary Lamb | b. 1764-12-03 | d. 1847-05-20 | An elder sister of Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb was a noted author of prose fiction a); 710] #Landon_LE (Laetitia Elizabeth Landon | b. 1802-08-14 | d. 1838-10-15 | Landon attended the St. Quintin School, and was taught by Frances Rowden, along ); 711] #Lane_Wm (William Lane | b. 1745—1746 | d. 1814-01-29 | London bookseller and publisher William Lane pioneered the circulating library, ); 712] #Langley_Eliza (Eliza Langley | d. 1897 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford and a shop assistant to Reading booksell); 713] #Langton_Miss (Miss Langton | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u); 714] #Lavater_Johann (Johann Lavater | b. 1741-11-15 | d. 1801-01-02 | Swiss poet, writer, philosopher, physiognomist, and theologian.); 715] #Lawrence_Mr (Mr. Lawrence | An associate of the Webb family in 1819. May be a relative of Jane Ogbourn Webb,); 716] #Lawrence_Wm (William Lawrence | b. 1783-07-16 | d. 1867-07-05 | Lawrence contributed to ideas about the material origin of human consciousness a); 717] #LeCamus_Antoine (Antoine Le Camus | b. 1722 | d. 1772 | French physician and writer, author of La Médecine de l'esprit.); 718] #Lediard_John (Lediard John | A young man who worked for the Mitfords during the 1830s and 1840s, and who is f); 719] #Lee_Mr (Mr. Lee | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 720] #Lee_Nath (Nathaniel Lee | b. 1653 | d. 1692-05-06 | Lee’s best-known work is his 1677 tragedy The Rival Queens, or the Death of Alex); 721] #Lee_T (Mr. T. Lee | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 722] #Legh_T (Thomas Legh | b. 1793 | d. 1857-05-08 | Illegitimate eldest son of Thomas Peter Legh. Member of Parliament. Mitford read); 723] #Lester_E (Elizabeth B. Lester | Mitford read her The Quakers: A Tale. Dates unknown. Active 1817. Source: WorldC); 724] #Letchworth_Mrs (Mrs. Letchworth | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 725] #Lewington_Mr (Mr. Lewington | A businessperson who worked for Mr. Payn. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 726] #Lewis_William_Thomas (William Thomas Lewis | b. 1748 | d. 1811-01-13 | English actor, called Gentleman Lewis, known for fop roles. Appeared at Haymarke); 727] #Ley_Mr (Mr. Ley | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ); 728] #Leyden_John (John Leyden | b. 1775-09-08 | d. 1811-08-28 | Scottish antiquary, poet, and orientalist who assisted Walter Scott in compiling); 729] #Liebensrood (Mr. Liebensrood | Father and head of a family visited by the Mitfords. Forename unknown. Dates unk); 730] #Liebensrood_son (Liebensrood | Son of Mr. Liebensrood and member of a family visited by the Mitfords. Forename ); 731] #Liston_John (John Liston | b. 1776 | d. 1846-03-22 | English actor, specializing in comedy, including Cockney parts. His most famous ); 732] #Liston_SarahT (Sarah Tyrer Liston | b. 1781 | d. 1854 | English comic actor known for her singing voice and roles in burlesque operas, a); 733] #Lock_Mr (Mr. Lock | A supporter of Charles Fysshe Palmer. Dates unknown. The identification of Mr. L); 734] #Lockhart_Charlotte (Charlotte Lockhart Hope-Scott | b. 1827 | d. 1858-10-20 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Daughter of J. G. Lockhart and Sarah Sc); 735] #Lockhart_JG (John Gibson Lockhart | b. 1794-07-12 | d. 1854-11-25 | A prominent writer for Blackwood's Magazine in its early years, Lockhart joined ); 736] #LopedeVega (Félix Lope de Vega y Carpio | b. 1562-11-25 | d. 1635-08-27 | Prolific and renowned Spanish writer of the Baroque period, active from 1580 int); 737] #Lorrain_Cl (Claude Lorrain | b. 1600 | d. 1682-11 | ); 738] #LouisXVI (Louis XVI, King of France | b. 1754-08-23 | d. 1793-01-21 | Last King of France during the Ancien Régime, he ruled as absolute monarch until); 739] #Lovejoy_Geo (George Lovejoy | b. 1808 | d. 1883-07-19 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1840 and 1850 and a Reading book); 740] #Lovejoy_Martha (Martha (Patty) Lovejoy | b. 1836 | d. 1856 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1846. Daughter of George Lovejoy and ); 741] #Lovett_Wm (William Lovett | b. 1800-05-08 | d. 1877-08-08 | After working as a ropemaker in Cornwall, Lovett sought better work in London. H); 742] #Lucas_John (John Lucas | b. 1807-07-04 | d. 1874-04-30 | A friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1828 and 1853. Fashio); 743] #Lucetti (Lucetti | May be a fellow traveller with Joseph Acerbi; however, he is not mentioned by na); 744] #MacareeClarke_Mrs (Matilda Hill Macaree Clarke | b. 1760-02-26 | d. 1835-02-04 | Miss James was her companion and, with Mrs. Stuart, (widow of the Archbishop of ); 745] #Macartney_Geo (Sir George Macartney | b. 1737-05-03 | d. 1806-03-31 | The East India Company and the British government sent Macartney on an embassy t); 746] #Macauley_C (Catharine Macauley | b. 1731-03-21 | d. 1791-06-22 | Important English historian during the eighteenth century, celebrated and vilifi); 747] #Macfarlane_Chas (Charles MacFarlane | b. 1799 | d. 1858 | Scottish writer and correspondent of Mitford’s. In her Journal of May and June 1); 748] #Machiavelli (Niccoló di Bernardo dei Machiavelli | b. 1469-05-03 | d. 1527-06-21 | One of the figures whose birthdate is printed in The Literary Pocket Book, owned); 749] #Macpherson_J (James Macpherson | b. 1736-10-27 | d. 1796-02-17 | ); 750] #Macready_Laetitia (Laetitia Macready | b. 1794 | d. 1857 | William Charles Macready's sister; she kept house for him before his marriage an); 751] #Macready_Wm (William Macready | b. 1793-03-03 | d. 1873-04-27 | English actor, one of the most prominent tragedians of his era. He appeared at C); 752] #Madison_Mrs (Mrs. Madison | Mitford dined with her at the Jolliffe's in 1820. May also be spelled Maddison. ); 753] #Magnay_C (Christopher Magnay | d. 1826-10-27 | Lord Mayor of London from 1821 to 1822.); 754] #Mahomet (Mahomet | b. 0570 | d. 0632-06-08 | French and medieval Latin spelling of Muhammad; used by Mitford to refer to the ); 755] #Maitland_Eb (Ebenezer Fuller Maitland | b. 1780-04-23 | d. 1858 | Son of wealthy merchant and Bank of England director Ebenezer Maitland, he marri); 756] #Maitland_Mr (Mr. Maitland | Acquaintance of Mitford; unknown whether he is identical with Ebenezer Maitland.); 757] #Malcolm_J (James Peller Malcolm | b. 1767-08 | d. 1815 | Mitford read his Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman I); 758] #Malthus_Thomas (Thomas Malthus | b. 1766-02-13 | d. 1834-12-29 | Author of An Essay on the Principle of Population published in 1798.); 759] #Malton_Mr (Mr. Malton | Solicitor whose services the Mitfords used.); 760] #Margaret_Anjou (Margaret of Anjou | b. 1430-03-23 | d. 1482-08-25 | Margaret of Anjou, daughter of René I of Anjou, King of Naples, married Henry VI); 761] #Mariam_Tecla (Tecla Mariam | According to James Bruce in Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Y); 762] #Marie_Antoinette (Marie Antoinette, Queen of France | b. 1755-02-11 | d. 1793-10-16 | Born an Archduchess of Austria, she was the daughter of Francis I, Holy Roman Em); 763] #MarieTherese_France (Marie-Thérèse Charlotte de France, Duchesse d'Angloulême | b. 1778-12-19 | d. 1851-10-19 | Eldest child of Louis XVI of France and Queen Charlotte, and the only person to ); 764] #Marlowe_Chris (Christopher (Kit) Marlowe | b. 1564 | d. 1593-05-30 | English Early-modern-era playwright, poet, and translator; wrote The Tragical Hi); 765] #Marmy_pet (Marmy | One of Mitford's dogs at Bertram House in 1819.); 766] #Marriott_John (Rev. John Marriott | b. 1780 | d. 1825-03-31 | Clergyman, poet, and dedicatee of Canto Two of Walter Scott's Marmion. Curate of); 767] #Marsh_Henry (Henry (Harry) Marsh | MRM's letters in December 1820 indicate that Henry Marsh was involved in a local); 768] #Marsh_Mrs (Mrs. Marsh | Likely the spouse of Harry Marsh. Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dat); 769] #Marshall_Alan (Alan Marshall | Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Head of Humanities, and a faculty member); 770] #Marshall_Miss (Miss Marshall | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 771] #Marshall_MrsLA (Mrs. L. A. Marshall | Wrote for juvenile and Evangelical audiences. Wrote under the pseudonym Meta. Pa); 772] #Marsham_Robt (Robert Marsham | b. 1708-01-27 | d. 1797-09-04 | English naturalist and author of Indications of Spring (1789), a founding work i); 773] #Marten_H (Henry Marten | b. 1602 | d. 1680-09-09 | A republican and Parliamentarian, Marten supported the New Model Army and the es); 774] #Martin_A (Albinus Martin | b. 1791 | d. 1871-10-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1840 and 1843. A student of Jose); 775] #Martin_Lucy (Lucy Martin | Beer retailer who lived in Three Mile Cross. Noted by Needham on a list of local); 776] #Martyn_H (Henry Martyn | b. 1781-02-18 | d. 1812-10-16 | Church of England clergyman, chaplain to the British East India Company, and mis); 777] #MaryII (Mary II, Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland | b. 1662-04-30 | d. 1694-12-28 | Ruled England jointly with King William III after the Glorious Revolution as Kin); 778] #MaryQoS (Mary I of Scotland | b. 1542-12 | d. 1587-02-08 | Daughter of James V of Scotland and Mary of Guise, Mary Stuart acceded to the th); 779] #Massinger_Phil (Philip Massinger | b. 1583 | d. 1640-03-17 | Early-modern-era playwright and associate of Shakespeare and Fletcher with the K); 780] #Mast_pet (Mast | Mitford’s dog. More research needed.); 781] #Master_Betty (Master Betty | b. 1791-09-13 | d. 1874-08-24 | A celebrated child actor, known as Master Betty and the Young Roscius. Appeared ); 782] #Mathews_Geo (George Mathews | Wrongly convicted of robbery and later exonerated. Author, with attorney James H); 783] #Matthews_George (George Matthews | Schoolmaster who worked at the Free School in Three Mile Cross. Noted by Needham); 784] #MatthewsH (Henry Matthews | b. 1789 | d. 1828 | Mitford read his Diary of an Invalid.); 785] #Maturin_Charles (Charles Maturin | b. 1782-09-25 | d. 1824-10-30 | ); 786] #Maurice_Mr (Mr. Maurice | Unknown person named in Mitford’s 5 July 1819 letter to Mary Webb. More research); 787] #May_Fly (May Fly | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819. Sister of Mossy.); 788] #May_J (James May | Possibly James May, attorney, Friar Street, Reading according to Coles.); 789] #May_William (May William | Needham identifies him as the Magistrates’ Clerk. Dates unknown.); 790] #McCoy_Rich (Richard C. McCoy | b. 1946-10-09 | Distinguished Professor of English at Queens College and the Graduate Center, CU); 791] #McCracken_Flesher (Caroline McCracken-Flesher | b. 1958 | UW George Duke Humphrey Distinguished Professor in the Department of English at ); 792] #McLeod_John (John McLeod | b. 1777 | d. 1820-11-08 | Naval surgeon and author of Narrative of a Voyage, in His Majesty’s Late Ship Al); 793] #MDonough_F (Felix M'Donough | b. 1768 | d. 1836 | Surname also spelled MacDonough. Mitford read his Hermit in London. Active 1820-); 794] #Mears_Mr (Mr. Mears | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ); 795] #MeekeMrs (Elizabeth Meeke | b. 1761-11-13 | d. 1826-10 | In Mitford's time, believed to be Mary Meeke of Staffordshire. Recently identifi); 796] #Melville (Herman Melville | b. 1819-08-01 | d. 1891-09-28 | American novelist and poet. After his father’s death, he worked as a schoolteach); 797] #Merry_Anne (Anne Merry | b. 1793 | d. 1871 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of William Merry.); 798] #Merry_William (William Merry | b. 1793 | d. 1873 | A friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford and Elizabeth Barrett-Brownin); 799] #Michael_Ras (Ras Michael | Governor of Tigré, Abyssinia during James Bruce’s expedition Source: ODB.); 800] #Michelangelo (Michelangelo | b. 1475-03-06 | d. 1564-02-18 | Early-modern artist famous for sculptures, such as David and La Pieta, and fresc); 801] #Mildenhall_Mr (Mr. Mildenhall | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 802] #Millington (Gilbert Millington | b. 1598 | d. 1666-09-19 | Elected Member of Parliament for Nottingham in the Long Parliament of 1640 to 16); 803] #Mills_Chas (Charles Mills | b. 1788-07-29 | d. 1826-10-09 | Mitford read his The History of the Crusades.); 804] #Milman_HH (Henry Hart Milman | b. 1791-02-10 | d. 1868-09-24 | After a brilliant career at Brasenose College, Oxford, Milman was ordained into ); 805] #Milner_John (John Milner | b. 1752-10-14 | d. 1826-04-19 | Son of Joseph Milner, tailor and Helen Marsland. A Clergy member of Winchester.); 806] #Milton (John Milton | b. 1608-12-09 | d. 1674-11-08 | English poet and polemical essayist who wrote in support of Parliamentary and Pu); 807] #Miranda_pet (Miranda | A greyhound owned by Mitford, described by her as blue all sprinkled with little); 808] #Mitford_Geo (George Mitford | b. | d. | Father of Mary Rusell Mitford, George Mitford was the son of Francis Midford, su); 809] #Mitford_RobertO (Robert Osbaldeston Mitford | b. 1781-01-26 | d. 1870-06-18 | A paternal relative and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1816 and 1); 810] #Mob_pet (Mob | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819.); 811] #MolesworthRbt (Robert Molesworth | b. 1656-09-07 | d. 1725-05-22 | Anglo-Irish writer and political figure, Member of Parliament and of the Privy C); 812] #Moliere (Molière | b. 1622-01-15 | d. 1673-02-17 | French actor, playwright, and writer of court entertainments; specialized in sat); 813] #Molly_hound (Molly | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819. She later had a spaniel of); 814] #Molly_pet (Molly | Mitford's dog, whom she describes in a letter of 1820-11-27 as a pretty little S); 815] #Monck_JB (J. B. Monck | Member of Parliament for Reading area 1820-1830, who frequently franked Mary Rus); 816] #Monck_Mrs (Mary Stephens Monck | Wife of John Berkeley Monck, the Member of Parliament for Reading. Francis Needh); 817] #Montagu (Edward Montagu, Earl of Sandwich | b. 1625-07-27 | d. 1672-05-28 | Montagu fought during the first Civil War as a Parliamentarian, but later change); 818] #Montagu_MW (Mary Wortley Montagu | b. 1689-05-15 | d. 1762-08-21 | ); 819] #Montague_Captain (Captain Montague | Mentioned in Francis Needham’s biographical listings of people in Mitford’s circ); 820] #Monteagle_TSR (Thomas Spring-Rice, Baron Monteagle | b. 1790-02-08 | d. 1866-02-07 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford. Moderate Anglo-Irish Whig politician wh); 821] #Moore_DrJ (Dr. John Moore | b. 1729-12-07 | d. 1802-02-21 | John Moore, M.D., physician and author, wrote A View of Society and Manners in I); 822] #Moore_Thos (Thomas Moore | b. 1779-05-28 | d. 1852-02-25 | Irish poet, singer, and musical composer; friend of Byron. Author of Irish Melod); 823] #More_Hannah (Hannah More | b. 1745-02-02 | d. 1833-09-07 | Hannah More began her career in 1770s London as a successful playwright and asso); 824] #Morpeth_GH (George Howard, Viscount Morpeth | b. 1773-09-17 | d. 1848-10-07 | English peer and politically moderate Member of Parliament and statesman who ser); 825] #Morris_Mr (Mr. Morris | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 826] #Morton_Thos (Thomas Morton | b. 1764 | d. 1838-03-28 | English author and theater manager. Author of Speed the Plough (1798).); 827] #Moses_pet (Moses | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819.); 828] #Mossy_pet (Mossy | Mitford’s dog; He died on Saturday, August 21, 1819 at Bertram House. Mossy was ); 829] #Moulton_B_Ara (Arabella Moulton-Barrett | b. 1813-07-04 | d. 1868-06-11 | Sister of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning and her frequent correspondent. A correspon); 830] #Moulton_B_Ed (Edward Barrett Moulton-Barrett | b. 1785-05-28 | d. 1857-04-17 | Father of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning. Inheritor and administrator of his grandfa); 831] #Moulton_B_Hen (Henrietta Moulton-Barrett Cook | b. 1813-07-04 | d. 1860-11-23 | Sister of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in); 832] #MowerA (Arthur Mower | Mitford read his The White Cottage. Dates unknown. Active 1811 to 1837. Source: ); 833] #Mozart (Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart | b. 1756-01-27 | d. 1791-12-05 | ); 834] #MRM (Mitford Mary Russell | b. 1787-12-16 | d. 1855-01-10 | Poet, playwright, writer of prose fiction sketches, Mary Russell Mitford is, of ); 835] #MRM_maledog_pet (An unnamed male dog owned by Mitford in 1819 (a different dog from the female greyhound Miranda). | An unnamed male dog owned by Mitford in 1819 (a different dog from the female gr); 836] #Mrs_Hall (Hall | An acquaintance of Mitford and Mrs. Dickinson.); 837] #Mude_Mr (Mr. Mude | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 838] #Mudie_Rob (Robert Mudie | b. 1777-06-28 | d. 1842-04-29 | Newspaper editor and author. Author of Glenfergus. Also wrote The Copyright Ques); 839] #Munden_Joseph_Shepherd (Joseph Shepherd Munden | b. 1758-05 | d. 1832-02-06 | Comic actor who frequently played sailor and drunken roles, though occasionally ); 840] #Murphy_Ar (Arthur Murphy | b. 1727-12-27 | d. 1805-06-18 | Mitford read his The Way to Keep Him. A Comedy in Five Acts.); 841] #Murray_Hugh (Hugh Murray | b. 1779 | d. 1846-03-04 | Geographer and travel writer. Mitford read his Historical Account of Discoveries); 842] #Murray_John (John Murray | b. 1778-11-27 | d. 1843-06-27 | John Murray (second of that name) was proprietor of the publishing house bearing); 843] #MuschatN (Nicol Muschat | b. 1695 | d. 1721 | Executed for murdering his wife in 1721, he was one of the criminals mentioned i); 844] #Napoleon (Napoleon I | b. 1769-08-15 | d. 1821-05-05 | Military commander and political leader. During the French Revolution and Revolu); 845] #Nares_Mr (Mr. Nares | In her Journal on June 7 1820 Mitford mentions seeing him and Mr. MacFarlane the); 846] #Nelly_pet (Nelly | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819.); 847] #Nelson (Horatio Nelson | b. 1758-09-29 | d. 1805-10-21 | British flag officer and Vice Admiral during the Napoleonic Wars. His death at t); 848] #Newbery_J (Jacob Newbery | Solicitor at various addresses in Lincoln Inn Fields, London; and at Friar Stree); 849] #Newbery_Mrs (Mrs. Newbery | Spouse of Jacob Newbery. Name variously spelled Newbery and Newberry. Forename u); 850] #Newell_Mr (Mr. Newell | Associated with William Hayward.Married to Mrs. Newell.); 851] #Newell_Mrs (Mrs. Newell | Mitford called on her at Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 852] #Newman_but (Newman | The butler of Mitford's friend Dr. Richard Valpy. Forename unknown. Dates unknow); 853] #Newman_Miss (Miss Newman | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 854] #Nicholls_Geo (George Nicholls | b. 1781-12-31 | d. 1865-03-24 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Bank of England s); 855] #Nicholls_H (Harriet Maltby Nicholls | b. 1786-04-10 | d. 1869-05-14 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Mother of Jane Ni); 856] #Nicholls_John (John Nicholls | b. 1745 | d. 1832 | Solicitor and Member of Parliament for Bletchingley and for Tregony. Author of R); 857] #Nichols_J (John Nichols | b. 1745-02-02 | d. 1826-11-26 | John Nichols the elder, father of John Bowyer Nichols, also a printer-publisher.); 858] #Nicholson_Jeremiah (Jeremiah Nicholson | d. 1771-07-18 | Francis Needham identifies Nicholson as the husband of Mrs. Nicholson in Our Vil); 859] #Nicholson_Mrs (Nicholson unknown | According to Francis Needham, a historical Mrs. Nicholson is the basis of the ch); 860] #Nooth_C (Charlotte Nooth | b. 1780 | A friend of Dr. Richard Valpy, who resided at Kew, Surrey, but often visited Par); 861] #Norbrook (David Norbrook | b. 1950-06-01 | Emeritus Merton Professor of Renaissance English literature at Oxford University); 862] #Norman_Master (Master Norman | Child actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in); 863] #Northmore_Thos (Thomas Northmore | b. 1766 | d. 1851 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford, friend of John Johnson and co-founder w); 864] #Norton_Andrews (Andrews Norton | b. 1786-12-31 | d. 1853-09-18 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1841 and 1843. Unitarian clergym); 865] #Nott_GeorgeFr (Nott George Frederick | b. 1768-05-14 | d. 1841-10-25 | Son of Samuel Nott (1740-1793). Clergymen and prebendary of Winchester and super); 866] #Ogbourn_Miss (Miss Ogbourn | Possibly the relation of Mrs. Webb, whose paternal name was Ogbourn.); 867] #OHara_Kane (Kane O'Hara | b. 1711—1712 | d. 1782 | Popular Irish playwright and musician, O'Hara wrote many comic operas, including); 868] #OKeefe (John O’Keeffe | b. 1747-06-24 | d. 1833-02-04 | Irish actor who began his career as a painter. Performed at Smock Alley Theatre,); 869] #OKeeffe_Ad (Adelaide O'Keeffe | b. 1776-11-05 | d. 1865-09-04 | Author of poetry for children and historical novels for adults. She contributed ); 870] #ONeill_Eliz (Elizabeth O'Neill | b. 1791 | d. 1872-10-29 | Appeared at Crow Street Theatre, Dublin and Covent Garden Theatre, London. Acted); 871] #Opie_Amelia (Opie Amelia Alderson | b. 1769-11-12 | d. 1853-12-02 | A prolific novelist from 1790 through 1834, contemporary with Mitford, and an ac); 872] #Opie_J (John Opie | b. 1761-05-16 | d. 1807-04-09 | Historical and portrait painter. Professor of painting at the Royal Academy. He ); 873] #ORegan (William O'Regan | b. | Mitford read his Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late,); 874] #Orger_MA (Mary Ann Orger | b. 1788-02-25 | d. 1849-10-01 | English actor and playwright, specializing in comedy and farce; appeared as Mrs.); 875] #Ormsby_James (James Wilmot Ormsby | b. | Mitford read his Letters from the Continent. According to the title page, he was); 876] #OttoII (Otto II of Wittelsbach | b. 1206-04-07 | d. 1253-11-29 | House of Wittelsbach, Bavaria, known as Otto the Illustrious; historical figure ); 877] #Otway_Thos (Thomas Otway | b. 1652-03-03 | d. 1685-04-14 | English Restoration-era playwright and poet whose best-known works include the t); 878] #Ouvry_Jane (Jane Nicholls Ouvry | b. 1819-05-20 | d. 1856-01-08 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Spouse of the Rev); 879] #Ouvry_PT (Rev. Peter Ouvry | b. 1811-10-19 | d. 1891-06-02 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Spouse of Jane Ni); 880] #Ovid (Ovid | b. -0043-03-20 | d. 0016-11-30 | Roman orator and poet.); 881] #Owenson_S (Sydney Owenson, Lady Morgan | b. 1781-12-25 | d. 1859-04-14 | Irish author, amateur performer, and Romantic-era literary celebrity.); 882] #Packer_Chas (Charles Sandys Packer | b. 1810 | d. 1883-07-13 | Musician, born in Reading, who composed the music for Mitford's opera Sadak and ); 883] #Palmer_CF (Charles Fyshe Palmer | b. 1769 | d. 1843-01-24 | Charles Fyshe Palmer was the son of Charles Fyshe Palmer and Lucy Jones. He marr); 884] #Palmer_Mad (Madelina Gordon Sinclair Palmer | b. 1772-06-19 | d. 1847 | Lady Madelina Gordon was born on June 10, 1772, the daughter of Alexander Gordon); 885] #Palmerston_HJT (The Right Honourable The Viscount Lord Henry John Temple Palmerston | b. 1784-10-20 | d. 1865-10-18 | Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, 12 June 1859 to 18 October 1865 and 6 Febr); 886] #Pardoe_J (Julia Pardoe | b. 1806-12-03 | d. 1862-11-26 | Pioneering travel writer, particularly on Turkey, Hungary, and Portugal; novelis); 887] #Parfitt_Jos (Joseph Parfitt | Acquaintance of Mitford's, a young man who admired her friend Eliza Webb. Mentio); 888] #Parfitt_Sarah (Sarah Parfitt | Young acquaintance of Mitford's, who was enchanted by her upon their meeting. Me); 889] #Parry_Mrs (Mrs. Parry | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 890] #Parsons_Thos (Thomas William Parsons | b. 1819-08-18 | d. 1892-09-03 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1854. Notable Italian language schola); 891] #Patmore_PG (Peter George Patmore | b. 1786 | d. 1855 | Frequent periodical contributer. In the early 1820s, he authored Picture Galleri); 892] #Patty (Patty Surname unknown. Dates unknown.); 893] #Payn_Mr (Mr. Payn | Spouse of Mrs. Payn. They live near Seymour Court. Forename unknown. Dates unkno); 894] #Payn_Mrs (Mrs. Payn | Spouse of Mr. Payn. The couple live near Seymour Court. Forename unknown. Dates ); 895] #Peacock_TL (Thomas Love Peacock | b. 1785-10-18 | d. 1866-01-23 | Poet, essayist, satiric novelist. Most famous novels were published between 1815); 896] #Pearson_Hugh (Hugh Pearson | b. 1817 | d. 1882-04-09 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1852. Vicar of St. Andrews Church, So); 897] #Peel_Rbt (Robert Peel | b. 1788-05-02 | d. 1850-02-07 | Prime Minster from 10 December 1834 to 8 April 1835, and again from 30 August 18); 898] #PembrokeI (William Herbert | b. 1501 | d. 1570-03-17 | ); 899] #Pennant_Thomas (Thomas Pennant | b. 1726-06-14 | d. 1798-12-16 | Correspondent of Gilbert White in his Natural History and Antiquities of Selborn); 900] #Percy_Thos (Thomas Percy | b. 1729-04-13 | d. 1811-09-30 | Author and antiquarian, Thomas Percy collected and edited Reliques of Ancient En); 901] #Perry_Horatia (Horatia Anne Perry | b. 1793-07-05 | d. 1861-09-22 | Daughter of James Perry, who invited Mitford to a dinner party in London in Dece); 902] #Perry_James (James Perry | b. 1756-10-30 | d. 1821-12-04 | Born as James Pirie in Scotland, he presumably anglicized his name on moving to ); 903] #Peters_Hugh (Hugh Peters | b. 1598-06-29 | d. 1660-10-16 | Chaplain to the New Model Army. Executed as a regicide for his role in the trial); 904] #Petrarch (Petrarch | b. 1304-07-20 | d. 1374-07-19 | Petrarch's scholarship and poetry helped to initiate the Italian Renaissance. He); 905] #Philips_Mr (Mr. Philips | A Reading millwright mentioned in Mitford’s discussion of the Reading elections ); 906] #Phillips_Chas (Charles Phillips | b. 1787 | d. 1859-02-01 | Irish author and barrister. Mitford mentions him a letter of 1819, along with Ed); 907] #Phillips_Miss (Miss Phillips | Actor who appeared in her first professional role as Claudia in Rienzi at the Th); 908] #Piles_Mr (Mr. Piles | May be a local veternarian. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 909] #Pincott_Leonora (Leonora Pincott | b. 1805 | d. 1884 | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 910] #Pithers_Mr (Mr. Pithers | Owner of a field near Bertram House. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 911] #Pitt_Chris (Christopher Pitt | b. 1699 | d. 1748-04-13 | English poet, translator, and clergyman. Translated into English the Aeneid and ); 912] #Pitt_Geo (George Pitt | b. 1751-09-19 | d. 1828-07-20 | Sold a portion of the estate at Stratfield Saye, Hampshire to the crown in 1814;); 913] #PittWm_younger (William Pitt | b. 1759-05-28 | d. 1806-01-23 | Called William Pitt the younger to differentiate him from his father, William Pi); 914] #Pius7_Pope (Pope Pius VII | b. 1742-08-14 | d. 1823-08-20 | Pius the VII reigned as Pope (patriarch of the Catholic Church) from 1800 to 182); 915] #Pleydell_B (William Pleydell-Bouverie | b. 1779-05-11 | d. 1869-04-09 | Member of Parliament for Downton and Salisbury and local dignitary who served as); 916] #Pliny_Elder (Pliny the elder | b. 0023 | d. 0079-08-25 | Roman natural historian, author of Naturalis Historia in thirty-seven books. Sou); 917] #Plumer_Thos (Sir Thomas Plumer | b. 1753-10-10 | d. 1824-04-05 | English judge and politician. Plumer served as a Commissioner in bankruptcy and ); 918] #PlumptreAnnabella (Annabella Plumtre | b. 1769 | d. 1838 | Younger sister of Anne Plumptre and her collaborator. The sisters translated Ger); 919] #PlumptreAnne (Anne Plumtre | b. 1760-02-22 | d. 1818-10-20 | Sister of Annabella Plumptre and her collaborator. The sisters translated and wr); 920] #Plutarch (Plutarch | b. 0045—0047 | d. 0119—0125 | Studied at the School of Athens, and was a priest at Delphi. Most famous works a); 921] #PocockeT (Thomas Pococke | b. | Mitford read his A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st. According to the title page); 922] #Poll_pet (Poll | Mitford's tabby cat at Bertram House in 1819.); 923] #Poole_J (John Poole | b. 1786 | d. 1872 | Wrote many theatrical satires and farces over a sixty-year career between 1810 a); 924] #Pope_Alex (Alexander Pope | b. 1688-05-21 | d. 1744-05-30 | Augustan-era Catholic poet whose achievements include the mock epics The Rape of); 925] #Pope_Jane (Jane Pope | b. 1744 | d. 1818-07-30 | Began her career as a child actor in 1756 and went on to play soubrette roles. S); 926] #PorteousJ (John Porteous | b. 1695 | d. 1736 | Captain of the City Guard of Edinburgh, attacked and killed by a lynch mob for o); 927] #Porter_AM (Anna Maria Porter | b. 1780 | d. 1832-09-21 | Sister of the popular historical novelist Jane Porter, Anna Maria Porter wrote p); 928] #Porter_Jane (Jane Porter | b. 1775-12-03 | d. 1850-05-24 | Sibling of writer Anna Maria Porter, with whom she collaborated; and painter Rob); 929] #Portsmouth_JCW (John Charles Walopp Portsmouth | b. 1767-12-18 | d. 1853-07-14 | Legally declared insane since 1809 in a well-publicized series of court hearings); 930] #Potter_R (Rev. Robert Potter | b. 1771 | d. 1804-08-09 | While a clergyman in Scarning, Norfolk, and the Master of Seckar's School, he co); 931] #Powell_Mrs (Mrs. Powell | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1820. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 932] #Praed_Winthrop (Winthrop Praed | b. 1820-07-26 | d. 1839-07-15 | Although Praed began his career at Cambridge with Whig sympathies, he was return); 933] #Pratt_SJ (Samuel Jackson Pratt | b. 1749-12-25 | d. 1814-10-04 | Actor, author, and literary celebrity, the friend of Mary Robinson and Sarah Sid); 934] #Price_Stephen (Stephen Price | b. 1783 | d. 1840 | American theater manager and leasee of Drury Lanebetween 1826 and 1827. Mitfordr); 935] #Pride_T (General Sir Thomas Pride | b. 1608 | d. 1658-10-23 | Pride was a Parliamentary general during the Civil Wars. He was responsible for ); 936] #Princess_E_hist (Elizabeth Stuart | b. 1635-12-28 | d. 1650-09-08 | Second daughter of Charles I and Queen Henrietta Maria. She was a prisoner of Pa); 937] #PrincessCharlotte (Charlotte Augusta, Princess of Wales and Saxe Coburg | b. 1796 | d. 1817 | Only child of the Prince Regent and Princess Caroline and second in line to the ); 938] #Pringle_Thos (Thomas Pringle | b. 1789-01-05 | d. 1834-12-05 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. He emigrated to South Africa in 1820, w); 939] #Procter_BW (Bryan Procter | b. 1787-11-21 | d. 1874-10-05 | A friend of Charles Lamb, Procter contributed poetry to the Naturalist's Calenda); 940] #Pulci (Luigi Pulci | b. 1432-08-15 | d. 1484-11-11 | Forentine poet, patronized by the Medici family.); 941] #Qu_Henrietta (Henrietta Maria of France | b. 1609-11-25 | d. 1669-09-10 | Daughter of Henry IV of France and Marie de Medici. House of Bourbon. Spouse of ); 942] #Quayle_Mr (Mr. Quayle | Mentioned in Mitford’s letters of November 6 and 16 1821 as a friend willing to ); 943] #Queen_Anne (Queen Anne | b. 1655-02-06 | d. 1714-08-01 | Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland on 8 March 1702. In 1707, after the Acts); 944] #Queen_Caroline (Caroline, Queen Consort of the United Kingdom | b. 1768-05-17 | d. 1821-08-07 | The cousin and later the estranged wife of the Prince Regent (later George IV). ); 945] #Quillinan_Ed (Edward Quillinan | b. 1791-08-12 | d. 1851-07-08 | Son of a wine merchant of Irish descent who made his fortune in Portugal, his fa); 946] #Racine (Jean-Baptiste Racine | b. 1639-12-22 | d. 1699-04-21 | Noted seventeenth-century French playwright, the contemporary of Molière and Cor); 947] #Radcliffe_Ann (Ann Ward Radcliffe | b. 1764-07-09 | d. 1823-02-07 | Best known for Gothic romances The Mysteries of Udolpho (novel, 1794) and The It); 948] #Raggett_Mr (Mr. Raggett | Spouse of Mrs. Raggett. In Mitford's Journal in 1819, she records that he is bli); 949] #Raggett_Mrs (Mrs. Raggett | Spouse of Mrs. Raggett. In Mitford's Journal in 1819, she indicates that Mrs. Ra); 950] #Rainy_Mr (Mr. Rainy | Person who came to see Bertram House in 1819. Source: Journal.); 951] #Raleigh_Wal (Sir Walter Raleigh | b. 1552 | d. 1618-10-29 | Early modern English courtier, military leader, explorer, and poet. He was a cou); 952] #Ramsay_Mary (Mary Ramsay | b. 1804 | d. 1819-10-20 | Friend of Mitford and Miss Jamesin 1819. The 6th daughter of George Ramsay (1769); 953] #Raphael (Raphael | b. 1483 | d. 1520-04-06 | Medieval Italian artist and architect.); 954] #Rapley_Betty (Betty Rapley | Dates unknown.); 955] #Rapley_Ha (Hannah Rapley | Mitford mentions in her Journal on 24 January 1820 that Hannah Rapley had begun ); 956] #Rapley_John1 (John (Jack) Rapley | b. 1809-10-25 | Son of William and Sarah Rapley. Baptismal data as noted by Needham along with o); 957] #Rapley_John2 (John Rapley | b. 1811-12-01 | Son of John and Elizabeth Rapley. Baptismal data as noted by Needham along with ); 958] #Redding_Cyrus (Cyrus Redding | b. 1785 | d. 1870 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1832. Newspaper and magazine founder,); 959] #Reed_Andrew (Andrew Reed | b. 1787-11-27 | d. 1862-02-25 | Congregational minister. Mitford read his No Fiction.); 960] #Reeve_Henry (Henry Reeve | b. 1813-09-09 | d. 1895-10-21 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1838. Studied at Norwich Grammar Scho); 961] #Reeve_Mrs (Mrs. Reeve | From Whitley. More research needed.); 962] #Rembrandt (Rembrandt | b. 1606-07-15 | d. 1669-10-04 | Famous Dutch Golden Age painter and printmaker. A prolific painter and printmake); 963] #RennellT (Thomas Rennell | b. 1787 | d. 1824-06-30 | Mitford read his Remarks on Scepticism. According to the title page, in 1819 he ); 964] #Repton (Humphry Repton | b. 1752-04-21 | d. 1818-03-24 | Most important landscape designer of the second half of the eighteenth century. ); 965] #Reynolds_JH (John Hamilton Reynolds | b. 1794-09-09 | d. 1852-11-15 | Prolific poet, journalist and reviewer, the friend of Leigh Hunt and John Keats ); 966] #Reynolds_Josh (Sir Joshua Reynolds | b. 1723-07-16 | d. 1792-02-23 | The most celebrated and sought-after English portrait painter of the second half); 967] #RichardI (Richard I of England | b. 1157-09-08 | d. 1199-04-06 | House of Plantaganet; Angevin dynasty. Son of Henry II of England and Eleanor of); 968] #RichardII (Richard II of England | b. 1367-01-06 | d. 1400-02-14 | English monarch, 1367-1400. House of Plantaganet. Son of Edward, Prince of Wales); 969] #RichardIII (Richard III of England King of England and Lord of Ireland | b. 1452-10-02 | d. 1485-08-22 | House of Plantaganet. King of England and Lord of Ireland from 1483 to 1485. Aft); 970] #Richardson_H (Henry Kemp Richardson | Coles says this is Henry Kemp Richardson of Reading, see p.471, note 5. One of t); 971] #Richardson_Jon (Jonathan Richardson | b. 1667-01-12 | d. 1745-05-28 | Portrait painter and writer on the theory and practice of painting and art colle); 972] #Richardson_Sam (Samuel Richardson | b. 1689-08-19 | d. 1761-07-04 | English author and printer. Author of influential eighteenth-century sentimental); 973] #Richelieu (Armand Jean du Plessis | b. 1585-09-09 | d. 1642-12-04 | Became a cardinal of the Catholic Church in 1622 and served as Louis XIII's chie); 974] #Ricketts_Miss (Miss Ricketts | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1830. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 975] #Rienzo_hist (Cola di Rienzo, Tribune of Rome | b. 1313 | d. 1354-10-08 | The historical figure on whom Mitford's character, Cola di Rienzi, is based. Rie); 976] #Rigsby_R (R. Rigsby | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1847. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 977] #Ritchie_AnneT (Anne Thackeray Ritchie | b. 1837-06-09 | d. 1919-02-26 | Novelist, adapter of folk and fairy tales, and biographer, Lady Ritchie wrote a ); 978] #Rivers_Lord (Horace Beckford | b. 1777-12-02 | d. 1831-01-23 | Before inheriting the title, Horace Beckford was a member of Crockford’s Club an); 979] #Robertson_William (William Robertson | b. 1721-09-19 | d. 1793-06-01 | Scottish historian, clergyman, and Principal of the University of Edinburgh, aut); 980] #Robins_Geo (George Robins | b. 1777-05-29 | d. 1847-02-08 | Auctioneer and theater patron. Acquaintance of Byron, Sheridan, and J.P. Kemble.); 981] #Robinson_H (Henry Robinson | In a Mitford letter of July 29, 1825, this name appears as that of an attorney n); 982] #Robinson_HC (Henry Crabb Robinson | b. 1775-05-13 | d. 1867-02-05 | Journalist and solicitor. He worked as a war correspondent during the Peninsular); 983] #Robinson_MaryD (Mary Darby Robinson | b. 1757-11-27 | d. 1800-12-26 | Actor in Shakespearean and breeches parts, mentored by Garrick. Friend of Georgi); 984] #Rogers_Sam (Samuel Rogers | b. 1763-07-30 | d. 1855-12-18 | Banker, poet and literary and art patron. Author of The Pleasures of Memory (179); 985] #Roscoe_T (Thomas Roscoe | b. 1791-06-23 | d. 1871-09-24 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1829. Prolific travel writer, playwri); 986] #Rose_Wm (William Stewart Rose | b. 1775 | d. 1843-04-29 | Tory M.P. and Anti-Jacobin writer. Associate of Walter Scott. Mitford read his L); 987] #Ross_Capt (John Ross | b. 1777-06-24 | d. 1856-08-30 | Mitford read his A Voyage of Discovery, Made Under the Orders of the Admiralty, ); 988] #Rousseau (Jean-Jacques Rousseau | b. 1712-06-28 | d. 1778-02-07 | 18th-century French philosopher, novelist, and memoirist, whose political philos); 989] #Rowden_Fr (Frances Rowden St. Quintin | Educator, author, and Mitford tutor. Also taught Caroline Lamb and L.E.L.. Worke); 990] #Roworth_Mary (Mary Valpy Roworth | b. 1786 | d. 1854-01 | Eldest of the daughters of Dr. Richard Valpy and his second wife, Mary Benwell, ); 991] #Rubens (Peter Paul Rubens Sir | b. 1577-06-28 | d. 1640-05-30 | A portrait, landscape, and history painter in oils, Rubens is best-known for his); 992] #Ruisdael_Jacob (Jacob van Ruisdael | b. 1628—1629 | d. 1682-03-10 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, nephew of Salomon van Ruysdael, and cousin o); 993] #Russell_Constance (Lady Constance Russell | b. 1832 | d. 1925 | A correspondent and friend of Mary Russell Mitford, when she moved to a cottage ); 994] #Russell_David (David Russell | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1831. Dates unknown.); 995] #Russell_Henry_1stBar (Henry Russell, first baronet Russell | b. 1751-08-08 | d. 1836-01-18 | Having begun his career as a lawyer, he was appointed to the supreme court of ju); 996] #Russell_Henry_2ndBar (Henry Russell, 2nd baronet Russell | b. 1783-05-17 | d. 1852-04-19 | Son of Sir Henry Russell, first baronet of Swallowfield, who inherited the Swall); 997] #Russell_John (Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell | b. 1792-08-18 | d. 1878-05-28 | 3rd son of John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford by his first wife, Georgiana Byng. ); 998] #Russell_Lady (Rachel Wriothesley Russell | b. 1637-09-19 | d. 1723-09-29 | The daughter of Thomas Wriothesley, fourth earl of Southampton; her letters invo); 999] #Russell_LadyMarie (Lady Marie-Clotilde Russell Russell Mottet de la Fontaine Marie-Clotilde | b. 1794-06-03 | d. 1872-01-31 | Lady Marie-Clotilde Russell was a great friend of Mitford, particularly later in); 1000] #Russell_M (Mitford Russell Mary | b. 1750 | d. 1830-01-02 | Mary Russell was the youngest child of the Rev. Dr. Richard Russell and his seco); 1001] #Russell_MaryDicker (Mary Dicker Russell | Mary Russell Mitford's maternal grandmother. Mary Dicker was the daughter of Wil); 1002] #Russell_Richard (Rev. Dr. Richard Russell | b. 1695-10-05 | d. 1783-02-25 | Mary Russell Mitford's maternal grandfather. The Rev. Dr. Richard Russell was th); 1003] #Rutt_John (John Towill Rutt | b. 1760-04-04 | d. 1841-03-03 | Political radical and writer. Dissenter and later Unitarian. He edited the The T); 1004] #Ruysdael_Jacob (Jacob van Ruysdael | b. 1629 | d. 1681 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, the son of Salomon van Ruysdael, the cousin ); 1005] #Ruysdael_Salomon (Salomon van Ruysdael | b. | d. 1670-11-03 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, the father of Jacob van Ruysdael, and the un); 1006] #Saabye (Hans Egede Saabye | b. 1746-07 | d. 1817-08-31 | Parish priest in Denmark and missionary to Greenland. Mitford read an English tr); 1007] #Sackville_Chas (Charles Sackville | b. 1638-01-24 | d. 1706-01-29 | Restoration-era courtier, rake, and wit, the associate of Sir Charles Sedley, Ro); 1008] #Saladin (Saladin | b. 1137 | d. 1193-03-04 | Known by his Arabic honorific,Salah ad-Din, westernized as Saladin. First Sultan); 1009] #Salame_Ab (Abraham Salamé | Mitford read his A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816. Date); 1010] #Salisbury_hist (William Cecil, Earl of Salisbury | b. 1591-03-28 | d. 1668-12-03 | In 1648, Salisbury was a member of the deputation who negotiated the failed Trea); 1011] #Sally (Sally | Servant at Bertram House, dismissed on September 15, 1820, when the Mitfords mov); 1012] #Sargent_John (John Sargent | b. 1780 | d. 1833 | Evangelical-learning Church of England clergyman. Mitford read his Memoirs of th); 1013] #Savigny_JBH (Jean-Baptiste-Henri Savigny | b. 1793 | d. 1843 | Mitford read a translation of his Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816, co-a); 1014] #Say_hist (William Say | b. 1604 | d. 1666 | A regicide, Say was one of the Commissioners at the trial of Charles I and signe); 1015] #ScafeJ (John Scafe | Mitford read his King Coal's Levée. Active 1815-1820; dates unknown. Source: Wor); 1016] #Schiller_F (Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller | b. 1759-11-10 | d. 1805-05-09 | German poet, playwright, historian, and philosopher, Schiller studied medicine a); 1017] #Schimmelpenninck_MA (Mary Anne Galton Schimmelpennick | b. 1778-11-25 | d. 1856-08-29 | Mitford read her A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse.); 1018] #Schlegel_AW (August Wilhelm von Schlegel | b. 1767-09-08 | d. 1845-05-12 | Brother of Friedrich Wilhelm von Schlegel, advisor to Madame de Staël and tutor ); 1019] #SchlegelF (Friedrich von Schlegel | b. 1771-03-10 | d. 1829-01-12 | Important figure in Jena Romanticism, the first wave of German Romantic literatu); 1020] #Scott_John (John Scott | b. 1784-10-24 | d. 1821-02-21 | Journalist and editor who revived The London Magazine in 1820 and edited it unti); 1021] #Scott_John_LdEldon (John Scott, Earl of Eldon | b. 1751-06-04 | d. 1838-01-13 | John Scott, later created the first Earl of Eldon, was an English barrister, jud); 1022] #Scott_Wal (Sir Walter Scott | b. 1771-08-15 | d. 1832-09-21 | Scottish advocate, antiquarian, poet, and novelist. Also worked as clerk of the ); 1023] #Sedgwick_Cath (Catharine Maria Sedgwick | b. 1789-12-28 | d. 1867-07-31 | American novelist and correspondent of Mitford.); 1024] #Sedgwick_Theo2 (Theodore Sedgwick, Jr. | b. 1780-12-09 | d. 1839 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1835 and 1840. Brother of Cather); 1025] #Selby_Mr (Mr. Selby | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 1026] #Selby_PJ (Prideaux John Selby | b. 1788-07-23 | d. 1867-03-27 | Important naturalist and illustrator in the 1820s, 30s, and 40s, friend and neig); 1027] #Selim_pet (Selim | Mitford's ferocious long-haired white cat. The cat may have been a Turkish angor); 1028] #Senior_Jane (Jane Elizabeth (Jeanie) Hughes Senior | b. 1828-12-10 | d. 1877 | Social reformer and relief worker during the Franco-Prussian War, and co-founder); 1029] #Serle_TJ (Thomas James Serle | b. 1798-10-28 | d. 1889-03-20 | Actor, playwright, and theater manager who appeared with Kean and Charles Kemble); 1030] #Serres_OW (Olivia Wilmot Serres | Niece and biographer of James Wilmot who claimed that he was the author of the L); 1031] #Sevigne_Mad (Madame Sévigné | b. 1626-02-05 | d. 1696-04-17 | 17th-century French aristocrat and salonniere, celebrated as a letter writer.); 1032] #Seward_Martha (Martha Seward | An acquaintance of Mary Webb. Needs additional research.); 1033] #Seward_Wm (William Seward | b. 1747-01 | d. 1799-04-24 | Mitford read his four-volume collection of literary and biographical anecdotes, ); 1034] #Sforza_hist (General Francesco Sforza, Duke of Milan | b. 1401-07-23 | d. 1466-03-08 | Sforza defeated Venice and its ally Florence under Doge Francesco Foscari. Mary ); 1035] #Shakespeare (William Shakespeare | b. 1564-04 | d. 1616-04-23 | Early modern era actor, theater manager, poet, and playwright. Part owner of pla); 1036] #Sharpe_CK (Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe | b. 1781-05-15 | d. 1851-03-17 | Editor of Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-Lot); 1037] #Shaw_Sam (Sam Shaw | Coauthor with James Bruce of An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Br); 1038] #ShawLefevre_C1 (Charles Shaw Lefevre | b. 1759-09-20 | d. 1823-04-27 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1805 and a moderate Tory Member of Pa); 1039] #Sheffield_John (John Sheffield, Duke of Buckingham and Normanby | b. 1648-04-07 | d. 1721-02-24 | English poet, Tory politician, and favorite of Queen Anne who served as Lord Pri); 1040] #Shelley_MW (Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelley | b. 1797-08-30 | d. 1851-02-01 | Daughter of William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft. Novelist, playwright, essayi); 1041] #Shelley_PB (Percy Bysshe Shelley | b. 1792-08-04 | d. 1822-07-08 | Romantic-era poet, novelist, essayist, and playwright. Best known for lyric poem); 1042] #Shepherd_HJ (Henry John Shepherd | b. 1784 | d. 1855 | Barrister at law, Recorder for Abingdon, and Commissioner for the Court of Bankr); 1043] #Sheridan_RichardB (Richard Brinsley Sheridan | b. 1751 | d. 1816-07-07 | Successful playwright and longtime owner-manager of Drury Lane Theatre. A promin); 1044] #Sherwood_Mr (Mr. Sherwood | Practiced medicine in Reading. He was a friend of John Berkeley Monck, and likel); 1045] #Shoberl_F (Frederic Shoberl | b. 1775 | d. 1852-03-22 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1830 and 1835. Founder, with Hen); 1046] #Shoberl_T (Theodosia Shoberl | d. 1838-12-18 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1849.Spouse of Frederic Shoberl.); 1047] #Siddons_Sarah (Sarah Kemble Siddons | b. 1755-07-05 | d. 1831-06-08 | Considered the best tragic actor of her era, better than her three actor-brother); 1048] #Sidmouth_Lady2 (Mary Anne Scott Townshend Addington, Lady Sidmouth | d. 1842-04-26 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1830. Second wife of Henry Addington,); 1049] #Simonds_H (Henry Simonds | b. 1785 | d. 1874 | Potentially the H. Symonds mentioned in Mitford’s Journal on November 2 1820. So); 1050] #Simonds_MrB (William Blackall Simonds | b. 1762 | d. 1843 | Potentially the Monsieur Simon mentioned in Mitford’s Journal on November 2 1820); 1051] #Simonds_MrsB (Elizabeth Blackall Simonds | b. 1764 | d. 1842 | Potentially the Mrs. Blackall Symonds mentioned in Mitford’s Journal on December); 1052] #Sinclair_SrJohn (Sir John Sinclair | b. 1754-05-10 | d. 1835-12-21 | Sir John Sinclair was perhaps most politically active in the 1780s and 1790s whe); 1053] #Skerrett_Marianne (Marianne Skerrett | The 1888 volume of Notes and Queries indicates that Marianne and Henrietta Skerr); 1054] #Slade_F (Slade Frederick | Called at Bertram House in 1819. Dates unknown.); 1055] #Sloman_Mrs (Mrs. Sloman | b. 1799 | d. 1858-02-08 | Actor, specialized in tragedy. Performed at Drury Lane and Covent Garden Theatre); 1056] #Slops (Slops | May be a Mitford family pet.); 1057] #Smith_Ad (Adam Smith | b. 1723-06-05 | d. 1790-07-17 | Scottish Enlightenment philosopher, Doctor of Laws, and later Rector of the Univ); 1058] #Smith_Ch (Charlotte Turner Smith | b. 1749-05-04 | d. 1806-10-28 | Best known as a poet and reviver of the sonnet tradition in the late eighteenth ); 1059] #Smith_Dora (Dora Smith | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1847. Dates unknown.); 1060] #Smith_Farmer (Farmer Smith | b. 1801 | ); 1061] #Smith_Horace (Horace Smith | b. 1779-12-31 | d. 1849-07-12 | Born Horatio Smith. Co-author with his brother James of the literary parody coll); 1062] #Smollett_Tob (Tobias Smollett | b. 1721-03-19 | d. 1771-09-17 | Novelist and poet, as well as editor, translator, critic, and medical practition); 1063] #Soane_Geo (George Soane | b. 1790 | d. 1860-07-12 | Second son of the architect John Soane. He wrote numerous melodramas for the sta); 1064] #Solomon (Solomon | May be the name of a Mitford servant or pet. Surname not given.); 1065] #Somerville_Miss (Margaret Agnes Somerville Bunn | b. 1799 | d. 1883 | Actor who appeared as Miss Somerville and later performed under her married name); 1066] #Sophocles (Sophocles | b. -0496 | d. -0406 | As an Athenian citizen, Sophocles held many roles, such as serving on the treasu); 1067] #Southey_R (Robert Southey | b. 1774-08-12 | d. 1843-03-21 | English poet, historian, essayist, and biographer. Early friend of Coleridge. He); 1068] #Spence_Jos (Joseph Spence | b. 1699-04-28 | d. 1768-08-20 | Clergyman and garden designer, Professor of Poetry, and Regius Professor of Hist); 1069] #Spenser_Edmund (Edmund Spenser | b. 1552 | d. 1599-01-13 | Early modern poet and courtier, author of The Faerie Queen. Served in the milita); 1070] #Spurling_Mr (Mr. Spurling | An associate of Mr. Elliott, possibly an attorney. Forename unknown. Dates unkno); 1071] #Starkey_DP (Digby Pilot Starkey | b. 1806 | d. 1876 | Irish poet and playwright; friend of Maria Edgeworth. A correspondent of Mary Ru); 1072] #Staunton_Geo (Sir George Staunton | b. 1737-04-10 | d. 1801-01-14 | In 1792 Staunton was apointed principal secretary to Lord Macartney’s embassy to); 1073] #Steele_Richard (Sir Richard Steele | b. 1672-03-12 | d. 1729-09-01 | English playwright, editor and essayist who founded the journal The Tatler and l); 1074] #Stendahl (Marie-Henri Beyle | b. 1783-01-23 | d. 1842-03-23 | Mitford read the English translation of his Lives of Haydn and Mozart, published); 1075] #Stevenson_Em (Emily Stevenson | Possibly the daughter of Mr. Stevenson. Dates unknown.); 1076] #Stevenson_Mr (Mr. Stevenson | Possibly the father of Emily Stevenson. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 1077] #Stewart_Major (Major Stewart | Mitford's Journal of 1820 mentions both a Mr. Stewart and a Major Stewart. Relat); 1078] #Stewart_Mr (Mr. Stewart | Mitford's Journal of 1820 mentions both a Mr. Stewart and a Major Stewart. Relat); 1079] #Stoddard_RH (Richard Henry Stoddard | b. 1825-07-02 | d. 1903-05-12 | Influential American reviewer and critic; also editor of compilations of English); 1080] #Stovin_Mrs (Mrs. M. Stovin | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1824. Forename unknown. Lived at Newb); 1081] #StQuentin (M. St. Quentin | Spouse of Frances Rowden, who was his second wife. They married in Paris. Founde); 1082] #Strafford (Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford | b. 1593-04-13 | d. 1641-05-12 | Caroline-era administrator and Lord Deputy for Ireland who was tried, convicted,); 1083] #Strong_Elizabeth (Elizabeth Strong | Baker of Three Mile Cross, as noted by Needham on a list of local tradespeople, ); 1084] #Strong_George (George Strong | Bricklayer and beer retailer of Three Mile Cross, as noted by Needhamon a list o); 1085] #Strutt_Jos (Joseph Strutt | b. 1749 | d. 1802 | Artist and antiquarian who collected and illustrated historical costume, arms, s); 1086] #Stuart_ChasEd (Charles Edward Stuart | b. 1720-12-31 | d. 1788-01-31 | The famously beautiful son of the Old Pretender (James, son of the deposed King ); 1087] #Stuart_H (Henry Stuart, Duke of Gloucester | b. 1639-07-08 | d. 1660-09-13 | Youngest son of Charles I and Henrietta Maria. He visited his father in prison, ); 1088] #Sunderland_Countess (Dorothy Sidney Spencer Smythe, Countess of Sunderland | b. 1617-10 | d. 1684-02 | As a young woman, Lady Dorothy Sidney was celebrated for her wit and beauty and ); 1089] #Swan_Mr (Henry Swan | On the 17th, convicted of bribery at an election for the borough of Penrhyn, in ); 1090] #Sweet_Rbt (Robert Sweet | b. 1783 | d. 1835-01-20 | Plant breeder, horticulturalist, ornithologist, and author of several important ); 1091] #Swift_J (Jonathan Swift | b. 1667-11-30 | d. 1745-10-19 | Irish clergyman and author, later Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. Autho); 1092] #Symmons_Chas (Charles Symmons | b. 1749 | d. 1826-04-27 | Mitford read his The Prose Works of John Milton: with a Life of the Author.); 1093] #Talbot_Geo (George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury | b. 1528 | d. 1590-11-18 | Appointed by Queen Elizabeth I to imprison Mary Queen of Scots in 1568 at Sheffi); 1094] #Talfourd_Mrs (Rachael Rutt Talfourd | b. 1793 | d. 1875-02-12 | The eldest daughter of John Towill Rutt, she married Thomas Noon Talfourd in 182); 1095] #Talfourd_Thos (Thomas Noon Talfourd | b. 1795-05-26 | d. 1854-03-13 | Close friend, literary mentor, and frequent correspondent of Mary Russell Mitfor); 1096] #Talma_Francois (Francois Joseph Talma | b. 1763-01-15 | d. 1826-10-19 | French actor and dentist who was a favorite of Napoleon Bonaparte.); 1097] #Talmage_Mrs (Mrs. Talmage | Mitford dined at Wokingham & met Mrs. Talmage as well as Mr. Morris.); 1098] #Tasso (Tasso | b. 1544-03-11 | d. 1595-04-25 | Poet and courtier from Naples. He was the author of the pastoral drama Aminta (1); 1099] #Taunton_Mrs (Mrs. Taunton | Mitford met her when dining at Mr. Green's in 1820. Forename unknown. Dates unkn); 1100] #Taylor_J (John Taylor | b. 1781 | d. 1864 | London writer and publisher with James Augustus Hessey as the publishing firm Ta); 1101] #Taylor_Jane (Jane Taylor | b. 1783-09-23 | d. 1824-04-13 | Collaborator with her sister Ann and Adelaide O'Keeffe on poetry for children. M); 1102] #Taylor_Jer (Jeremy Taylor | b. 1613-08-15 | d. 1667-08-13 | Church of England clergyman and author, known as the Shakespeare of Divines and ); 1103] #Taylor_JH (James Henry Taylor | b. 1843-04-09 | The illegitimate son of Kerenhappuch Taylor. Born about 1843 at Three Mile Cross); 1104] #Taylor_John (John Taylor | b. 1757 | d. 1832 | Began his career in London as an oculist; Mary Robinson dedicates her poem Sight); 1105] #Taylor_Joseph (Joseph Taylor | b. 1762 | d. 1844 | Mitford read his Antiquitates Curiosae. Source: VIAF, WorldCat.); 1106] #Taylor_K (Kerenhappuch (K.) Taylor | Known as K., she was a servant in the Mitford household intermittently from 1840); 1107] #Tennyson (Alfred Tennyson | b. 1809-08-06 | d. 1892-10-06 | Poet laureate of the UK from 1850 to 1892, following Wordsworth. Buried in Westm); 1108] #Thackeray_TJ (Thomas James Thackeray | b. 1796 | d. 1850 | Musician and librettist/lyricist. Wrote The Mountain Sylph (two-act opera, 1834)); 1109] #Thackeray_WM (William Makepeace Thackeray | b. 1811-07-18 | d. 1863-12-24 | English journalist, novelist, editor, amateur artist, and lecturer. He wrote for); 1110] #Thelwall_John (John Thelwall | b. 1764-07-27 | d. 1834-02-17 | Radical political writer, lecturer, poet, and novelist, who was associated with ); 1111] #Thomas_Mr (Mr. Thomas | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 1112] #Thompson_Mr (Mr. Thompson | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 1113] #Thomson_Hugh (Hugh Thompson | b. 1860-06-01 | d. 1920-05-07 | Book and periodical illustrator best known for his pen-and-ink illustrations of ); 1114] #Tichburne_hist (Robert Tichborne | b. 1604 | d. 1682-07 | Parliamentarian and regicide, he was one of the signers of the death warrant of ); 1115] #Tierney_SrMat (Sir Matthew Tierney | b. 1776-11-04 | d. 1845-10-28 | Tierney was a physician who studied medicine in Edinburgh and Glasgow and later ); 1116] #Tindal_Mrs_Acton (Henrietta Harrison Tindal | b. 1817-07-19 | d. 1879-05-06 | Author of volumes of poetry, as well as stories and articles in magazines, and n); 1117] #Titian (Titian | b. 1488—1490 | d. 1576-08-27 | 16th-century Italian painter, based in Venice, with an international clientele. ); 1118] #Tobin_John (John Tobin | b. 1770-01-28 | d. 1804-12-07 | An unsuccessful playwright during his lifetime, Tobin submitted and had rejected); 1119] #Traill_James (James Traill | Second to John Henry Christie in his 1821 duel with John Scott. Both men were in); 1120] #Trollope_Fr (Frances Milton Trollope | b. 1779-03-10 | d. 1863-10-06 | Prolific and celebrated reform novelist and travel writer. Author of The Domesti); 1121] #Tubb_Daniel (Daniel Tubb); 1122] #Tuckerman_H (Henry Theodore Tuckerman | b. 1813-04-20 | d. 1871-12-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1853. American travel writer, essayis); 1123] #Tully_Miss (Miss Tully | According to the Preface to , Miss Tully is the sister of Richard Tully, Esq., h); 1124] #Tuppen_Capt (William Tuppen | In Mitford's time, a captain retired from the Royal West regiment of the London ); 1125] #Tuppen_Mrs (Mrs. Tuppen | Spouse of William Tuppen. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 1126] #TwissH (Horace Twiss | b. 1787-02-28 | d. 1849-05 | ); 1127] #Ude_L (Louis Eustache Ude | b. 1769 | d. 1846 | Served as cook to Louis XVI, as maître d’hôtel to the Earl of Sefton, as chef to); 1128] #Valpy_Anne (Anne Valpy | b. 1765-09-14 | d. 1835-04-15 | ); 1129] #Valpy_Ant (Anthony Blagrave Valpy | b. 1791-02-10 | d. 1871-03-30 | Son of Dr. Richard Valpy and Mary Benwell. Spouse of Anna Harris Valpy. They had); 1130] #Valpy_Catherine (Catherine Valpy French | b. 1795-08-04 | d. 1873 | One of four daughters of Dr. Richard Valpy and his second wife, Mary Benwell; sh); 1131] #Valpy_Ed (Mr. Edward Valpy | b. 1764-04 | d. 1832-04-15 | ); 1132] #Valpy_John (A. J. (John) Valpy | b. 1786-10-30 | d. 1854-11-19 | Abraham John Valpy, called John or A.J. Dr. Richard Valpy’s second son, Abraham ); 1133] #Valpy_Miss (Valpy | A friend of MRM, and one of Dr. Richard Valpy’s as yet unmarried daughters by hi); 1134] #Valpy_Penelope (Penelope Valpy French | b. 1798 | d. 1869-03-17 | One of the daughters of Dr. Valpy by his second wife Mary Benwell. She was bapti); 1135] #Valpy_Richard (Dr. Richard Valpy | b. 1754-12-07 | d. 1836-03-28 | Richard Valpy (the fourth of that name) was the eldest son of Richard Valpy [III); 1136] #Valpy_Sarah (Sarah Frances {Fanny} Valpy Shuter | b. 1790-09-03 | d. 1870-07 | Sarah Frances, called Frances or Fanny, third daughter Dr. Richard Valpy and his); 1137] #Vanbrugh (Sir John Vanbrugh | b. 1664-01 | d. 1726-03-26 | A noted architect and successful playwright who wrote original comedies and adap); 1138] #Vandyke (Sir Anthony van Dyck | b. 1599-03-22 | d. 1641-12-09 | Flemish portrait painter who became celebrated in England for his portraits of C); 1139] #Vane_hist (Henry (Harry) Vane | b. 1613-03 | d. 1662-06-14 | Henry Vane was a Parliamentarian during the English Civil Wars and later served ); 1140] #VauxJH (John Hardy Vaux | b. 1782 | d. | Career thief, forger, and swindler, convicted and transported to Australia three); 1141] #Vestris_L (Lucia Elizabeth Vestris | b. 1797-03-03 | d. 1856-08-08 | A famous English actor and opera singer who amassed a large fortune over her per); 1142] #Victoria_Queen (Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | b. 1819-05-24 | d. 1901-01-22 | After Elizabeth II, who surpassed her on 9 September 2015, Victoria was the long); 1143] #Villiers_Geo (George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham | b. 1628-01-30 | d. 1687-04-16 | Restoration-era poet, courtier, and rake, friend of Rochester.); 1144] #Vines_Mr (Mr. Vines | Coles says this is the son of Edward Vines, possibly named Jacob, see p. 524, no); 1145] #Virgil (Virgil | b. -0070-10-15 | d. -0020-09-21 | Roman poet, author of the Aeneid.); 1146] #Visconti_E (Ennio Quirino Visconti | b. 1751-11-01 | d. 1818-02-17 | Expert on Roman sculpture and other antiquities of the ancient world. With his f); 1147] #Voltaire (Voltaire | b. 1694 | d. 1778 | Major figure of the French Enlightenment: philosopher, historian, naturalist, es); 1148] #Voules_Mr (Mr. Voules | Friend of the Mitfords who visited Bertram House and Three Mile Cross. Likely th); 1149] #Voules_Mrs (Mrs. Voules | Friend of the Mitfords. She adopts one of Molly's puppies in 1820. Likely the sp); 1150] #Waddington_J (Julia Rattray Waddington | b. 1801 | d. 1862 | Author of four novels. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Da); 1151] #Wakefield_D (Daniel Wakefield | b. 1776 | d. 1846-07-19 | Mentioned in letter of Mitford to Talfourd of June 21 1821, known to Mitford and); 1152] #Walker_CE (Charles Edward Walker | b. 1818 | Author of historical tragedies and melodramas written between 1818 and 1829, inc); 1153] #Walker_John (John Walker | b. 1781-05-29 | d. 1859-01-05 | English chemist, inventor of the friction match in the late 1820s.); 1154] #Walker_Mr (Mr. Walker | Friend of the Mitfords who visited Bertram House. Forename unknown. Dates unknow); 1155] #Walker_Mrs (Mrs. Walker | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1842. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 1156] #Walker_P (Peter Walker | Father of the playwright Charles E. Walker. It is noted that he was a Westminste); 1157] #Wallace_William (William Wallace | b. 1270-04-03 | d. 1305-08-23 | The Scottish warrior who led the soldiers against the English in the Scottish Wa); 1158] #Wallack_Mr (Mr. Wallack | An actor whom Mitford critiqued for his performance as Brutus.); 1159] #Waller_Edmund (Edmund Waller | b. 1606-03-03 | d. 1687-10-21 | Poet and politician remembered for the deviousness of his politics, the wealth o); 1160] #Walpole_Hor (Horace Walpole | b. 1745-12-10 | d. 1797-03-02 | English politician, antiquarian, and author. Youngest son of Sir Robert Walpole,); 1161] #Walton_I (Izaak Walton | b. 1594 | d. 1683-12-15 | Wrote The Compleat Angler and a book of short biographies, The Lives of John Don); 1162] #Wanley_N (Nathaniel Wanley | b. 1634-03 | d. 1680 | Mitford read his The Wonders of the Little World.); 1163] #Warde_Mr (James Prescott Warde | b. 1792 | d. 1840 | Acted under Mr. Warde. Tragedian who appeared at Drury Lane and Covent Garden Th); 1164] #Wardle_GL (Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle | b. 1762 | d. 1833-11-30 | Radical politician and Member of Parliament for Okehampton from 1807 to 1812. Wi); 1165] #Warry_Jos2 (Joseph Warry | b. 1775-11-08 | d. 1822-08-04 | Radical Whig trademan with premises at Minster Street, Reading, who went to Fran); 1166] #Warwicke_Miss (Miss Warwicke | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 1167] #Washington_Geo (George Washington | b. 1732-02-22 | d. 1799-12-14 | Virginia landholder, colonial military officer, Commander-in-Chief of the Contin); 1168] #Waterton_Mrs (Mrs. Waterton | Mitford correspondent in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.); 1169] #Watteau (Jean-Antoine Watteau | b. 1684-10 | d. 1721-07-18 | French painter known for his bucolic landscapes and country scenes in the Late-B); 1170] #Webb_Eliza (Eliza Webb | b. 1797-03-03 | d. 1851-03-24 | Elizabeth Webb, called Eliza, was a neighbor and friend of Mary Russell Mitford.); 1171] #Webb_James (James Webb | b. 1769 | d. 1822-01-11 | Prominent manufacturer in the Wokinghambrewing industry, and community leader in); 1172] #Webb_Jane (Jane Webb Hayward | b. 1797-03-03 | d. 1847-03 | Friend of Mary Russell Mitford, the daughter of James Webb and Jane Elizabeth Og); 1173] #Webb_John (John Webb | b. 1761 | Likely Uncle John, uncle to Eliza and Mary Webb and younger brother to James Web); 1174] #Webb_Mary_elder (Aunt Mary Webb | Friend ofMary Russell Mitford. Sister or sister-in-law of James Webb and aunt of); 1175] #Webb_Mary_younger (Mary Webb | b. 1796-04-15 | Close friend and frequent correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Mary Webb was t); 1176] #Webster_J (Mr. J. Webster | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 1177] #Webster_John (John Webster | b. 1580 | d. 1634 | Early-modern era playwright, author of the Duchess of Malfi.); 1178] #Webster_Mrs (Mrs. Webster | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 1179] #Weirdon_Miss (Miss Weirdon | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1831. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 1180] #Wellington_Duke (Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington | b. 1769-05-01 | d. 1852-09-14 | Before his fame in the Napoleonic Wars, Wellesley served in the Irish House of C); 1181] #Wentworth_WC (William Charles Wentworth | b. 1790-08 | d. 1872-03-20 | Mitford read his A Description of the Colony of New South Wales.); 1182] #Weyland_John (John Weyland | b. 1774-12-04 | d. 1854-05-08 | Tory journal editor and political figure. He and William Roberts founded the Chr); 1183] #Whateley_Elijah (Elijah Whateley | Wheelwright and carpenter of Three Mile Cross. He is listed by Needham solely as); 1184] #Wheeler_James (James Wheeler | A friend of Mitford in 1819-1823. Mitford visited him in Wokingham, along with t); 1185] #Wheeler_John (John Wheeler | Spouse of Mrs. John Wheeler.); 1186] #Wheeler_Kate (Kate Wheeler | Friend of Miss James. Mitford refers to her as providing home remedies and advic); 1187] #Wheeler_Mrs (Mrs. John Wheeler | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1840. Spouse of John Wheeler. Forenam); 1188] #Whim (Whim | Mitford's spaniel at Bertram House in 1819.); 1189] #White_Mr (Mr. White | Associated with Reading. A Mr. White was an original member of the Ilsley Coursi); 1190] #White_Tom (Tom White | Mentioned in connection with Captain Tuppen, may be a relation of Mr. White of R); 1191] #White_WF (W. F. White | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u); 1192] #WhiteGilbert (Gilbert White | b. 1720-07-18 | d. 1793-06-26 | Gilbert White obtained deacon's orders in 1746 and was fully ordained in 1749; h); 1193] #whitekitten_WEpet (white kitten | Female white kitten belonging to Mitford that she proposes to give to Elford. Mi); 1194] #Whittaker_Geo (George B. Whittaker | b. 1793-03 | d. 1847-12-13 | George B. Whittaker, publisher and bookseller, was the eldest son of the Rev. Ge); 1195] #Whittaker_WB (William Budd Whittaker | b. 1794-12-10 | d. 1834-05-12 | William Budd Whittaker was born in 1794in New Alresford, the second child of the); 1196] #Wienholt_Miss (Miss Wienholt | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u); 1197] #Wilhelmina_Prussia1709 (Frederika Sophie Wilhelmine of Prussia | b. 1709-07-03 | d. 1758-10-14 | House of Hohenzollern, granddaughter of George I of Great Britain, daughter of F); 1198] #Wilkie_Wil (William Wilkie | b. 1721-10-05 | d. 1772-10-10 | Scottish poet and minister of Ratho, most known for his epic in nine books, The ); 1199] #WilliamIII (William III of England and Ireland and William II of Scotland | b. 1650-11-04 | d. 1702-03-08 | Protestant monarch, House of Hanover. Ousted King James II from power during the); 1200] #WilliamIV (William IV, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | b. 1765-08-21 | d. 1837-06-20 | House of Hanover. Successor to his brother George IV, William enjoyed comparativ); 1201] #Williams_G (Mr. G. Williams | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.); 1202] #Williams_Miss (Miss Williams | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Forename unknown. Dates unknown); 1203] #Williams_Mr (Mr. Williams | Forename unknown. Dates unknown. May be related to Miss Williams.); 1204] #Williams_Thos (Thomas Williams | b. 1755 | d. 1839 | Dissenting lay preacher and writer on politics and Calvinist religion, active 17); 1205] #Willis_David (David Willis | b. 1806-12-25 | Son of John and Elizabeth Willis. Baptismal data noted by Needham along with oth); 1206] #Willis_John (John Willis | Blacksmith recorded by Needhamon a list of local tradespeople drawn from the Pos); 1207] #Willis_NP (Nathaniel Parker Willis | b. 1806-01-20 | d. 1867-01-20 | American poet, journalist, periodical editor, and public lecturer. Also publishe); 1208] #Willis_Thomas (Thomas Willis | Blacksmith whose name is recorded by Needham on a list of local tradespeople dra); 1209] #Wilmot_James (James Wilmot | b. 1726 | d. 1807 | In 1817, his niece Olivia Serres claimed that he was the author of the Letters o); 1210] #Wilmot_John (John Wilmot | b. 1647-04-01 | d. 1680-07-26 | ); 1211] #Wilson_Andrew (Andrew Wilson | b. | d. 1736-04-14 | One of the criminals mentioned in Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entit); 1212] #Wilson_John (John Wilson | b. 1785-05-18 | d. 1854-04-03 | John Wilson wrote under the pseudonym Christopher North for Blackwood's Magazine); 1213] #Wilson_RT (Sir Robert Thomas Wilson | b. 1777-08-17 | d. 1849-05-09 | Liberal Member of Parliament for Southwark from 1818 to 1831. Served in British ); 1214] #Windham_Wm (William Windham | b. 1750 | d. 1810-06-04 | Politican and friend of Edmund Burke. Early in his political career he was a fri); 1215] #WindsorEE_ed (Editor of the Windsor and Eton Express | Mitford refers to this person as the Windsor paper man. Presumably the editor or); 1216] #Wishart_Geo (George Wishart | b. 1599 | d. 1671-07-26 | Close friend, political supporter, and biographer of James Graham, Duke of Montr); 1217] #Wm_Conq (William the Conqueror | b. 1028 | d. 1087-09-09 | Led the Norman invasion of England, defeating the Anglo Saxon King Harold in 106); 1218] #Woodburn_J (John Woodburn); 1219] #Wordsworth_Dor (Dorothy Wordsworth | b. 1771-12-25 | d. 1855-01-25 | Sister of William Wordsworth; her diary entries, poems, and sketches were not pu); 1220] #Wordsworth_Dora (Dorothy (Dora) Wordsworth | b. 1804-08-16 | d. 1847-07-09 | Daughter of Wordsworth, named for her aunt Dorothy Wordsworth and called Dora.); 1221] #Wordsworth_Wm (William Wordsworth | b. 1770-04-07 | d. 1850-04-23 | First-generation poet of the Romantic era, Lake Poet and friend of fellow poet C); 1222] #Wrangham_Fr (Francis Wrangham | b. 1769-06-11 | d. 1842-12-27 | Prominent Anglican clergyman, author, and book collector who became Archdeacon o); 1223] #WrightJ (John Wright | b. 1770 | d. 1844 | Mitford read his Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for certain libels pub); 1224] #Wylde_H (Harriet Wylde Valpy | b. 1788-01-03 | d. 1864-06-18 | Spouse of A.J. (John) Valpy, they were married in Burrington, Somerset in Februa); 1225] #Wyndham_HP (Henry Penruddocke Wyndham | b. 1736-06-04 | d. 1819-05-03 | Whig M.P. Mitford read his edited volume, The Diary of the late George Bubb Dodi); 1226] #Yarnold_Mr (Mr. Yarnold | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 1227] #Yates_Miss (Miss Yates | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1840. Acted under Miss Yates. Forenam); 1228] #Yates_Mrs (Mrs. Yates | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1835. Forename unknown. Likely the mo); 1229] #Young_CM (Charles Mayne Young | b. 1777-01-10 | d. 1856 | Actor who performed at Covent Garden and Drury Lane between 1807 and 1832. Acted); 1230] #Young_Ed (Edward Young | b. 1683-07-03 | d. 1765-04-05 | Clergyman and poet, author of Night-Thoughts, important promulgator of the late-); 1231] #Young_Mr (Mr. Young | Medical doctor from Reading. Dates unknown.); 1232] #Younge_Mr (Mr. Younge | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und); 1233] #Zouch_T (Thomas Zouch | b. 1737-09-12 | d. 1815-12-17 | Prebendary of Durham and scholar of Izaak Walton. Mitford read his Memoirs of th); 1234] #Admetus (Admetus | A king in Greek mythology, he wins the princess Alcestis by achieving the feat o); 1235] #Ahab (Ahab | Historic and legendary ancient King of Israel, married to Jezebel.); 1236] #Alcestis (Alcestis | A princess in Greek mythology known for her loyalty to her husband and for retur); 1237] #Amaziah (Amaziah of Judah | Historical and legendary ancient King of Judah, member of the House of David; th); 1238] #Apollo (Apollo | In Greek mythology, the son of Zeus and Leto; one of the twelve Olympians. He wa); 1239] #Baal (Baal | Levantine diety associated with Hadad, a storm and fertility god in ancient worl); 1240] #Bluebeard_fict (Bluebeard | Title character in French folktale of the same name. Story was best known in Mit); 1241] #Cassandra (Cassandra | Daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy, Cassandra was a prophet in anci); 1242] #Cupid (Cupid | Classical god of sexual desire and erotic love, known as Eros in ancient Greece ); 1243] #David_OT (David | Old Testament figure from the Christian Bible. Apocryphal king of a united kingd); 1244] #Deborah (Deborah | Hebrew leader, prophet, and judge, who predicted a woman would kill Sisera, the ); 1245] #Hassan_Bedreddin (Prince Bedreddin Hassan | A character in Arabian aTles (also known as One Thousand and One Nights) who app); 1246] #Hebe (Hebe | Greek mythological figure, the goodess of youth and the daughter of Zeus and Her); 1247] #Hercules (Hercules | Roman god, the son of Jupiter and the mortal Alceme. Known as Heracles in Greek ); 1248] #Jael (Jael | Jael fulfilled Deborah’s prophecy that a woman would kill Sisera, the Canaanite ); 1249] #Jezebel (Jezebel | Queen of the Israelites, married to King Ahab, who influenced him to worship mul); 1250] #John_Apostle (John the Apostle | b. 0006 | d. | Traditionally (and contestedly) the author of the Gospel of John, the fourth boo); 1251] #Jonah (Jonah | Prophet from the Hebrew Bible and Old Testament famous for surviving the experie); 1252] #Judas_NT (Judas | New Testament figure from the Christian Bible. One of the Jesus's twelve discipl); 1253] #Judith_OT (Judith | Apocryphal Old Testament figure from the Christian Bible. Famous for seducing th); 1254] #Judy (Judy | Wife of Mr. Punch in manifestations of the Punch and Judy slapstick puppet show ); 1255] #Lazarus (Lazarus | According to the Gospel of St. John the Evangelist, Jesus Christ raised or resur); 1256] #Master_Fuller (Master Fuller | Old Master Fuller is a figure found in Collectanea Curiosa, where he appears as ); 1257] #Nathan (Nathan | Apocryphal Old Testament prophet from the Christian Bible; he related his vision); 1258] #Niobe (Niobe | Greek mythological figure who boasted of her fourteen children, (called the Niob); 1259] #Peter_NT (Peter | New Testament figure from the Christian Bible. One of Jesus's twelve disciples o); 1260] #Prometheus_Aes_char (Prometheus | Prometheus, the title character in the tragedies attributed to Aeschylus such as); 1261] #Punch (Punch | The Punch and Judy slapstick puppet shows of England had their roots in the 16th); 1262] #Pygmalion (Pygmalion | Mitford generally refers to the version of the myth from Ovid’s Metamorphoses in); 1263] #Rapley_Jack_OV (Jack Rapley); 1264] #Rehoboam (Rehoboam); 1265] #Satan (Satan | In Judeo-Christian theology, the opponent of God and mankind. The word’s derivat); 1266] #Venus (Venus | Roman goddess of love and beauty; her counterpart in Greek mythology is Aphrodit); 1267] #Vesta (Vesta | Vesta is the Roman goddess of hearth and domesticity. The temple to Vesta was ke); 1268] #Abbe_de_L_Epee_DD (Abbé de L’Épée | character in Deaf and Dumb); 1269] #Abbot_J (Abbot | Unnamed Abbot Character in Julian.); 1270] #Admetus_char (Admetus | Character in Alcestis by Euripides.); 1271] #Alberti (Alberti | Alberti is a character in Rienzi; Captain of the Guard. Played by Mr. Thompson a); 1272] #Alfonso_J (Alfonso | Character of the king of Naples, disguised as Theodore, in Julian.); 1273] #Alice (Alice | Possibly a deleted character in Mitford's Charles I. Coles identifies the undate); 1274] #Ambassador_R (Ambassador | The character of the unnamed Ambassador in Rienzi.); 1275] #Annabel_J (Annabel | Wife of Julian, in Julian.); 1276] #Annaly_Lady_char (Annaly Lady | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond.); 1277] #Annaly_Miss_char (Annaly Miss | Daughter of Lady Annaly in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond.); 1278] #Antigone_A (Antigone | Title character in Antigone.); 1279] #ArchBishop_Jul (Archbishop | Character of an unnamed Archbishop in Julian.); 1280] #Ariel (Ariel | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest who serves Prospero under magical duress.); 1281] #Ascanius (Ascanius | Character from Virgil’s Aeneid.); 1282] #Aspatia (Aspatia | Character in The Maid’s Tale.); 1283] #Balfour_John (John Balfour | Character in Old Mortality.); 1284] #Bardolph_WS (Bardolph | Character in Shakespeare’s Henry V and Henry IV Part I, Henry IV Part II, and th); 1285] #Beatrice_MuchAdo (Beatrice | Niece of Leonato, character in Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing.); 1286] #Bellario (Bellario | Character in Philaster, also called Euphrasia.); 1287] #Bennet_Mrs_fict (Mrs. Bennet | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.); 1288] #Berta_R (Berta | Attendant to Claudia in Rienzi.); 1289] #Bertone_J (Bertone | Bertone, nicknamed Bert, is the character of a servant to Count D'Alba in Julian); 1290] #Betsy_ShopLodger_OV (Betsy | One of the two characters in Our Village who lodges with the shopkeepers, and te); 1291] #Blacksmith_OV (George | Character of a blacksmith introduced in the introductory sketch of Our Village. ); 1292] #BlacksmithsWife_OV (blacksmith's wife | Character introduced in the introductory sketch of Our Village . She and her hus); 1293] #Blondel_fict (Blondel | Fictional character loosely based on a 13th-century French trouvére or troubador); 1294] #Bradshaw (Lord President Bradshaw | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1295] #Bradwardine_Baron_WS (Baron of Bradwardine | Jacobite character in Walter Scott’s Waverley ; He lives at Tully-Veolan, and is); 1296] #Bramble_Matthew (Matthew Bramble | character in The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker by Smollett.); 1297] #BramMay_companion_OV; 1298] #BranghtonMiss_Evelina (Miss Branghton | Character in Evelina; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ); 1299] #Brent_Joel_OV (Joel Brent | Protagonist of A Village Beau, the Our Village story, where he courts Harriet. H); 1300] #BriggsMr_Cecilia (Mr. Briggs | Character in Fanny Burney’s Cecilia .); 1301] #Brulgruddery_D (Dennis Brulgruddery | A character in the George Colman the younger play, John Bull the Englishman’s Fi); 1302] #BustlingDame_OV (bustling dame | Character mentioned in the introductory sketch of Our Village . She is noted for); 1303] #Byron_Harriet (Harriet Byron | Character from Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison who is r); 1304] #Cafarello (Lord Cafarello | Lord Cafarello is a character in Rienzi; one of the members of the Colonna facti); 1305] #Caliban (Caliban | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest who chafes against his magically-enforced); 1306] #Calvi_J (Calvi | a Sicilian noble in Julian); 1307] #Camilla (Camilla Donato | daughter of Senator Donato in Mitford’s play Foscari); 1308] #Camilla_char (Camilla | Title character in Camilla; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of her in ); 1309] #Camillo_R (Camillo | Camillo is a character in Rienzi; Rienzi's servant. Played by Mr. C. Jones as pe); 1310] #Cantwell (Dr. Cantwell | Title character in Bickerstaff’s comedy The Hypocrite , an adaptation of Tartuff); 1311] #Carton_Sidney (Sidney Carton | Protagonist in A Tale of Two Cities; he is a young, alcoholic London junior barr); 1312] #Catherine_Ab (Catherine | Character in The Abbot.); 1313] #Celso_F (Celso | Character in Foscari; mentioned in the Cast List as a follower of Erizzo. played); 1314] #Centinel_Ch1 (Centinel | A character in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1315] #Chas1_MRM (Charles the First | King of England in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1316] #Chas_Grandison_fict (Sir Charles Grandison | Title character of Samuel Richardson’s novel The History of Sir Charles Grandiso); 1317] #Clarissa_fict (Clarissa | Title character of Samuel Richardson’s novel Clarissa. Became proverbial for an ); 1318] #Claudia_R (Claudia | daughter of Cola di Rienzi in Rienzi.); 1319] #Clementina_della_Poretta (Clementina della Poretta | A character from Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison, who r); 1320] #Clerk_OV (clerk | Character of the county clerk who performs the marriage ceremony between Hannah ); 1321] #Collins_Mr_fict (Mr. Collins | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.); 1322] #Colonna_Ang (Angelo Colonna | Character in Rienzi.); 1323] #Colonna_Lady (Lady Colonna | Wife of Stephen Colonna in Rienzi.); 1324] #Colonna_Stph (Stephen Colonna | Character in Rienzi. Father of Angelo Colonna); 1325] #Constance_KJ (Constance | Character in The Life and Death of King John.); 1326] #Cook1 (Cook | Cook Mitford hired in Reading for Bertram House on February 13, 1819. Works for ); 1327] #Cook2 (Cook | Cook Mitford hired Reading for Bertram House on March 14, 1820. She is employed ); 1328] #Cook3 (Cook | Cook Mitford hired Readingfor Bertram House, ahead of their move to Three Mile C); 1329] #Cook_Ch1 (Cook | Solicitor to the Commons in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1330] #Coriolanus_C (Coriolanus | Title character in Coriolanus); 1331] #Cosmo (Cosmo Donato | son of Senator Donato in Foscari); 1332] #Cromwell_MRM (Oliver Cromwell | Cromwell’s character in King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1333] #Curate_OV (Mr. B. | The character of the curate is introduced in the first sketch of Our Village . H); 1334] #Cypress_Mr (Mr. Cypress | Character in Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey. Identified by Mitford and others as a sa); 1335] #DAlba (Count D’Alba | a powerful Nobleman in Julian.); 1336] #Dandie_Dinmont (Dandie Dinmont | Character in Guy Mannering.); 1337] #Darcy_fict (Fitzwilliam Darcy | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.); 1338] #Dauphin_WS (The Dauphin | The character of the Dauphin is the son of the King of France in Shakespeare’s H); 1339] #Deans_Jeanie_WS (Jeanie Deans | character in The Heart of Midlothian by Walter Scott , heroine and sister of Eff); 1340] #Denison_Jenny_WS (Jenny Denison | Character in Old Mortality by Walter Scott . Edith Bellenden’s maid.); 1341] #Desdemona_O (Desdemona | character in Othello); 1342] #Dido_Aeneid (Dido | Character from Virgil’s Aeneid; Aeneas’s wife.); 1343] #Dirk_Hatteraick (Dirk Hatteraick | character in Guy Mannering.); 1344] #Dogberry_MA (Dogberry | character in Much Ado About Nothing); 1345] #Doge_F (Doge Foscari | character in Mitford’s play Foscari See also historical counterpart: Doge Foscar); 1346] #Don_Quixote_char (Don Quixote | Title character in Don Quixote); 1347] #Donato (Donato Senator | character in Foscari); 1348] #Dousterwivel_WS (Dousterwivel | Character in The Antiquary); 1349] #Downes (Downes | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1350] #DubsterMr_Camilla (Camilla | Character in Camilla; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ); 1351] #DukeSr_AYLI (Duke Senior | In As You Like It, the character of Duke Senior, the older brother of the usurpi); 1352] #Dulcinea_DQ (Dulcinea del Toboso | Name of idealized female character in Don Quixote (who is mentioned in the text ); 1353] #Edie_Ochiltree (Edie Ochiltree | character in The Antiquary.); 1354] #Ellis_Robert_OV (Robert Ellis | Character mentioned in the Our Village, volume 1 sketch Hannah as a poor competi); 1355] #Elspeth (Elspeth | Steenie’s grandmother in Walter Scott’s The Antiquary .); 1356] #Erizzo (Erizzo | Count Erizzo, character in Mitford’s play Foscari); 1357] #Evans_John_OV (John Evans | One of the villagers mentioned in the introductory sketch of Our Village . He is); 1358] #Evans_JohnWife_OV (Mrs. Evans | Deceased wife of the Our Village sketch character John Evans. Forename not given); 1359] #Fairfax (Lord Fairfax | General of the Parliamentary Army in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1360] #Falstaff_WS (Falstaff | Character in Shakespeare’s Henry IV, part one, Henry IV, part two, and Merry Wiv); 1361] #Ferdinand (Ferdinand | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest who is shipwrecked on Prospero's Island, ); 1362] #Fiesco_fict (Fiesco | Title character of Mitford’s tragedy Fiesco.); 1363] #Flosky (Ferdinando Flosky | Character in Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey. Identified by Mitford and others as a sa); 1364] #Foscari_Fr (Foscari Francesco | character in Foscari); 1365] #Frances_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Frances | Character in the Our Village sketch Modern Antiques. She and her sister Theodosi); 1366] #Frangipani (Frangipani | Character in Rienzi, a partisan of Ursini, also a nobleman. Played by Mr. Bland ); 1367] #Friday (Friday | Character who becomes Robinson Crusoe's friend and companion in Daniel Defoe's T); 1368] #frost_bitten_gent_OV (frost-bitten gentleman); 1369] #Glenalvon (Glenalvon | Secondary character in Douglas.); 1370] #Gloucester (Duke of Gloucester | Son of King Charles I, a boy of seven years old in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1371] #Goodwin_Col (Colonel Goodwin | Roundhead character in The Roundhead's Daughter; father of the title character.); 1372] #Goodwin_Mabel (Mabel Goodwin | Title character in The Roundhead's Daughter.); 1373] #Great_Farmhouse_farmer_OV ( | Unnamed farmer, who lives with his wife at M. farmhouse and raises greyhounds, f); 1374] #Grisildi (Grisildi | Character in The Clerk's Tale from Canterbury Tales, also called Griselda or Pat); 1375] #Grizzle_Lord (Lord Grizzle | Character in the pantomime Tom Thumb. John Liston played Lord Grizzle in a Hayma); 1376] #Grizzy_Marriage (Miss Grizzy | Character in Marriage. Mitford’s favorite character from the novel; she admires ); 1377] #Gulliver (Lemuel Gulliver | Titular character in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels.); 1378] #Hacker_Ch1 (Hacker | Colonel of the Guard in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1379] #Hamlet_H (Hamlet | character in Hamlet); 1380] #Hammond_Ch1 (Hammond | Governor of the Isle of Wight in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1381] #Harriet_ShopLodger_OV (Harriet | One of the two characters introduced in Our Village who lodges with the shopkeep); 1382] #Harrison (Harrison | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1383] #Helen_H (Helen | character in Helen); 1384] #Helen_pet_OV (Helen | Favorite greyhound of the farmer, who lives with his wife at M. farmhouse, featu); 1385] #Hengo_B (Hengo | character in Bonduca); 1386] #Henry_Ab (Henry | Character in Walter Scott’s novel The Abbot.); 1387] #Herbert_Ch1 (Sir Thomas Herbert | A Gentleman attending on the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1388] #Hermione_WT (Hermione | character in The Winter’s Tale); 1389] #HughSir_Camilla (Camilla | Character in Camilla; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ); 1390] #Iago_O (Iago | Character in Othello.); 1391] #Imogen_C (Imogen | character in Cymbeline); 1392] #Ireton (Ireton | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1393] #Isabella_Dante (Isabella | Character from Dante’s Inferno.); 1394] #Isabella_Meas4Meas (Isabella | Sister of Claudio, character in Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure .); 1395] #Jack_Rover (Jack Rover | A character from the play Wild Oats.); 1396] #Jacky_Marriage (Miss Jacky | Character in Marriage; Mitford admires Ferrier’s characterization of her.); 1397] #Jailer_F (Jailer | character in Foscari); 1398] #Jem_Eusden (James (Jem) Eusden Eusden James Jem | Character described in the Our Villagesketch, The Hard Summer . He is one of the); 1399] #Jervois_Emily (Emily Jervois | Character in Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison. She is th); 1400] #Julian (Julian | Melfi’s son in Julian); 1401] #Justice_Lord (The Lord Chief Justice | Most powerful official of the law in England. Character in Shakespeare’s Henry I); 1402] #Katharine_H8 (Katharine | character in Henry VIII); 1403] #King_Corny (Corny | King Corny was the king of Ireland in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1817)); 1404] #King_Philip_WS (King Philip | King Philip is the King of France in Shakespeare’s King John); 1405] #LadyFairfax (Lady Fairfax | Married to Lord Fairfax in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1406] #LadySingleton_fict (Lady Singleton | A character in Lady Morgan’s novel The O’Donnel’s.); 1407] #Lambourne_Kenil (Michael Lambourne | Character in Walter Scott’s novel Kenilworth. Nephew of innkeeper Giles Gosling.); 1408] #Laura_F (Laura | Senator Donato’s niece in Foscari, as mentioned in Cast List); 1409] #Leanti_J (Leanti | a Sicilian noble in Julian); 1410] #Leon (Leon | Character in Rule a Wife and Have a Wife by Beaumont and Fletcher); 1411] #Leontes_WT (Leontes | character in The Winter’s Tale); 1412] #Lieutenant_OV (Lieutenant | Character mentioned in the introductory sketch of Our Village . He also appears ); 1413] #Lizzy_fict (Elizabeth Bennet | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.); 1414] #Lizzy_OV (Lizzy Brent | The three-year-old girl who often accompanies the narrator of Our Village on her); 1415] #LizzysFather_OV (Mr. Brent | Father of the character of LizzyLizzy, the three-year old girl who accompanies t); 1416] #LizzysMother_OV (Mrs. Brent | Mother of the character of Lizzy, the three-year old girl who accompanies the na); 1417] #Lucy_OV_fict (Lucy | Title character of the Our Village story. Lucy is a servant in the narrator's ho); 1418] #Macbeth (Macbeth | Title character in Macbeth.); 1419] #Macbeth_Lady (Lady Macbeth | Character in Macbeth); 1420] #Maclaughlan_Marriage (Lady MacLaughlan | Character in Marriage; Mitford admires Ferrier’s characterization of her.); 1421] #Maggs_Sally_DP (Sally Maggs | Character in Deaf as a Post); 1422] #Maimoune (Maimoune | Character from Arabian Tales.); 1423] #MandlebertE_char (Mr. Edgar Mandlebert | Character in Camilla; Mitford says of this character that the very name is as st); 1424] #Maritornes_DQ (Maritornes | Character in Don Quixote. Servant at the inn who makes an appointment with Don Q); 1425] #Marten (Marten | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1426] #Mary_Marriage (Mary | Heroine of Marriage. Mitford does not admire Ferrier’s depiction of her heroine,); 1427] #Marygold_pet_OV (Marygold | Fictional pet dog in Tom Cordery.); 1428] #Mason_OV (Mr. Strong | Character introduced in the first sketch of Our Village . He is said to be parti); 1429] #MasonsWife_OV (Mrs. Strong | Wife of the mason in Our Village. She is said to be tall, contrasting his shortn); 1430] #Master_Peter_DQ (Master Peter | Master Peter is the puppetmaster in Don Quixote; his puppets are destroyed in th); 1431] #May-flower_OV (May-flower | Greyhound dog who is featured as the narrator's companion in many Our Villageske); 1432] #MCrule_Mrs (Mrs. M’Crule | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1817)); 1433] #Meg_Merrilies (Meg Merrilies | character in Guy Mannering.); 1434] #Melfi (The Duke of Melfi | Uncle to Alfonso and Regent of the Kingdom of Naples in Julian); 1435] #Miranda (Miranda | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest. She is the daughter of Prospero and is i); 1436] #Miss_Crawley_fict (Miss Crawley | A character in Lady Morgan’s novel Florence Macarthy.); 1437] #ModAntiques_ServingMaid_OV (elderly beau's maid | One of the servant characters in Modern Antiques from Our Village. Proper name n); 1438] #ModAntiquesBeau_OV (elderly beau | Unnamed character in the Our Village sketch, Modern Antiques, who is rumored to ); 1439] #ModAntiquesBrother_OV (elderly beau's brother | Character in Modern Antiques in Our Village. He is the younger brother of elderl); 1440] #Montgomery_J (James Montgomery | b. 1771-11-04 | d. 1854-04-30 | Editor of the Sheffield Iris and friend of Barbara Hofland. Political reformer a); 1441] #Montresor_Phil (Sir Philip Montresor | Royalist character in The Roundhead's Daughter.); 1442] #Morris_DrP (Dr. Peter Morris | Protagonist in John Gibson Lockhart’s 1819 novel, Peter’s Letters to his Kinfolk); 1443] #Mosse_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Elizabeth (Mossy) Mosse | Title character of the Our Village sketch, Mrs. Mosse. Nicknamed Mossy. She is a); 1444] #Mr_Dexter_fict (Mr. Dexter | A character in Lady Morgan’s novel The O’Donnel’s.); 1445] #Mrs_MCrule (Mrs. MCrule | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1812)); 1446] #Nerissa_MerchVenice (Nerissa | Portia’s maid, character in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice. Nerissa disguises ); 1447] #Nicholson_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Nicholson | Character in Our Village, volume 5, Early Recollections: A Widow Gentlewoman. Ac); 1448] #Nicky_Marriage (Miss Nicky | Character in Marriage; Mitford admires Ferrier’s characterization of her.); 1449] #North_Christopher (Christopher North | Pseudonym for John Wilson in Blackwood’s Magazine.); 1450] #Nuncio (Nuncio | Character in Rienzi. Known by his title; no proper name given.); 1451] #Nym_WS (Corporal Nym | Character in Shakespeare’s Henry V and Merry Wives of Windsor.); 1452] #Odysseus (Odysseus | Hero of Homer's The Odyssey, whose twenty-year journey to return home from the T); 1453] #OFaley_Miss_char (Miss O’Faley | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1817)); 1454] #Officer_OV (officer | Character introduced in Our Village. He lives with his family in a small detache); 1455] #OfficersEldestSon_OV (officer's son | Character introduced in Our Village as admiring Lizzy. Proper name not given.); 1456] #Oldbuck_Jonathan (John Oldbuck | character in The Antiquary.); 1457] #OLeary_FM (Terence Oge O’Leary | Character of an Irish hedge schoolmaster in Lady Morgan's novel Florence Macarth); 1458] #Olivia_F (Olivia | One of the Ladies in Foscari); 1459] #Orestes_Aes_char (Orestes | Orestes, title character in the play Choephoræ or the Libation Bearers, attribut); 1460] #Orestes_Eur_char (Orestes | Orestes, title character in the play Orestes attributed to Euripides.); 1461] #Orlando_AsYouLikeIt_char (Orlando de Boys | Orlando de Boys who falls in love with Rosalind in Shakespeare’s As You Like It.); 1462] #Ormond_H (Harry Ormond | Protagonist of Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1812).); 1463] #Ossian (Ossian | The narrator and purported author of a cycle of epic poems published by James Ma); 1464] #Othello_O (Othello | character in Othello); 1465] #OVNarrator (Our Village narrator | The narrator of all the Our Village stories. Though unnamed throughout the serie); 1466] #OVNarratorsFather (Our Village narrator's father | The character of the father of the narrator of the Our Village stories. In some ); 1467] #OVNarratorsMother (Our Village narrator's mother | The character of the mother of the narrator of the Our Village stories. In some ); 1468] #Paolo_J (Paolo | Paolo is the character of Julian's servant in Julian. Surname not given. Played ); 1469] #Paolo_R (Paolo | Paolo, the character in Rienzi.); 1470] #Penelope (Penelope | In The Odyssey, Penelope is the spouse of Odysseus who awaited his return and fe); 1471] #Penruddock_WF (Penruddock | character in Wheel of Fortune.); 1472] #Phaeton_Ovid (Phaeton | Character in Metamorphoses, book two. Phaeton attempts to drive his father the S); 1473] #Phoebe_OV (Phoebe | Character introduced in Our Village as the daughter of the Rose Inn landlord. Sh); 1474] #Pickle_P (Pickle Peregrine | Protagonist of Tobias Smollett’s The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, In Which ar); 1475] #Pierce_G (Pierce | Character of a jester who serves the King in Gaston de Blondeville.); 1476] #Pisani_F (Count Pisani | Character of Count Pisani in Foscari.); 1477] #Pleydell (Pleydell | character in Guy Mannering.); 1478] #Polonius (Polonius | Chief counselor of the king; character in Shakespeare’s Hamlet.); 1479] #Pride_Ch1 (Pride | The character of an Officer in the Parliamentary Army in Mitford's play, Charles); 1480] #PrinceEdward1767 (Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn | b. 1767-11-02 | d. 1820-01-23 | 4th son of King George III, his daughter became Queen Victoria, following the 18); 1481] #PrincessE_Ch1 (Elizabeth Stuart | b. 1635-12-28 | d. 1650-09-08 | The second daughter of Charles I and Queen Henrietta Maria. She was imprisoned d); 1482] #Prospero (Prospero | Main character from Shakespeare's The Tempest who, upon being shipwrecked on an ); 1483] #Queen_Ch1 (Queen Henrietta Maria | Queen of England in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1484] #Queen_Dollalolla (Queen Dollalolla | Comic role in Henry Fielding’s play Tom Thumb, adapted in Mitford’s day by Kane ); 1485] #Queen_Hamlet (Gertrude, Queen of Denmark | character in Hamlet); 1486] #Rachel_Aunt (Aunt Rachel | Character in Glenfergus by Mudie.); 1487] #Rebecca_Ivanhoe (Rebecca | character in Ivanhoe.); 1488] #RecruitingSerjeant_OV (Recruiting Serjeant | Character mentioned in Our Village who is courting Phoebe. In A Parting Glance a); 1489] #Renzi_J (Renzi | Character of an old Huntsman in Julian); 1490] #RetiredPublican_OV (Mr. H. | A particularly patriotic character introduced in Our Village. He is based on a n); 1491] #RetiredPublicansWife_OV (Mrs. H. | The wife of the character of the retired publican from the introductory sketch o); 1492] #RichardIII_WS (Richard III | Title character from Shakespeare's The Life and Death of Richard III, loosely ba); 1493] #Richelieu_EBL (Richelieu | Title character from Edward Bulwer-Lytton Richelieu, loosely based on the histor); 1494] #Rienzi_Cola (Cola di Rienzi | character in Rienzi.); 1495] #Robin_Goodfellow (Robin Goodfellow | Mischievous fairy or sprite from folklore. In Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's ); 1496] #Robinson_Crusoe (Robinson Crusoe | Titular character of Daniel Defoe's famous novel about a man shipwrecked near Tr); 1497] #Rolla_P (Rolla | character in Pizarro); 1498] #Rosa_R (Rosa | Attendant to Claudia in Rienzi); 1499] #RoseInnLandlord_OV (Rose Inn landlord | Character introduced in Our Village, the introductory sketch of the Our Village ); 1500] #RoseInnLandlordsSon_OV (Rose Inn landlord's son | This character is introduced in Our Village. He is the brother of Phoebe. Proper); 1501] #RoseInnLandlordsWife_OV (Rose Inn landlord's wife | This character is introduced in Our Village. She has a son, and a daughter named); 1502] #Rowena_WS (Rowena | Character in Ivanhoe); 1503] #Salisbury (Lord Salisbury | A Commissioner appointed by Parliament to treat with the King in Mitford's play,); 1504] #Sancho_Panza (Sancho Panza | Squire character, a former farmer enlisted by Don Quixote in his service, from D); 1505] #Sardanapalus_By (Sardanapalus | Title character from Byron's tragedy Sardanapalus, about a doomed Assyrian tyran); 1506] #Savelli (Lord Savelli | Lord Savelli is a character in Rienzi; one of the members of the Colonna faction); 1507] #Say (Lord Say | The character of a Commissioner appointed by Parliament to treat with the King i); 1508] #Sebastian_TN (Sebastian | Character in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.); 1509] #Selby_Lucy (Lucy Selby | A character in Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison.); 1510] #Selby_Nancy (Nancy Selby | A character Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison.); 1511] #Serjeant_Kite (Serjeant Kite | Character from George Farquhar's play The Recruiting Officer. Forename not given); 1512] #servant_Ch1 (Servant of Cromwell | The character of the servant belonging to Cromwell in Mitford's play, Charles I.); 1513] #Sforza (Sforza | Character of Sforza in Foscari. See also the character's historical counterpart:); 1514] #shivering_lady_OV (shivering lady | A character whom the narrator encounters in the Our Village story Frost and Thaw); 1515] #Shoemaker_OV (shoemaker | Character described in Our Village as a sober, industrious man. Proper name not ); 1516] #ShoemakersDaughter_OV (shoemaker's daughter | Character described in Our Village. She goes from the age of fourteen to sixteen); 1517] #ShoemakersWife_OV (shoemaker's wife | Character introduced in Our Village. Proper name not given.); 1518] #Shopkeeper_OV (shopkeeper | Character mentioned in Our Village. Proper name not given.); 1519] #ShopkeepersWife (shopkeeper's wife | Character mentioned in Our Village. Proper name not given.); 1520] #Smith_theHatter_OV (Mr. Smith | Character in the Our Village, volume 1 story Hannah. He is the father of the sui); 1521] #Smith_William_OV (William Smith | Character of the suitor of Hannah in the Our Village story of that name.); 1522] #SmithMr_Evelina (Mr. Smith | Character in Evelina; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ); 1523] #Sophy_PPchar (Sophy | Character in Tobias Smollett’s The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle (1751)); 1524] #Strong_John_OV (John Strong | Son of the Our Village character the mason and the mason's wife. He appears as a); 1525] #Teresa_R (Teresa | Attendant to Claudia in Rienzi); 1526] #Theodosia_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Theodosia | One of the two sister characters in the Our Village story Modern Antiques. Theod); 1527] #Tichburne (Tichburn | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.); 1528] #Trueman_T (Timothy Trueman | Pseudonym used by Mr. Johnson. Author of A Letter to the Independent Electors of); 1529] #Tubb_Dr_OV (Dr. Tubb | Title character of the doctor in the Our Village, volume two sketch. Francis Nee); 1530] #Ugolino (Count Ugolino | Character from Dante’s Inferno. Guilty of treason.); 1531] #Ulric_O (Ulric | character in Otto of Wittelsbach); 1532] #Ursini (Ursini | Leader of the Ursini family in Mitford’s Rienzi.); 1533] #Valore_J (Valore | a Sicilian noble in Julian); 1534] #Vane (Sir Harry Vane | A Commissioner appointed by Parliament to treat with the King in Mitford’s play,); 1535] #Varney_Kenil (Richard Varney | Character in Walter Scott’s novel Kenilworth. Squire to the Earl of Leicester.); 1536] #Vicar_OV (vicar | Character of the vicar from Our Village, volume 1, who, in the sketch A Parting ); 1537] #Viola_TN (Viola | Character in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.); 1538] #Viper_pet_OV (Viper | Mr. Sidney's pet terrier in An Old Bachelor.); 1539] #Volumnia_C (Volumnia | character in Coriolanus); 1540] #Wealthy_Renovator_OV (wealthy renovator | Character introduced in Our Village as an wealthy man who continually refurbishe); 1541] #Western_Sophia_TJchar (Western Sophia | Squire Western’s daughter, model of virtue, beauty, and all good qualities. Char); 1542] #Wheeler_OV (wheeler | Character introduced in Our Village as a very civil and courteous man. The curat); 1543] #WheelersWife_OV (wheeler's wife | Character introduced in Our Village. With her husband, she lodges the curate at ); 1544] #White_Spirit_WS (the White Spirit | The White Spirit is a supernatural guardian spirit character in Walter Scott’s T); 1545] #Willis_David_OV (David Willis | One of the cricket players featured in A Country Cricket Match. In his Mitford P); 1546] #Wilson_Dame_OV (Dame Wilson | A character in the Our Village sketch Hannah. She is the mother of Hannah and th); 1547] #Wilson_Hannah_OV (Hannah Wilson Smith | Title character of the Our Village story Hannah. She is wooed by the secretly we); 1548] #Wilson_John_OV (John Wilson | Character in the Our Village story Hannah. He is the deceased father of the titl); 1549] #Wilson_Susan_OV (Susan Wilson | Younger sister of the character Hannah, the title character of the Our Village s); 1550] #WmTell_SK (William Tell | Title character from Knowles's play William Tell, loosely based on the pseudohis); 1551] #Wolsey_H8 (Wolsey | character in Henry VIII); 1552] #Zeno_F (Count Zeno | Count Zeno in Foscari) #ab (Booth Alison Advisory Board | Brown-Forman Professor of English and Faculty Director of the Digital Humanities) #ad (Drayton Alexandra Ph.D. Consultant | One of the Digital Mitford project’s founding editors, Alexandra Drayton earned ) #adi (Dia Aliou Research Assistant | Ali Dia graduates in 2025 with a B.A. in Communication from the State University) #ahm (Algee-Hewitt Mark Consultant: Data Visualization Group Advisory Board) #ajc (Colombo Amy Consultant) #ajn (Normington Alyssa Research Assistant | Alyssa Normington graduates in 2025 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the S) #alg (Gates Amy L. Ph.D. Editor | Amy L. Gates is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English and Philosop) #aol (Longmuir Anne Editor | Anne Longmuir is Professor of English at Kansas State University. Anne specializ) #cjb (Bolton Carol Advisory Board) #cmp (Parisian Catherine M. Consultant | Catherine M. Parisian is a book historian and bibliographer whose research has f) #csc (Cox Catherine S. Consultant | Catherine S. Cox teaches at the University of Pittsburgh’s Johnstown campus, off) #daver (Robinson David Consultant) #djb (Birnbaum David J. Consultant: Data Visualization Group Advisory Board) #ds (Schierenbeck Daniel Consultant | Daniel Schierenbeck has published essays on Romantic authors including Jane Aust) #dsa (Saglia Diego Advisory Board) #du (Ulin Don Consultant | Don Ulin attended the Digital Mitford Coding School in May 2019 and contributed ) #ebb (Beshero-Bondar Elisa Principal Investigator and Technical Coordinator Founding Editor Poetry | Elisa Beshero-Bondar organized the Digital Mitford project in the spring of 2013) #efp (Parsons Elaine Frantz Consultant) #err (Raisanen Elizabeth Ph.D. Drama Founding Editor | Elizabeth Raisanen is the Assistant Dean of Advising & Strategic Partnerships an) #ghb (Bondar Gregory Manuscript Archaeology Founding Editor | Greg Bondar has photographed over 800 of Mitford’s letters in the Reading Centra) #had (Denis Hayley Research Assistant | Hayley Denis graduates in 2025 with a B.A. in Creative Writing and a minor in Fi) #ham (Hammer Nathan Louis Research Assistant | Nathan Hammer is a student at Penn State Behrend. Started working on Mitford’s J) #hjb (Bills Hadleigh Jae Research Assistant | Hadleigh Jae Bills is a student at Penn State Behrend. Started working on Mitfor) #jb (Bawden John Ph.D Associate Professor of History Consultant | John Bawden is Associate Professor of History at the University of Montevallo. H) #jjr (Rovira James Ph.D. Editor | James Rovira is founder of the Anazoa Educational Project and Bright Futures Edu) #jmh (Horanic Jonathan Michael Consultant | Jonathan M. Horanic completed a bachelor’s degree with double majors in English ) #kab (Bourrier Karen Consultant | Karen Bourrier is a professor at the University of Calgary. She is working on a ) #kdc (Donovan-Condron Kellie Ph.D. Founding Editor Advisory Board | Kellie Donovan-Condron writes primarily about the intersection of urban literatu) #lmw (Wilson Lisa M. Managing Editor Bibliography and Correspondence Founding Editor | Lisa M. Wilson is Professor in the Department of English at SUNY Potsdam, where ) #mah (Hughes Megan Abigail Consultant | Megan Hughes was Elisa Beshero-Bondar’s Green Scholar (or research assistant) be) #mc (Creech Melinda Consultant | Independent scholar with PhD in English and MA in Museum Studies at Baylor Unive) #mez (Zimmer Mary Erica Consultant: Data Visualization Group | Mary Erica Zimmer is Lecturer in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Conco) #mms (Spaulding Meghan Research Assistant | Meghan Spaulding graduates in 2025 with a B.S. in Childhood Education/Early Chil) #mns (Smith Martha Nell Advisory Board | The founding Director of the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities) #msm (Murray M. Stephanie Consultant) #naj (Joukovsky Nicholas Advisory Board) #pmd (Duck Patricia M. Advisory Board) #qar (Reed Quinton A. Consultant | Quinton Reed is an alumnus of the University of Montevallo, where he attended fr) #rjp (Parker Rebecca Jeanne Editor | Rebecca Parker completed an M.A. in Digital Humanities at Loyola University in C) #scw (Webb Samantha Ph.D Professor Emeritus of English Founding Editor Fiction | Samantha Webb is Professor Emritus of English, specializing in British Romantic ) #slc (Cantwell Sara Active Consultant | Sara Cantwell received her M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Vermont College o) #srr (Ricks Savannah R. Research Assistant | Savannah Ricks is a coding research assistant who started in October 2022 workin) #st (Triplette Stacey Ph.D. Consultant | Earned her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. She studies the li) #tel (Lombardi Thomas Consultant: Data Visualization Group) #TSA (Akam Tyler S. Research Assistant | Tyler Akam is a student filmmmaker and coding research assistant who started in ) #amp (Peddicord Amber M. Research Assistant | Amber Peddicord sorted image files and encoded different editions of Mitford's l) #bas (Stewart Brooke Ann Consultant | Brooke A. Stewart transcribed, researched, encoded, and proofed the Mitford lett) #ctm (McCabe Cailey Active Consultant | Cailey McCabe has assisted the editing team through completing and checking lett) #drl (Lint Dorothea Editor | Dorothea Lint joined the Digital Mitford project in 2018 as a Green Scholar rese) #esh (Hood Eric Ph.D. Founding Editor | Eric Hood is an Assistant Professor at Michigan State University and holds a PhD) #fbur (Burwick Frederick Advisory Board | b. 1936-03-17 | d. 2022-03-16 | Besides benefiting from his tireless research on 18th- and 19th-century drama an) #mco (O’Donnell Molly C. Editor | Molly O’Donnell was the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, President’s Foundation ) #mjk (Klamer Melissa Editor | Melissa Klamer earned a Ph.D. in English at Michigan State University, and serve) #rnes (Nesvet Rebecca Ph.D. Founding Editor | Rebecca Nesvet’s other digital humanities projects include the general editorshi) #abp (Parker Ashante Research Assistant | Ashante Parker graduated in December 2015 with a B.A., majoring in both in Liter) #adp (Phoenix Anaya Research Assistant | Anaya Phoenix graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the State) #alw (Aymee Lynn Woody Woody Aymee Lynn Research Assistant | Aymee Lynn Woody received her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Monte) #apc (Calderwood Austin Research Assistant | Austin Calderwood was enrolled in the M.A. in English and Communication from SUN) #avg (Annie Gill Gill Annie Research Assistant | Annie Gill was a Theatre major and English minor at the University of Montevallo) #avm (McConlogue Allison Research Assistant | Allison McConlogue graduated in 2018 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing and in 20) #bal (Laird Brytney Research Assistant | Brytney Laird graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing and Psychology) #cay (Collins Younes Courtney Research Assistant | Courtney Younes Collins graduated in 2017 with a B.A. in English Literature from) #cfc (Carey Collin Research Assistant | Collin Carey graduated in 2023 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the State ) #cmm (Murray Chelsie Research Assistant | Chelsie Murray received her B.A. in Psychology and her M.A. in English & Communi) #cvk (LaSalle Corie Research Assistant | Corie LaSalle was enrolled in the M.A. in English and Communication from SUNY Po) #cyh (Huang Chi-Ya Research Assistant | In 2014, Chi-Ya Huang was studying undergraduate psychology in UCLA. She also wo) #dms (Shembesh Danya Research Assistant | Danya Shembesh graduated in 2022 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Stat) #ejb (Beckman Ella Research Assistant | Ella Beckman was an undergraduate at UCLA in 2014, double majoring in Political ) #ga (Amos Gracia Research Assistant | In 2014, Gracia Amos was a fourth year undergraduate at UCLA, wprlomg a degree i) #hbl (Lown Hailey Research Assistant | In 2014, Hailey Lown was a third year transfer student at UCLA. She is originall) #hl (Long Heather Research Assistant | Heather Long completed a B.A. in English and was enrolled in the M.S.T. program ) #hmk (Kellogg Hannah Research Assistant | Hannah Kellogg graduates in 2025 with a B.S. in Biology from LeMoyne College. Sh) #hsar (Sarsfield Heather Research Assistant | Heather Sarsfield received her B.A. in English Literature from the State Univers) #jap (Price Jordan Research Assistant | Jordan Price earned his Bachelor’s degree in English at the University of Montev) #jbb (Burwell Jaime Breanna Research Assistant | Jaime Burwell received her B.A. in English Literature from the State University ) #jbl (Langer Jessica Research Assistant | Jessica Langer graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the Stat) #jcm (Mostales Joshua Research Assistant | Joshua Mostales was an undergraduate student in the Robert D. Clark Honors Colle) #jgf (Fish Julie Research Assistant | Julie Fish graduated in 2017 with a B.A. in English Literature from the State Un) #kkl (Lampart Kemton Research Assistant | Kemton Lampart graduated in 2022 with a B.S. in Business Administration from the) #knm (Murphy Kristen Research Assistant | Kristen Murphy completed an M.A. in English and Communication from SUNY Potsdam.) #kyh (Hastings Kyanna Research Assistant | Kyanna Hastings graduated in 2023 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Sta) #led (Dingman Lindsay Research Assistant | Lindsay Dingman graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the Sta) #lrs (Spillar Lindsey R. Research Assistant | Lindsey Spillar was enrolled in the Robert D. Clark Honors College at the Univer) #mbn (Nardoci Matthew Blake Research Assistant | Matt Nardoci was enrolled in the biochemistry major at the University of Oregon ) #md (Das May Research Assistant | May Das graduated in 2019 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the State Unive) #mgp (Peterson Martha Research Assistant | Martha Peterson graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in English: Literature from the St) #mq (Kohli Mehaque Research Assistant | In 2014, Mehaque Kohli was a fourth year International Development Studies major) #ms (Scott Madelyn N. Research Assistant | Madelyn N. Scott plans to graduate in 2020 with a B.S. in Chemistry from the Rob) #msp (Paine Margo Research Assistant | Margo Paine graduatedMay 2015 from the State University of New York at Potsdam w) #ncl (LoRusso Natalie Claire Research Assistant | Natalie LoRusso graduated in May 2015 with a B.A. in English Literature from the) #nlh (Hebert Nathaniel Research Assistant | Nathan Hebert graduated in December 2015 with a B.A., majoring in both in Litera) #ntcy (Young Nate Research Assistant | Nate Young graduated in 2022 with a B.F.A. in Creative Writing from the State Un) #oa (Allard Olivia Research Assistant | In 2015, Olivia Allard was enrolled in the B.A. in Communication and minor in Wo) #ps (Sasu Perdita Research Assistant | Perdita Sasu graduated in 2016 with a B.A. in Communication from the State Unive) #rct (Tang Rebecca Research Assistant | In 2014, Rebecca Tang was a fourth-year student at UCLA, majoring in English wit) #sbb (Sylvan Baker Baker Sylvan Research Assistant | Sylvan Baker graduated with a B.A. in English from the University of Montevallo ) #SCR (Susannah Ritchey Ritchey Susannah Research Assistant | Originally from Maylene, Alabama, Susannah Ritchey earned her Bachelor’s degree ) #sg (Gemelas Sophia Research Assistant | In 2017, Sophia Gemelas was an undergraduate student in the Robert D. Clark Hono) #sm (Morelli Sophia Research Assistant | Sophie Morelli graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the Stat) #SMG (Garrett Shekneko Research Assistant | Shekneko Garrett was enrolled in the Master’s degree in Secondary Education in E) #SMP (Sara Perry Perry Sara Research Assistant | In 2017, Sara Perry was an English major and Game Studies and Design minor at th) #ssc (Courtney Shawntel Research Assistant | Shawntel Courtney graduated in 2018 with a B.A. in English: Writing and a minor ) #TEAC (Cameron Tyler E. A. Research Assistant | Tyler Cameron assisted in Fall 2022 with Mitford’s Journal of 1819-1823 on trans) #tfb (Beck Temani Research Assistant | In 2017, Temani Beck was enrolled in the Master’s degree in Education at the Uni) #tlh (Harnish Tracy Lynn Research Assistant | Tracy Harnish received her B.F.A. in Creative Writing and her M.A. in English an) #tnh (Hays Toni Research Assistant | In 2014, Toni Hays was a student at UCLA, majoring in English Literature with a ) #wnb (Barr William Research Assistant | William Barr graduated in 2016 with a B.A. in English Literature, History, and S) #ws (Sainbert Wilmina Research Assistant | Wilmina Sainbert graduated in 2016 with a B.A. in Literature/Writing from the St) #xjw (Xiong Robin Research Assistant | Robin Xiong is Xiong Junwen from China. In 2014, she was an undergraduate studen) #ztd (Deroche Zakiya Research Assistant | Zakiya Deroche graduated in 2019 with a B.A. in Communication and a minor in Bus) #coles (William Allan Coles | Wrote his PhD Dissertation to the Dept. of English at Harvard University of Augu) #Harness_Wm (Rev. William Harness | b. 1790-03-14 | d. 1869-11-11 | A lifelong friend of Mary Russell Mitford who knew her from their childhood in t) #Lestrange (A. G. K. L’Estrange | b. 1832 | d. 1915 | L’Estrange was a curate working for William Harness, and assisted him with the f) #Needham_Francis (Francis Needham | Francis R. Needham was librarian and secretary to the Duke Wellington, while bas) #penAnnot_RCL (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, who occasionally left notes in a spidery) #pencil (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford who left grey pencil marks on her letters) #pencil_Yale (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, perhaps cataloging letters and describin) #pencilRy (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, perhaps cataloging letters and describin) #rc (unknown | Someone, apparently other than Mitford, perhaps cataloging letters and describin) #Roberts_Wm (William J. Roberts | Early twentieth-century Mitford biographer and author of Mary Russell Mitford: T) #Watson_Vera (Vera Watson | Early Mitford critic and author of the biography Mary Russell Mitford) #Abbott_Wm (William Abbott | b. 1790-06-12 | d. 1843-06-01 | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays, Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823 a) #Acerbi_J (Joseph Acerbi | b. 1773-05-03 | d. 1846-08-25 | Author of Travels through Sweden, Finland, and Lapland to the North Cape, in the) #Adams_GP (General Sir George Pownall Adams | b. 1779-01-01 | d. 1856-04 | Husband of Elizabeth Elford, second daughter of Dr. Richard Valpy. Adams was bap) #Addison_Joseph (Joseph Addison | b. 1672-05-01 | d. 1719-06-17 | English politician and writer who, with his friend Sir Richard Steele, edited th) #Addison_Mr (Mr. Addison | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Adolphus_JL (John Leycester Adolphus | b. 1795 | d. 1862 | Author of a literary essay in which he speculates on the identity of the author ) #Aeschylus (Aeschylus | b. -0525 | d. -0455 | Ancient writer of tragedies, the earliest of the three celebrated progenitors of) #Aesop (Aesop | b. -0620 | d. -0564 | Ancient-world storyteller and purported author of Greek fables and tales. Mentio) #Aikin_J (John Aikin | b. 1747-01-15 | d. 1822-12-07 | Brother of Anna Laetitia Aikin Barbauld and father of Lucy Aikin. Mitford read h) #Aikin_Lucy (Lucy Aikin | b. 1781-11-06 | d. 1864-01-29 | Daughter of John Aikin and niece of Anna Laetitia Barbauld. Prolific author of v) #Ainsworth (William Harrison Ainsworth | b. 1805-02-04 | d. 1882-01-03 | Prolific novelist and journalist in the early nineteenth century. Author of Rook) #Aitken_Mr (Mr. Aitken | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Albert_SaxeCbrg (Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | b. 1819-08-26 | d. 1861-12-14 | Queen Victoria's first cousin and spouse, whose death at the age of forty-eight ) #Alexander_I_Rus (Alexander I of Russia | b. 1777-12-12 | d. 1825-12-01 | Emperor of Russia, 1801-1825.) #Alfieri_Vittorio (Count Alfieri Vittorio | b. 1749-01-16 | d. 1803-10-08 | Credited with reviving Italian tragedy in the eighteenth century, Alfieri's play) #Alfred (Alfred I, King of the West Saxons | b. 0848—0849 | d. 0899-10-26 | King of the West Saxons, of the House of Wessex, later styled King of the Anglo-) #Allan_SrWm (Sir William Allan | b. 1782 | d. 1850-02-23 | Artist who painted portraits of Scott, Byron, and Burns, as well as Scottish, En) #Allaway_Frank (Frank Allaway | Manservant at Bertram House in 1819. He and his brother George buried Mossy.) #Allaway_Mary (Mary Allaway | Maidservant at Bertram House in 1819.) #Allen_Mrs (Mrs. Allen | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Date unknown. Dates unknown.) #Allin_Miss (Miss Allin | Corresponded with Mitford in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Allingham_Mrs (Mrs. Allingham | Likely the mother of Catherine Dickinson. Mitford visited them at Farley Hill in) #Amyot_Thos (Thomas Amyot | b. 1775-01-07 | d. 1850-09-28 | Mitford read his collection of William Windham speeches.) #Anacreon (Anacreon | b. -0560 | d. -0478 | Ionian lyric poet of the ancient world, later considered one of nine canonical G) #Anderdon_LOH (Lucy Olivia Hobart Anderdon | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1837 and 1854. Spouse of the Rev) #Anne_servant (Anne | Cook at Bertram House in 1820. Surname unknown.) #Annesley_Francis (Francis Annesley | b. 1734-05-02 | d. 1812-04-12 | First Master of Downing College, Cambridge University from 1800 until his death ) #Annie (Annie | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Surname unknown. Dates un) #Anstruther_Col (Colonel Anstruther | b. 1750 | d. 1825 | ) #Anstruther_Miss (Miss Anstruther | Daughter of Colonel Anstruther. Mitford visited her in Reading in 1819. Forename) #Anstruther_Mrs (Mary Donaldson | b. 1760 | d. 1827-07-20 | ) #Antinous (Antinous | b. 0111-11-27 | d. 0130-10-30 | Beautiful young man who was a court favorite of the Roman emperor Hadrian. Hadri) #Antony (Mark Antony | b. -0083 | d. -0030 | Historic figure rendered as the famous persuasive speaker in Shakespeare's play ) #Ariosto (Ariosto | b. 1474-09-08 | d. 1533-07-06 | Poet, courtier, and diplomat; Author of the epic Orlando Furioso (1516), a seque) #Armstrong_Mr (Mr. Armstrong | Dined at Bertram House with the Mitfords and Mr. Parfitt in 1819. Forename unkno) #Ashburton_Lord (Alexander Baring, Baron Ashburton | b. 1774-10-27 | d. 1848-05-13 | Influential financier, politician, and government official. Head of Baring Broth) #Aubrey_John (John Aubrey | b. 1626-12-03 | d. 1897-07-06 | Seventeenth-century antiquarian, naturalist, and writer. By the nineteenth centu) #Austen_Jane (Jane Austen | b. 1775-12-16 | d. 1817-07-18 | Novelist celebrated for her wit and style, whose works investigated women's soci) #Babo (Joseph Marius Babo | b. 1756-01-14 | d. 1822-02-05 | German playwright, author of the tragedy Otto von Wittelsbach.) #Bacon (Sir Francis Bacon | b. 1561-01-22 | d. 1626-04-09 | A writer and philosopher who made important methodological contributions to scie) #Bacon_Mr (Mr. Bacon | Mitford corresponded with him in 1819. Original member of the Ilsley Coursing So) #Bailey_Mr (Mr. Bailey | An acquaintance of Mitford in 1819. May be the relation of Maria Bailey Kirby. D) #Bailley_Dr (Dr. Bailley | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Baillie_Joanna (Joanna Baillie | b. 1762-09-11 | d. 1851-02-23 | Successful playwright, authored Poems: Wherein It Is Attempted to Describe Certa) #Baker_Mr (Mr. Baker | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays, Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ) #Baldwin_R (Robert Baldwin | b. 1780 | d. 1858-01-29 | Printer of the London Magazine; London printer and bookseller. Partners with Cha) #Bannister_Jack (John (Jack) Bannister | b. 1760-05-12 | d. 1836-11-07 | Actor who performed at Haymarket and Drury Lane. Specialized in low comic roles.) #BarbauldAL (Anna Laetitia Aikin Barbauld | b. 1743-06-20 | d. 1825-03-09 | Poet, prose writer, author of children's books, and sometime member of the Blues) #Barrett_E (Elizabeth Barrett Browning | b. 1806-03-06 | d. 1861-06-29 | Victorian poet, long-time correspondent, mentee, and friend of Mary Russell Mitf) #Barrie_JM (Sir James Barrie | b. 1860-05-09 | d. 1937-06-19 | Author of Peter Pan Quality Street, and The Admirable Crichton.) #Barrow_John (Sir John Barrow | b. 1764-06-19 | d. 1848-11-23 | Served as comptroller to Lord Macartney’s embassy to China (1792-4). Known for w) #BarrowJ (John Barrow | Mitford read his Chronological History of Voyages Into the Arctic Regions.) #Bassett_Mr (Mr. Bassett | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford around the 1830s. Forename unknown. Date) #Bath_Mrs (Mrs. Bath | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Bayley_Mrs (Mrs. Bayley | Mrs. Bayley, spouse of Peter Bayley. After his sudden death in 1823, she arrange) #Bayley_P (Peter Bayley | b. 1778 | d. 1823-01-25 | Solicitor, poet, playwright, and editor of the The Museum. Married to the Mrs. B) #Beaumont_Fr (Francis Beaumont | b. 1584 | d. 1616-03-06 | Contributor to a corpus of plays published in the seventeenth century as the col) #Beaumont_Sir_Geo (Sir George Beaumont | b. 1753-11-06 | d. 1827-02-07 | Art collector, patron of the arts, and amateur painter. He donated the first col) #Becket_Thos (Thomas Becket | b. 1118-12-21 | d. 1170-01-29 | As Archbishop of Canterbury, Becket quarreled with King Henry II over the balanc) #Beckford_William (William Beckford | b. 1760-10-01 | d. 1844-04-01 | Author of the groundbreaking gothic novel, Vathek, art collector, and Member of ) #Beechey_W (Sir William Beechey | b. 1753-12-12 | d. 1839-01-28 | Official portrait painter to Queen Charlotte and member of the Royal Academy; he) #Bell_Geo (George Bell | b. 1814 | d. 1890 | Founder of publishing firm George Bell & Sons In 1856 Bell took Frederick Daldy ) #Bellamy_John (John Bellamy | b. 1755 | d. 1842 | Hebraicist and author of The Holy Bible newly translated from the original Hebre) #Belzoni_Gio (Giovanni Battista Belzoni | b. 1778-11-05 | d. 1823-12-03 | An Italian explorer and archaeologist. Wrote Narrative of the Operations and Rec) #Bender_Mr (Mr. Bender | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Benger_ElizO (Elizabeth Ogilvy Benger | b. 1775-06 | d. 1827-01-09 | Mitford read her Memoirs of the Late Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton.) #Bennet_G (Henry (Grey) Bennet | b. 1777-12-02 | d. 1836-05-29 | Known as Grey Bennett, the brother of Charles Augustus Bennet (1776-1854) who sh) #Bennett_AM (Anna Maria Evans Bennett | b. 1750 | d. 1808-02-12 | Published under Mrs. Bennett and sometimes catalogued as Agnes rather than Anna.) #Bennett_GJ (George John Bennett | b. 1800 | d. 1879 | Versatile actor who played both comic and tragic roles with success. Performed i) #Bennett_Mr (Mr. Bennett | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ) #Bennett_Wm_Cox (William Cox Bennett | b. 1820-10-14 | d. 1895-03-04 | Friend of Mitford's late in her life, William Cox Bennett addressed a sonnet to ) #Bennoch_Fr (Francis Bennoch | b. 1812 | d. 1890 | Scottish wholesale silk merchant, amateur poet, and literary and art patron. Ded) #Bennoch_M (Margaret Bennoch | Spouse of Francis Bennoch. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1855. Date) #Bentley_R (Richard Bentley | b. 1794-10-24 | d. 1871-09-10 | Publisher and founder of the publishing firm R. Bentley and partner in the firm ) #Benwell_M (Mary Benwell Valpy | b. 1760 | d. 1816 | Second wife of of Dr. Richard Valpy. They were married on July 22, 1781.) #Benyon_R (Richard Benyon | b. 1769-04-28 | d. 1854-03-22 | One of the wealthiest commoners in Berkshire and a major landowner and philanthr) #Benyon_RF (Richard Fellowes Benyon | b. 1811-11-17 | d. 1897-07-26 | Conservative Member of Parliament, High Sheriff of Berkshire, and Chairman of th) #Berengaria (Berengaria of England | b. 1165 | d. 1230 | Queen Consort of Richard I of England, 1191-1199. Eldest daughter of King Sancho) #Beresford_James (James Beresford | b. 1764-05-28 | d. 1840-11-29 | Clergyman and writer, best known as the author of the satirical work The Miserie) #Berghem (Nicholaes Berghem | b. 1620 | d. 1683 | Dutch landscape painter known for his pastoral subjects and scenes of rural vill) #Bess_of_Hardwick (Elizabeth of Hardwick, Countess of Shrewsbury | b. 1521 | d. 1608-02-13 | A very rich and powerful woman in Elizabethan England, Bess of Hardwick married ) #Bewick_Thos (Thomas Bewick | b. 1752-08-11 | d. 1828-11-08 | Bewick is one of the most important practitioners of modern wood engraving. He i) #Bewick_Wm (William Bewick | b. 1795-10-20 | d. 1866-06-08 | Pupil of the painter Benjamin Robert Haydon for about three years and attended t) #Bickerstaff_Is (Isaac Bickerstaffe | b. 1733-09-26 | d. 1808 | Irish librettist and writer of musical theater and comic operas in London and fo) #Biggs_Miss (Miss Biggs | Associated with Mr. Johnson and Miss Johnson. Mitford dined with them at Seymour) #Bint_Hannah (Hannah Bint | b. 1804-09-16 | Daughter of Thomas Bint and Sarah Bint. Baptised in Shinfield Parish on Septembe) #Birkbeck_M (Morris Birkbeck | b. 1764-01-23 | d. 1825-06-04 | Quaker, abolitionist, radical reformer in politics and religion, and an agricult) #Bisset_R (Robert Bisset | b. 1759 | d. 1805-05-14 | Author of biographical sketches of contributors to The Spectator as well as a bi) #Blackford_Mar (Lady Isabella Moncrieff Stoddart | b. 1775 | d. 1846 | Daughter of Rev. Henry Moncrieff-Wellwood and spouse of Sir John Stoddart. Autho) #Blackwood_Wm (William Blackwood | b. 1776-11-20 | d. 1834-09-16 | Founder of publishing house of William Blackwood and Sons and of Blackwood's Edi) #Blake_Wm (William Blake | b. 1757-11-28 | d. 1827-08-12 | First-generation British Romantic poet, artist, engraver, and religious visionar) #Bland_Mr (Mr. Bland | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Active 18) #Blandy_Mrs (Mrs. Blandy | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u) #Blewitt_O (Octavian Blewitt | b. 1810-10-03 | d. 1884-11 | Travel writer, essayist, and Secretary of the Royal Literary Fund after 1839. A ) #Body_Ann (Ann Body | A local farmer of Shinfield, farmed at Hyde End farm. Listed among the traders o) #Body_Richard (Richard Body | b. 1776-11-17 | d. 1842 | Needham tentatively identifies him as Mitford's landlord. Listed in 1841 census ) #Bogue_David (David Bogue | b. 1808 | d. 1856 | Publisher, bookseller, and writer of children's fiction. Business partner of Cha) #Bohn_GH (George H. Bohn | b. 1796-01-04 | d. 1884-08-22 | George Henry Bohn was born in London, the son of a German bookbinder. He began h) #Bolinbroke (Henry St. John, Lord Bolingbroke | b. 1678-09-16 | d. 1751-12-12 | Tory politician, political philosopher, and supporter of the 1715 Jacobiterebell) #Boner_Chas (Charles Boner | b. 1815-04-29 | d. 1870-04-09 | A mentee and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1845 and 1855. Author) #Bonviese_Mr (Mr. Bonviese | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Booth_John (John Booth | b. 1768 | d. 1840 | Mitford read his Biographical Memoir of the Public and Private Life of the Much ) #Booth_Mr (Mr. Booth | An actor whom Mitford critiqued for his performance as Cassius.) #Boscawen_Col (Colonel Boscawen | Mitford corresponded with him in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown. Source: ) #Boswell (James Boswell | b. 1740-10-29 | d. 1795-05-19 | Best known as the companion and biographer of Samuel Johnson, Boswell travelled ) #Bowdich_TE (Thomas Edward Bowdich | b. 1791-06-20 | d. 1824-01-20 | Mitford read his Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee.) #Bowles_Wm (William Lisles Bowles | b. 1762-09-24 | d. 1850-04-07 | Known for his sonnets as well as for his long poems including The Missionary pub) #Boyd_Mrs (Mrs. Boyd | Lived in Reading, where Mitford called upon her in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates) #Bradshaw_hist (John Bradshaw | b. 1602-07-15 | d. 1659-10-31 | English Republican politician. Appointed Judge of the Sheriff's Court at the Gui) #Brent_George (George Brent | Proprietor or innkeeper of the George and Dragon Inn, Three Mile Cross. Listed a) #Brent_Joel (Joel Brent | b. 1800-04-20 | d. 1876-07-18 | Son of John and Anne Brent. Baptismal data as noted by Needham on a list of othe) #Brent_Lizzy (Eliza (Lizzy) Brent | b. 1818-01-31 | d. 1827-09-27 | There is no family information provided by Needham for Lizzy Brent, but she is l) #Brenton_Howard (Howard Brenton | b. 1942-12-13 | English playwright. Brenton's plays include The Romans in Britain, Anne Boleyn, ) #Bridgwater_Mr (Mr. Bridgwater | Local owner of a meadows in Shinfield parish. Forename unknown. Dates unknown. S) #Brightwell_CL (Lucy Brightwell | b. 1811-02-27 | d. 1875-04-17 | Sketcher and lithographer; author of Memorials of the Life of Amelia Opie, as we) #Brocas_Bernard (Bernard Brocas | b. 1730 | d. 1777-11-08 | Member of the Brocas family, owner of Beaurepaire House and Wokefield Park, whos) #Brocas_H (Harriet Hunter Brocas | d. 1819 | She married Bernard Brocas in 1769, and renovated Wokefield Park after her husba) #Broghill (Roger Boyle, Lord Broghill | b. 1621-04-25 | d. 1679-10-16 | Broghill defended his ancestral estate, Lismore Castle against an Irish rebellio) #Bromley_William (William Bromley | Baker and shopkeeper of Three Mile Cross. Listed among the traders of Shinfieldi) #Bronte_E (Emily Brontë | b. 1818-07-30 | d. 1848-12-19 | Yorkshire novelist and poet. Her novel Wuthering Heights was printed together wi) #Brooke_Miss (Miss Brooke | A correspondent of Mitford's, to whom she writes at 11 East Cliff, Brighton. Wil) #Brooke_Mr (Mr. Brooke | d. 1820-04 | Forename unknown. The father of Miss Brooke and spouse of Mrs. Brooke. A Mr. Bro) #Brooke_Mrs (Mrs. Brooke | Forename unknown. Dates unknown. Possibly the mother of Miss Brooke and spouse o) #BrookeFrances (Frances Moore Brooke | b. 1724-01-12 | d. 1789-01-23 | Mitford read her Manners: A Novel. Not related to the Brooke family, who were no) #Brooks_Miss (Miss Brooks | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u) #Brougham_H (Henry Peter Brougham | b. 1778-09-19 | d. 1868-05-07 | One of the founders of the Edinburgh Review. Practiced law in Edinburgh and Lond) #Broughton_Betsy (Betsy Broughton | Local beauty from Three Mile Cross, engaged to Mr. Hawley through Mrs. Dickinson) #Brown_Benjamin (Benjamin Brown | Listed as a blacksmith and postmaster of Three Mile Crossin the 1854 Post Office) #Brown_DrT (Thomas Brown | b. 1778-01-09 | d. 1820-04-02 | M.D. and Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh. Mitford r) #Brown_Thos (Thomas Browne | b. 1605-10-19 | d. 1682-10-19 | Physician, philosopher, and theologian who made considerable contributions to En) #Browne_Martha (Martha Browne | Sister of poet Mary Ann Browne (1812-1844). Mary Russell Mitford wrote in an alb) #Browning_Rob (Robert Browning | b. 1812-05-07 | d. 1889-12-12 | Victorian poet, later married to Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Important philsophe) #Bruce_James (James Bruce of Kinnaird | b. 1730-12-14 | d. 1794-04-26 | Bruce was only the second European to visit the isolated mountain kingdom of Aby) #Brumoy_Pierre (Pierre Brumoy | b. 1688 | d. 1742 | French author and Jesuit priest, called le pere Brumoy or Father Brumoy, author ) #Brunton_Alexander (Alexander Brunton | b. 1772-10-02 | d. 1854-02-09 | Spouse of Mary Balfour Brunton. Church of Scotland clergyman and Moderator of th) #Brunton_Mary (Mary Balfour Brunton | b. 1778-11-01 | d. 1818-12-07 | Author of novels Self Control and Discipline. Mitford pokes gentle fun at her un) #Brutus (Brutus | b. -0085-06 | d. 0042-10-23 | Marcus Junius Brutus minor or the younger was the son of Marcus Junius Brutus ma) #Budd_Mrs (Mrs. Budd | d. 1819 | Mitford's Journal entry of April 28, 1819 records that she lived in Bedford and ) #BuddenM (Maria Elizabeth Halsey Budden | b. 1780 | d. 1832 | Author of books for children, including a True Stories series on historical and ) #Bullard_Mrs (Mrs. Bullard | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Bulley_F (Frederick Bulley | b. 1810 | d. 1885-09-03 | Third son of John Bulley and Charlotte Pocock. He obtained his BA (1829), MA (18) #Bullock_Wm (William Bullock | b. 1773 | d. 1849-03-07 | Collector and systematic organizer of museums, including the Liverpool Museum at) #Bulwer_Lytton (Edward Bulwer-Lytton | b. 1803-05-25 | d. 1873-01-18 | Whig and reformist Member of Parliament between 1831 and 1841 for constituencies) #Burckhardt_JL (Johann Ludwig Burckhardt | b. 1784-11-24 | d. 1817-10-15 | Travelled throughout the near East under a variety of pseudonyms, studying Musli) #Burdett_F (Sir Francis Burdett | b. 1770-01-25 | d. 1844-01-23 | Famous and frequently-caricatured radical and reformist politician, and member o) #Burdon_Wm (William Burdon | b. 1764 | d. 1818-05-30 | Wealthy mine owner and writer on political, moral, and literary subjects. Mitfor) #Burgess (Mr. Burgess | Forename unknown. Dates unknown. The person who recommended to Mitford a particu) #Burke_E (Edmund Burke | b. 1729-12-01 | d. 1797-09-07 | Member of Parliament within the conservative wing of the Whig Party, he supporte) #Burke_J (J. Burke | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1834. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Burnet_Gil (Gilbert Burnet | b. 1643-09-18 | d. 1716-03-17 | Whig clergyman and scholar who became Bishop of Salisbury and advisor to William) #Burney_F (Frances Burney d' Arblay | b. 1752-06-13 | d. 1840-01-06 | Author of satirical comedies, blank verse tragedies, and novels of manners as we) #Burney_SH (Sarah Harriet Burney | b. 1772-08-29 | d. 1844-02-08 | Daughter of Charles Burney by his second wife, Elizabeth Allen. Half sister to F) #Burns_Rob (Robert Burns | b. 1759-01-25 | d. 1796-07-21 | Scottish poet, author of Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect (1786). Rented a) #Butler_Mr (Mr. Butler | A Reading shop owner and Palmerite mentioned in Mitford's discussion of the Read) #Butler_Sam (Samuel Butler | b. 1613-02-14 | d. 1680-09-25 | This poet fought on the Parliamentary side in the English Civil Wars and is best) #Byron (George Gordon, Lord Byron | b. 1788-01-22 | d. 1824-04-19 | Romantic-era poet, playwright, and celebrity. English peer after he inherited th) #Byron_Annab (Anne Isabella (Annabella) Noel Byron | b. 1792-05-17 | d. 1860-05-16 | The spouse of George Gordon, Lord Byron, and mother of mathematician Ada Augusta) #Campbell_Thos (Thomas Campbell | b. 1777-07-27 | d. 1844-06-15 | Scottish poet and editor: author of The Pleasures of Hope (1799) and Gertrude of) #Canning_George (George Canning | b. 1770-04-11 | d. 1827-08-08 | Tory politician, supporter of William Pitt the Younger, and one of the founders ) #Carter_Mr (Mr. Carter | Mitford met him at the Webbs in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown. Source: J) #Cartwright_Maj (Major John Cartwright | b. 1740-09-17 | d. 1824-09-23 | Royal Navy officer who supported the aims of the American Revolution and radical) #Cary_HF (Henry Francis Cary | b. 1772-12-06 | d. 1844-08-14 | Mitford read his translation of Dante.) #Cary_Mrs (Mrs. Cary | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1844. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Cassius (Cassius | b. -0085 | d. -0042 | Brother-in-law of Brutus and the leader of the assassination plot to kill Julius) #Castlereagh_RS (Robert Stewart, Lord Castlereagh | b. 1769-06-18 | d. 1822-08-12 | Peer, politician, diplomat, and government official. From 1812,he helped organiz) #Cathcart_Mr (Mr. Cathcart | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Cecil_Henry (Henry Cecil | b. 1754-03-14 | d. 1804-05-01 | First Marquess of Exeter, and later tenth Earl of Exeter, to which he succeeded ) #Cervantes (Don Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra | b. 1547-09-29 | d. 1616-04-23 | Spanish poet and novelist. A soldier in his youth, he was wounded at Lepanto dur) #Chalk_Mr (Mr. Chalk | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Chalmers_Alex (Alexander Chalmers | b. 1759-03-29 | d. 1834-12-29 | An important nineteenth-century editor of collections of literary works from the) #Chalmers_T (Thamas Chalmers | b. 1780-03-17 | d. 1847-05-31 | Evangelical Presybterian minister of the Church of Scotland who sought reform of) #Chamberlaine_Jeremy (Chamberlaine Jeremy | Brought Mitford wildflowers in pots in 1819. Dates unknown. Source: Journal.) #Chamberlayne_Wm (William Chamberlayne | b. 1760-12-04 | d. 1829-10-10 | Heir to his father's property at Coley Park, Berkshire and at Weston Grove, Hamp) #Champernowne_Mr (Arthur Harrington Champernowne | b. 1767 | d. 1819 | Son of Rev. Richard Harrington and Jane Champernowne who took the name and arms ) #Chantrey_F (Francis Chantrey | b. 1781-04-07 | d. 1841-11-25 | Important and celebrated sculptor in early-nineteenth-century Britain. Mitford m) #Chapone_Hester (Hester Mulso Chapone | b. 1727-10-27 | d. 1801-12-25 | Author and member of the Bluestocking Circle.) #CharlesSpencer (Charles Spencer | b. 1955-03-04 | Since 1991, Charles Spencer has been a theater critic for the conservative Londo) #Charlotte_Duchess (Friederike Charlotte Ulrike Katharina, Duchess of York and Albany | b. 1767-05-07 | d. 1820-08-06 | Mitford mentions that she was working on a black gown for the death of the Duche) #Chas_SpencerChurchill (Lord Charles Spencer-Churchill | b. 1794-12-03 | d. 1840-04-28 | Second son of George Spencer-Churchill. Army officer and Member of Parliament fo) #ChasI (Charles I | b. 1600-11-19 | d. 1649-01-30 | The only English king to have been tried and executed by the British people, Cha) #ChasII (Charles II | b. 1630-05-29 | d. 1685-02-06 | The son of the executed King Charles I, Charles II was restored to his father's ) #Chatfield_Mr (Edward Chatfield | b. 1802 | d. 1839-01-22 | Chatfield was a pupil of Haydonat the same time as William Bewick. When Haydon w) #Chaucer (Geoffrey Chaucer | b. 1343 | d. 1400-10-25 | Medieval English poet, philsopher, and astronomer. Author of Canterbury Tales.) #Chippendale_Mr (Mr. Chippendale | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Chorley_HF (Henry Fothergill Chorley | b. 1808-12-15 | d. 1872-02-16 | Of Quaker parentage, Chorley worked unhappily in clerical positions and cultivat) #Christie_JH (Jonathan Henry Christie | b. 1793-11-04 | d. 1876-04-15 | Fought the duel on 27 February 1821 with John Scott that resulted in Scott's dea) #Clare_J (John Clare | b. 1793-07-13 | d. 1864-05-20 | Called the peasant poet, Clare worked as an agricultural laborer and manservant.) #Clargo_Meremoth (Meremoth Clargo | Possibly a shopkeeper in Three Mile Cross. Name uncertain. Dates unknown.) #Clark_Rupert (Rupert Clark | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Dates unknown.) #Clarke_ED (Edward Daniel Clarke | b. 1769-06-05 | d. 1822-03-09 | Traveller, writer, and naturalist. Author of Travels in Various Countries of Eur) #Clarke_Mrs (Mrs. Clarke | The daughter of Colonel Anstruther who lived in Reading. An associate of the Pal) #Clarke_William (William Clarke | Listed as a shopkeeper in Three Mile Crossin the 1854 Post Office Directory of B) #Clement6_Pope (Pope Clement VI | b. 1291 | d. 1352-12-06 | Clement the VI reigned the Pope, or patriarch of the Catholic Church, from 1329 ) #ClementWI (William Innell Clement | d. 1852 | Newspaper proprietor and journalist. Mitford read his Report of the Action, Wrig) #Cliff_Jesse (Jesse Cliff | Jesse Cliff gave the Mitford family elderly bantams (chickens) in 1819. Source: ) #Cobbett_Wm (William Cobbett | b. 1763-03-09 | d. 1835-06-18 | Politician, reformer, and journalist. Founded weekly newspaper The Political Reg) #Cockburn_Mrs (Mrs. Cockburn | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1840 and 1847. Forename unknown.) #Cockle_Gen (General Cockle | Comes to view Bertram House while it is for sale in 1819. May be Brigadier Gener) #Coffin_Mrs (Mrs. Coffin | Mentioned in a letter to Mary Webb of January 10, 1819 as a woman who talked of ) #Colburn_H (Henry Colburn | b. 1784 | d. 1855-08-16 | Publisher and founder of the publishing firm Henry Colburn, later Henry Colburn ) #Coleridge_ST (Samuel Taylor Coleridge | b. 1772-10-21 | d. 1834-07-25 | Key Romantic-era poet and writer and lecturer on aesthetics. Early collaborator ) #Collier_Margaret (Margaret Collier | b. 1719 | d. 1794 | Correspondent of Samuel Richardson, companion and friend of Sarah and Henry Fiel) #Collins_little (Thomas Collins | b. 1775 | d. 1806 | Comic actor at Drury Lane, called little Collins. Acted under Mr. Collins. Accor) #Collins_Wm (William Collins | b. 1721-12-25 | d. 1759-06-12 | Important poet of the mid eighteenth century, known for his lyrical Odes; he was) #Colman_the_Elder (George Colman the Elder | b. 1732-04 | d. 1794-08-14 | George Colman the Elder (so named to distinquish him from his son George Colman ) #Colman_the_Younger (George Colman the younger | b. 1762-10-21 | d. 1836-10-26 | Son of George Colman the Elder, he produced his first play at Haymarket Theater ) #Comber_Thos (Thomas Comber | b. 1765 | d. 1835 | Likely the Rev. Thomas Comber, vicar of Creech St. Michael, Somerset and then re) #Comer_Mr (Mr. Comer | Actor who appeared in Julian at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, February 1823.) #Congreve_Wm (William Congreve | b. 1670-01-24 | d. 1729-01-19 | Playwright and poet of the Restoration period, known for his satirical comedy, i) #Cook_CaptJ (Captain James Cook | b. 1728-10-27 | d. 1779-02-14 | Mapped Newfoundland and explored the Pacific, including New Zealand and Australi) #Cook_J (John Cook | b. 1608-09-18 | d. 1660-10-16 | As Solicitor General for the High Court of Justice, he led the prosecution of Ch) #Cooper_John (John Cooper | b. 1793 | d. 1870-07-13 | Actor active between 1811 and 1859; played at Drury Lane and other London theatr) #Cooper_Mr (Mr. Cooper | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Mitford c) #Corneille (Pierre Corneille | b. 1606-06-06 | d. 1684-10-01 | Seventeenth-century French tragedian. Author of The Cid and Cinna.) #Correard_A (Alexandre Corréard | b. 1788-10-08 | d. 1857-02-16 | Civil and military engineer and geographer. Mitford read a translation of his Na) #Cosway_Rich (Richard Cosway | b. 1742-11-05 | d. 1821-07-04 | Portrait painter and miniaturist; the husband of painter Maria Cosway. Member of) #Coutts_HM (Harriot Mellon Coutts Beauclerk, Duchess of St. Albans | b. 1777-11-11 | d. 1837-08-06 | Mrs. Coutts was the second wife of Thomas Coutts, banker; she was the former act) #Coutts_T (Thomas Coutts | b. 1735-09-07 | d. 1822-02-24 | Director of the banking firm of Coutts & Co. in London.) #Cowley_H (Hannah Cowley | b. 1743-03-14 | d. 1809-03-11 | Successful playwright at Drury Lane and Covent Garden from the 1770s to the 1790) #Cowper (William Cowper | b. 1731-11-26 | d. 1800-04-25 | Poet, hymnodist, and author of the most important translations of Homer since Po) #Cowslade_F (Francis (Frank) Cowslade | As Coles notes, Francis or Frank Cowslade was one of the publishers of the Readi) #Coxe_Wm (William Coxe | b. 1748 | d. 1828-05-08 | Author of Memoirs of John Duke of Marlborough.) #Crabbe (George Crabbe | b. 1754-12-24 | d. 1832-02-03 | Mentored by Edmund Burke and friend of Scott and Wordsworth. Mitford read his Ta) #Crawfurd_J (John Crawfurd | b. 1783-08-13 | d. 1868-05-11 | British colonial administrator to Southeast Asia, where he studied Malaysian lan) #Cripps_JM (John Marten Cripps | b. 1780 | d. 1853 | E.D. Clarke was his tutor; Clarke accompanied Cripps on his travels. Both attend) #Croker_JW (John Wilson Croker | b. 1780-12-20 | d. 1857-10-08 | Tory politician and Member of Parliament. Founding editor and writer for the Qua) #Croly_G (George Croly | b. 1780-08-17 | d. 1860-11-24 | An Irish writer and cleric who held the living of St. Stephen Walbrook in the Ci) #Cromwell (Oliver Cromwell | b. 1599-04-25 | d. 1658-09-03 | English Republican military leader, politician, and dictator. The effective prot) #Cromwell_Hen (Henry Cromwell | b. 1628-12-26 | d. 1674-03-23 | The fourth of Oliver Cromwell's five sons (out of nine children total), Henry se) #Crook_N (Nora Crook | b. 1940 | Emeritus Professor of English Literature at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridg) #Cropp_Mrs (Elizabeth (Croppy) Cropp | d. 1803 | Longtime servant in the Mitford household, who came to the family with Mitford's) #Crowther_Mr (Mr. Crowther | The dandy Mitford pokes fun at in her letters of 9 and 10 January, 1819 . Possib) #Crowther_Mrs (Mrs. Crowther | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1855. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Cruikshank_Geo (George Cruikshank | b. 1792-09-27 | d. 1878-02-01 | Book illustrator and caricaturist. Son of illustrator Isaac Cruikshank and broth) #Culpepper_Mr (William Alleyne Culpeper | b. 1794 | d. 1870-01-29 | William Alleyn Culpeper of Barbadoes (second of that name), was the second husba) #Culpepper_Mrs (Martha Carteretta Cornelia Valpy Straker Culpeper | b. 1779-11-16 | Dr. Valpy's eldest daughter by his first wife, Martha Cornelia de Cartaret. She ) #Cumberland_J (John Cumberland | b. 1787 | d. 1866 | John Cumberland was the publisher of Cumberland's British Theatre and Cumberland) #Cumberland_Rich (Richard Cumberland | b. 1732-02-19 | d. 1811-05-07 | Older brother of poet Mary Alcock. Author of The West Indian (play, 1771) and Th) #Cunningham_JW (John William Cunningham | b. 1780-01-03 | d. 1861-09-30 | Follower of the evangelical Clapham sect of the Church of England, which worked ) #d_Aubigné_Françoise (Françoise d'Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon | b. 1635-11-27 | d. 1719-04-15 | Aristocrat and second morganatic wife of Louis XIV of France (1635-1719); her fi) #Dacre_Lady (Barbarina Brand, Lady Dacre | b. 1768-05-09 | d. 1854-05-17 | Playwright, poet, translator, and editor. A correspondent of Mitford between 183) #Dallas_RC (R. C. Dallas | b. 1756-10-16 | d. 1824 | R.C. Dallas was a prominent barrister and judge who worked on many parliamentary) #Dante (Dante | b. 1265 | d. 1321-09-14 | Medieval poet, author of The Divine Comedy.) #Daphne_pet (Daphne | Mitford's dog, a female greyhound. However, there is also a pug named Daphne in ) #Dapuy_Mrs (Mrs. Dapuy | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Davenport_MA (Mary Ann Davenport | b. 1759 | d. 1843-05-08 | Performed at Covent Garden and retired from the stage in 1830 after a career of ) #Davenport_RA (Richard Alfred Davenport | b. 1777-01-18 | d. 1852 | Prolific miscellaneous writer and editor, spouse of novelist Selina Davenport. A) #Davenport_Sel (Selina Davenport | b. 1779-06-27 | d. 1859-07-14 | Author of 11 novels between the 1810s and 1830s. Friend of Anna Maria and Jane P) #Davie_William (William Davie | Noted by Needham as a beer retailer and possibly a butcher. His source is the 18) #Davies_Mr (Thomas Davies | Lived in Earley. Owned a neighboring meadow near Bertram House) #Dawson_GeoP (George Pelsant Dawson | b. 1804 | d. 1873 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837 and one of the signatories on he) #de_Chaboulon (Pierre Fleury de Chaboulon | b. 1779 | d. 1835-09-28 | Cabinet secretary of Napoleon after his return from Elba. In 1820 he published M) #Deacon_WF (William Frederick Deacon | b. 1799 | d. 1845 | Attended Reading School at the same time as Talfourd. Newspaper and magazine edi) #Dearesley_Mr (Mr. Dearesley | ) #Dearsley_Is (Isabella Eastwood Dearsley | b. 1796 | d. 1875 | Spouse of William Hanson Dearsley and lived with him at Moore Place, Shinfield u) #Dearsley_Wm (William Hanson Dearsley | b. 1769 | d. 1825-10-13 | Inherited Moore Place estate in Shinfield from his father William. After his dea) #Debar_Mr (Mr. Debar | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #deChaboulon (Pierre Alexandre Edouard Fleury de Chaboulon | Mitford read his Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de la vie privée, du retour, ) #Defoe_D (Daniel Defoe | b. 1660 | d. 1731-04-24 | Early practitioner of the English novel, admired by Mitford for the vivid realis) #deGenlis_Mme (Stéphanie Félicité de Genlis | b. 1746-01-25 | d. 1830-12-30 | French author of sensibility novels as well as works for children based on the p) #deGoodrich_Miss (Miss de Goodrich | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1852. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #DeJoinville (Jean de Joinville | b. 1224—1225 | d. 1317-12-24 | Author of Life of St. Louis in 1309 , chronicling the life of the crusading King) #Dekker_Thos (Thomas Dekker | b. 1572 | d. 1632 | Elizabethan poet, playwright, and political pamphleteer.) #delaMotte_F (Friedrich de la Motte, Baron Fouqué | b. 1777-02-12 | d. 1843-01-23 | German Romantic writer of works of medieval chivalry and Northern mythology, inc) #Denman_Marg (Margaret Denman Croft | b. 1771-07-09 | d. 1847-09-24 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Daughter of eminent physician a) #DeQuincey_Thos (Thomas de Quincey | b. 1785-08-15 | d. 1859-12-08 | Best known for Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1822). Also wrote Klosterh) #deStael (Germaine de Staël | b. 1766-04-22 | d. 1817-07-14 | Franco-Swiss salonierre, celebrity and writer. Author of Corinne, a novel about ) #Deverell_John (John Deverell | In a July 1819 both Mr. John Deverell and a Mr. Deverell appear. John could be t) #Deverell_Mr (Mr. Deverell | In July 1819, Mitford's journal mentions both a Mr. John Deverell and then a Mr.) #Dibdin_TJ (Thomas John Dibdin | b. 1771-03-21 | d. 1841-09-16 | English author, actor, and theater manager (1771-1841) Author of Something New () #Dickens (Charles Dickens | b. 1812-02-07 | d. 1870-06-09 | English journalist and editor, novelist, and lecturer. Considered one of the mos) #Dickinson_Charles (Charles Dickinson | b. 1755-03-06 | d. 1827 | Friend of the Mitford family. He was the son of Vikris Dickinson and Elizabeth M) #Dickinson_Daughter (Frances Vikris Dickinson Elliott | b. 1820-03-07 | d. 1898-10-26 | Frances Dickinson was the only child of Charles Dickinson and Catherine Allingha) #Dickinson_Grandmama (Grandmama Dickinson | Identity unknown. Frances Dickinson's paternal grandmother, Elizabeth Marchant D) #Dickinson_Mrs (Mrs. Dickinson | b. 1787 | d. 1861-09-02 | Catherine Allingham was the daughter of Thomas Allingham. She married Charles Di) #Dickinson_Nurse (Nurse | Nurse who worked for Charles Dickinson's family. Proper name unidentified. Dates) #Disraeli_I (Isaac D'Israeli | b. 1766-05-11 | d. 1848-01-19 | Satirical author and book collector. Mitford read his Calamities of Authors.) #Dobbs_Mr (Mr. Dobbs | An acquaintance of Mitford in 1819. The spouse of Mrs. Dobbs. She lists their ad) #Dobbs_Mrs (Mrs. Dobbs | An associate of both Mitford and Miss James, presumably older than both. The spo) #Dodd_Anne (Anne Dodd | b. 1800-06-27 | Married Henry Hayward on December 27, 1819, which is mentioned by Mitford in her) #DoddCE (Charles Dodd | Legal writer, active in the 1830s. Mitford read his An Autumn Near the Rhine. Da) #Dodington_Geo (George Bubb Dodington, 1st Baron Melcombe | b. 1691 | d. 1762-07-28 | Whig M.P. from 1715 to 1761 and government minister. Mitford read his posthumous) #Doge_F_hist (Francesco Foscari | Historical Doge of Venice on whom Mitford based her Doge in Foscari. Mitford's d) #Donato_hist (Donato Senator | Historical personage on whom Mitford based Senator Donato in her play, Foscari. ) #Doria_Andrea (Andrea Doria | b. 1466-11-30 | d. 1560-11-25 | A fifteenth-century Genoese military commander and statemen of interest in Mary ) #Downes_J (John Downes | d. 1660 | Trained in the law, he served as Member of Parliament for Arundel, Sussex. He wa) #Doyne_Mr (Mr. Doyne | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Drake_Nathan (Nathan Drake | b. 1766-01-15 | d. 1836 | Essayist and physician; his most ambitious work was Shakespeare and his Times. D) #Drover_Elizabeth (Elizabeth Drover | b. 1766-01-06 | d. 1789 | Second wife of James Drover, Sr., whom she married in 1789, and mother of James ) #Drover_JamesJr (Mr. Drover | b. 1791 | d. 1823 | Shopkeeper in Reading, son of James Drover, Sr. and Elizabeth Drover. He took ov) #Drover_JamesSr (James Drover | b. 1762 | d. 1816-03-15 | James Drover, Sr., and later his son, James Drover, Jr., operated a China shop a) #Drover_Miss (Miss Drover | Lived with her parents and brother on Minster Street. Forename and relationship ) #Drover_Mrs (Mrs. Drover | Lived with her family on Minster Street. Forename unknown.) #Drummond_Wm (William Drummond | b. 1585-12-13 | d. 1649-12-04 | Called Drummond of Hawthornden, Drummond was a Scottish lyric poet with royalist) #Dryden (John Dryden | b. 1631-08-09 | d. 1700-05-01 | Named Poet Laureate in 1668 , Dryden authored Annus mirabilis: the Year of Wonde) #Dubois_JA (Jean-Antoine Dubois | b. 1765-01 | d. 1848-02-17 | A French Catholic Missionary in India. Member of the Missions Etrangères de Pari) #Duke_Montrose (James Graham, Duke of Montrose | b. 1755-09-08 | d. 1836-12-30 | Lord Chamberlain who appointed George Colman the Younger to be the Examiner of p) #Duke_of_Devonshire (William George Spencer Cavendish, Duke of Devonshire | b. 1790-05-21 | d. 1858-01-18 | British peer and Whig politician who supported his family's traditionally reform) #Dukinfield_Henry (Rev. Sir Henry Dukinfield | Reverend Sir Henry Dukinfield, Mitford correspondent and Vicar of St. Giles in R) #Dukinfield_Mr (Mr. Dukinfield | A patient of Mr. Sherwood. May be Henry Duckinfield (note alternate spelling), v) #Duncan_MR (Maria Rebecca Duncan Davison | b. 1780—1783 | d. 1858-05-30 | British actor, reported to have been born in Liverpool. Although she had acted i) #Dundas_C (Charles Dundas | b. 1751-08-05 | d. 1832-07-07 | Member of Parliament for Berkshire from 1794 to 1832. He generally sided with li) #DundasHen (Henry Dundas, Lord Melville | b. 1742-04-28 | d. 1811-05-28 | Minister who held several important posts in William Pitt's government, includin) #Dyce_Alex (Alexander Dyce | b. 1798-06-30 | d. 1869-05-15 | Clergyman and prolific editor, translator, literary historian, and book collecto) #Easthope_John (John Easthope | b. 1784-10-29 | d. 1865-12-11 | Began his career as a bank clerk and stockbroker and became wealthy through inve) #Edgeworth_Maria (Maria Edgeworth | b. 1768-01-01 | d. 1849-05-22 | British author and educator. Best known for Castle Rackrent (1800); also wrote c) #EdgeworthRL (Richard Lovell Edgeworth | b. 1744-05-31 | d. 1817-06-13 | Anglo-Irish landowner and father of Maria Edgeworth by his first wife, Anna Mari) #Edwards_Bryan (Bryan Edwards | b. 1743 | d. 1800 | West Indian planter and politician. Mitford read his History of the West Indies.) #Egerton_Dan (Daniel Egerton | b. 1772 | d. 1835 | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Foscari at Covent Garden Theatre in 1828;) #Elford_Elizabeth (Elizabeth Elford Adams | b. 1782-03-11 | d. 1837 | Second daughter of Sir William Elford by his first wife, Mary Davies Elford. On ) #Elford_Grace (Grace Chard Elford | b. 1781-11-05 | d. 1856-02-24 | Elder daughter of Sir William Elford and Mary Davies Elford; she was baptised at) #Elford_J (Jonathan Elford | b. 1776-11-05 | d. 1823-03-11 | The only son of Sir William Elford and his first wife Mary Davies Elford. He joi) #Elford_MrsC (Charlotte Wynne Elford | Daughter of John Wynne of Abercynlleth, Denbigh. Married Jonathan Elford on May ) #Elford_MrsE (Elizabeth Hall Walrond Elford | b. 1780 | d. 1839 | Elizabeth Walrond was the second wife of Sir William Elford; they married on Jul) #Elford_MrsM (Mary Davies Elford | b. 1753 | d. 1807-08-02 | Mary Davies was the first wife of Sir William Elford; they married on January 20) #Elford_SirWm (Sir William Elford | b. 1749-08 | d. 1837-11-30 | According to L’Estrange, Sir William was first a friend of Mitford’s father, and) #ElizI (Elizabeth I | b. 1533-09-07 | d. 1603-03-24 | The last of the Tudor monarchs, and defender of father’s instition of a Protesta) #Elliott_John (John Elliott | Son of Mr. Elliot, mentioned by Mitford as coming to look at their home at Bertr) #Elliott_Mr (Mr. Elliott | Father of John Elliot, mentioned by Mitford as coming to look at their home at B) #Ellis_Hen (Sir Henry Ellis | b. 1788-09-01 | d. 1855-09-28 | A commissioner in Lord Amherst’s embassy to China 1816-17. Author of Journal of ) #Elliston_Robt (Robert Elliston | b. 1774 | d. 1831 | English actor and theater manager. Managed Drury Lane and and other theaters. Me) #Emery_John (John Emery | b. 1777-09-22 | d. 1822-07-25 | English actor and musician. Performed Covent Garden Theater. Acted under Mr. Eme) #Esther_Ozoro (Ozoro Esther | According to James Bruce in Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Y) #Euripides (Euripides | b. -0480 | d. -0406 | Ancient world playwright, considered together with Aeschylus and Sophocles as es) #EvelynJ (John Evelyn | b. 1620-10-31 | d. 1706-02-27 | Diarist; collector and writer on painting, sculpture, and medals; garden archite) #Fairfax_hist (Thomas Fairfax, Lord Fairfax | b. 1612-01-17 | d. 1671-11-12 | Lord General of the New Model Army. Fairfax was the commanding officer of Oliver) #Falmore_Mrs (Mrs. Falmore | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Farquhar_George (George Farquhar | b. 1676-01-01—1677-12-31 | d. 1707-05-23 | Playwright, author of numerous plays, including The Recruiting Officer and The B) #FarquharsonG (George Farquharson | Legal journalist. Mitford read his Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for ) #Faucit_Mrs (Mrs. Faucit | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Fawcett_John (John Fawcett | b. 1768-08-29 | d. 1837 | English actor and dramatist. Mitford likely refers to the younger Fawcett, a con) #Fearon_HB (Henry Bradshaw Fearon | b. 1770 | English surgeon who wrote Sketches of America. A Narrative of a Journey of Five ) #Fellowes_W (William Fellowes | b. 1769 | d. 1852 | Mitford read his A Visit to the Monastery of La Trappe, in 1817. Source: VIAF, W) #Ferdinand_I (Ferdinand I | b. 1751-01-12 | d. 1825-01-04 | Deposed by Napoleon in 1805, and earlier by the short-lived (6-months) Parthenop) #FerdinandVII (Ferdinand VII of Spain | b. 1784 | d. 1833 | Ferdinand VII was King of Spain in 1808, when he was overthrown by Napoleon , an) #Ferrier_Susan (Susan Ferrier | b. 1782-09-07 | d. 1854-11-05 | Scottish novelist. Mitford admired her novel Marriage.) #Fielding_Henry (Henry Fielding | b. 1707-04-22 | d. 1754-10-08 | Satirical novelist and playwright, Fielding was a member of the Scriblerus Club ) #Fielding_Sarah (Sarah Fielding | b. 1710-11-08 | d. 1768-04-09 | Author of novels for adults and children, including The Adventures of David Simp) #Fields_JT (James T. Fields | b. 1817-12-31 | d. 1881-04-24 | James T. Fields was junior partner in the Boston publishing firm Ticknor and Fie) #Fieschi_GL (Giovanni Luigi Fieschi | b. 1522 | d. 1547-01-02 | Giovanni Luigi Fieschi (or Fiesco), count of Lavagna was a nobleman of Genoa and) #Filleul_A (Adélaïde-Émilie Filleul, Marquise de Souza-Botelho | b. 1761-05-14 | d. 1836-04-19 | Author of Mademoiselle de Tournon which Mitford mentions reading in her Journal ) #Finden_Ed (Edward Finden | b. 1791 | d. 1857-02-09 | Engraver and printmaker, younger brother and partner to William Finden in his en) #Finden_Wm (William Finden | b. 1787 | d. 1852-09-20 | Line engraver, printmaker, and founder of the gift book/annual Finden's Tableaux) #Fisher_John (John Fisher | b. 1748 | d. 1825-05-08 | Bishop of Exeter and then Bishop of Salisbury from 1807-1825. Art collector and ) #Fisher_Mrs (Mrs. Fisher | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Fitzclarence_Geo (George Fitzclarence | Eldest son of William IV and his mistress Dorothea Jordan. Mitford read his Jour) #Fitzharris (Mr. Fitzharris | An Irish actor who began his career in Reading before going to London. He played) #Fleming_Mr (Mr. Fleming | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Fletcher_John (John Fletcher | b. 1579 | d. 1625 | Playwright following Shakespeare, contemporary of Ben Jonson in the early sevent) #Florry_Mrs (Sarah Florry | b. 1744 | d. 1832 | An acquaintance of Mitford and friend of Elizabeth James, who is remembered in h) #Flush_pet (Flush | The Mitfordsappear to owned a series of spaniels, all named Flush.) #Fly_pet (Fly | Female dog given as a gift to Mitford by Farmer Webb in February 1819 and marrie) #Foote_Maria (Maria Foote Stanhope | b. 1797-07-24 | d. 1867-12-27 | Well-known English theater actor. She was the daughter of Samuel Foote. She play) #Foote_Samuel (Samuel Foote | b. 1720-01-27 | d. 1777-10-21 | English author, actor, and Haymarket Theater manager. Comic actor and satirical ) #Forbes_Capt (Captain John Forbes | British theater proprietor and Royal Navy officer, and a former Grand Jury acqua) #Ford_John (John Ford | b. 1586 | d. 1639—1640 | English playwright and poet, wrote 'Tis Pity She's a Whore (printed 1633)) #Forrester_Mr (Mr. Forrester | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Forsyth_Jos (Joseph Forsyth | b. 1763-02-18 | d. 1815-09-20 | Schoolmaster and author of Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, during an ) #Foscari_son_hist (Jacopo Foscari | b. 1416 | d. 1457 | Historical personage on whom Mitford based the character of Francesco Foscari in) #Foscolo_Ugo (Ugo Foscolo | b. 1778-02-06 | d. 1827-09-27 | Venetian author and playwright who spent the last years of his life in England i) #Fox_ChasJ (Charles James Fox | b. 1749-01-24 | d. 1806-09-13 | Whig politician and leader of the House of Commons. Fox was an outspoken opponen) #Fox_HRV (Henry Richard Vassall Fox, 3rd Baron of Holland | b. 1773-11-21 | d. 1840-10-22 | Grandson of Henry Fox, first Baron Holland, and nephew of Charles James Fox. He ) #Francis_Philip (Sir Philip Francis | b. 1740-10-22 | d. 1818-12-23 | Whig Member of Parliament. Strong candidate to have been Junius, the pseudonymou) #Frankland_Mrs (Mrs. Frankland | A friend of Mrs. Mitford. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Franklin_Ben (Benjamin Franklin | b. 1706-01-17 | d. 1790-04-17 | Polymath, naturalist and inventor. Newspaper editor, printer and postmaster in P) #Franklin_Eleanor (Eleanor Porden Franklin | b. 1795-07-14 | d. 1825-02-22 | Poet. Author of The Veils; or the Triumph of Constancy and Coeur de Lion; or the) #Franklin_John (Sir John Franklin | b. 1786-04-16 | d. 1847-06-11 | Royal navy officer and explorer. Served in French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleo) #Frere_JH (John Hookham Frere | b. 1769-05-21 | d. 1846-01-07 | John Hookham Frere, diplomat and author, was a founder of the Quarterly Review a) #Froissart (Jean Froissart | b. 1337 | d. 1405 | Medieval poet and historian.) #Fuseli_H (Henry Fuseli | b. 1741-02-07 | d. 1825-04-17 | Swiss painter and author who later emigrated to England. Served as Professor of ) #Fuseli_Sophia (Sophia Rawlins Fuseli | Spouse and former model of Henry Fuseli; they married in 1788.) #Gandy_Ed (Edward Gandy | b. 1792 | d. 1859 | Playwright active between 1823 and 1827. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford) #Garrick_David (David Garrick | b. 1717-02-19 | d. 1779-01-20 | English actor and theatrical manager, considered the greatest actor of his era, ) #Gaskell_Eliz (Elizabeth Gaskell | b. 1810-09-29 | d. 1865-11-12 | Author of condition of England social problem novels such as Mary Barton and Rut) #GaspeyT (Thomas Gaspey | b. 1788-03-31 | d. 1871-12-08 | Mitford read his Mystery, or Forty Years Ago: A Novel.) #GastonII (Gaston II and IX | b. 1308 | d. 1343-09 | ) #GastonIII (Gaston III and X | b. 1331 | d. 1391 | Son of Gaston II, nicknamed Gaston Fébus or Phoebus, he wrote a famous Book of t) #Geesin_Mrs (Mrs. Geesin | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Geo_SpencerChurchill (George Spencer-Churchill, Duke of Marlborough | b. 1793-12-27 | d. 1857-01-07 | Tory Member of Parliament and celebrated collector of books, art, and antiquitie) #GeoII (George II of Great Britain and Ireland and Elector of Hanover | b. 1683-11-09 | d. 1760-10-25 | King of Great Britain and Ireland and Elector of Hanover from 1727, the eldest s) #GeoIII (George III, King of Great Britain and King of Ireland | b. 1738-06-04 | d. 1820-01-29 | The king who lost the American colonies, and suffered porphyria and mental illne) #GeoIV (George IV, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | b. 1762-08-12 | d. 1830-06-26 | King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and King of Hanover. Ho) #George (Allaway George | Manservant at Bertram House in 1819; dismissed on September 15, 1820, when the M) #Gibbon_Edward (Edward Gibbon | b. 1737-05-08 | d. 1794-01-16 | Best known for writing The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ) #Gifford_William (William Gifford | Tory editor of the Anti-Jacobin in the late 1790s as well as the Quarterly Revie) #Gillies_Rob (Robert Gillies | b. 1788 | d. 1858-11-28 | A contributor to Blackwood's Magazine.) #Glennig_Mr (Mr. Glennig | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u) #Glenny_Geo (George Glenny | b. 1793-11-01 | d. 1874-05-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1831 and 1832. Writer, editor an) #Goddard_Mr (Mr. Goddard | Gave Lucy Hill away at wedding.) #Godwin_Wm (William Godwin | b. 1756-03-03 | d. 1836-04-07 | Political philosopher and novelist, married to Mary Wollstonecraft and biographe) #Goethe (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe | b. 1749-08-28 | d. 1832-03-22 | Highly influential 18th-century novelist and dramatist, the author of Faust and ) #Goldsmid_AM (Anna Maria Goldsmid | b. 1805-09-17 | d. 1889-02-08 | Expert linguist and translator in Italian, French, German, and Hebrew. Founded t) #Goldsmith (Oliver Goldsmith | b. 1728-11-10 | d. 1774-04-04 | Poet, novelist, and playwright. Friend of Samuel Johnson. His works were admired) #Goodchild_J (Joseph Goodchild | Farmer of Hill House farm, which is mentioned in Our Village. Goodchild is noted) #Graham_Maria (Maria Dundas Graham, Lady Callcott | b. 1785-07-19 | d. 1842-11-21 | Mitford writes of this adventurous woman as Mrs. Graham and references her trave) #Gray_Thos (Thomas Gray | b. 1716-12-26 | d. 1771-07-30 | Poet and classicist. Author of Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard and Ode on ) #Green_Mr (Mr. Green | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Green_Mr_Berks (Mr. Green | Local man who visited the Mitfords at Bertram House and dined at Three Mile Cros) #Greene_JH (John Hooke Greene | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1831.) #Greenwell_Mrs (Mrs. Greenwell | Friend and visitor of the Mitfords, frequently associated with Mrs. Raggett. Liv) #Griffin_Rich (Richard Griffin, Baron Braybrooke | Until 1797, known as Richard Aldworth-Neville or Richard Aldworth Griffin-Nevill) #Groby (Thomas Grey, Lord Grey of Groby | b. 1623 | d. 1657 | Parliamentary Commander-in-Chief in the English Midlands and Leicester during th) #Guiccioli_T (Teresa Guiccioli | b. 1800 | d. 1873 | Lord Byron was her cavaliere serviente, just after she had married Count Alessan) #Gulson_Mrs (Mrs. Gulson | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Gutch_John (John Gutch | b. 1746-10-01 | d. 1831-01-07 | Clergy and antiquarian. Author of Collectanea Curiosa, or Miscellaneous Tracts: ) #Hackett_J (James Hackett | Mitford read his Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, ) #Halford_SrHen (Sir Henry Halford | b. 1766-10-02 | d. 1844-03-09 | Appointed physician-extraordinary to George III in 1793; he also attended George) #Hall_AM (Anna Maria Fielding Hall | b. 1800-01-06 | d. 1881-01-30 | Novelist and short story writer; her stories and sketches set in Ireland were co) #HallamH (Henry Hallam | b. 1777-07-09 | d. 1859-01-21 | Proponent of Whig causes such as the abolition of the slave trade. Wrote for the) #Hamilton_S (Samuel Hamilton | Publisher and editor of the Lady’s Magazine. He took over the publishing busines) #Hammond_T (Thomas Hammond | b. 1600 | d. 1660 | An officer in the New Model Army. A Commissioner at the High Court of Justicein ) #Handel (George Frederick Handel | b. 1685-03-05 | d. 1759-04-14 | Anglo-German composer, influenced by the Italian Baroque. Settled in London in 1) #Hanmer_Mrs (Mrs. Hanmer | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1835. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Hanson_John (John Hanton | b. 1755 | d. 1841-09-21 | Solicitor for Byron as well as solicitor and trustee for John Charles Walopp, 3r) #Hanson_MA (Mary Ann Hanson | d. 1867 | Mary Ann Hanson was the daughter of solicitor John Hanson. She was the second wi) #Harley_Miss (Miss Harley | Friend of Mitford's who made her a purse and who received a presentation copy of) #Harmer_J (James Harmer | b. 1777 | d. 1853-06-12 | Attorney, legal reformer, and later an alderman and Sheriff of London. Helped es) #Harness_John (Dr. John Harness | b. 1754-11-15 | d. 1823-01-03 | Naval surgeon, father of William Harness. Dr. Harness was friend of the Mitfords) #Harness_Mary (Mary Harness | b. 1801-02-04 | d. 1873-04-13 | Mary Harness was the daughter of John Harness, M.D. and Sarah Dredge; she was ba) #Harris_Anna (Anna Harris Valpy | b. 1793 | d. 1878 | Spouse of Anthony Valpy, married on 15 December 1818 at St. Giles Church, Readin) #Harris_Henry (Henry Harris | At the time of Foscari’s composition, Henry Harris was manager of Covent Garden ) #Harris_Mr (Mr. Harris | Dates unknown. Local doctor, not the same person as Henry Harris, the Covent Gar) #Harrison_hist (Thomas Harrison | d. 1660 | Trained to the legal profession, Major-General Thomas Harrison was a Parliamenta) #Hassall_Joan (Joan Hassall | b. 1906-03-03 | d. 1988-03-06 | Wood engraver and book and commercial illustrator, Joan Hassall began her career) #Hatch_John (John Hatch | b. 1805-11-24 | d. 1884-12-24 | Son of George and Sarah Hatch. Baptismal data as noted by Needham along with oth) #Havard_Wm (William Havard | b. 1710-07-12 | d. 1778-02-20 | Minor actor, poet, and playwright. A colleague of David Garrick but of reportedl) #Havell_Mrs (Mrs. Havell | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Hawkes_Miss (Miss Hawkes | Lived in Reading, where Mitford visits her in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unkn) #Hawkins_L (Laetitia Matilda Hawkins | b. 1759 | d. 1835-11-22 | Author of Heraline; or, Opposite Proceedings.) #Hawley_GeneralSr (General Hawley | Possibly Lieutenant General Henry Hawley (c. 1679 to 24 March 1759), British arm) #Hawley_Mr (Mr. Hawley | Descendant of General Hawley, engaged to Betsy Broughton through Mrs. Dickinson’) #Hawthorne_N (Nathaniel Hawthorne | b. 1804-07-04 | d. 1864-05-19 | New England author whose work Mitford admired and promoted by featuring him in h) #Haydn (Franz Joseph Haydn | b. 1732-04-01 | d. 1809-05-31 | Austrian composer popular in England; he visited London twice in the 1790s and b) #Haydon (Haydon Benjamin Robert | b. 1786-01-26 | d. 1846-06-22 | Benjamin Robert Haydon was a painter educated at the Royal Academy, who was famo) #Haydon_Father (Benjamin Robert Haydon Sr. | b. 1758 | d. 1813 | Haydon Sr. was the father of painter Benjamin Robert Haydon and was a printer, p) #Haydon_Mother (Sarah Haydon | d. 1808 | Sarah Haydon was the mother of painter Benjamin Robert Haydon Source: ODNB.) #Haydon_Mrs (Mary Hyman Haydon | The daughter of the Rev. Benjamin Cobley, the Rector of Dodbrooke, Kingsbridge, ) #Hayward_Abraham (Abraham Hayward | b. 1801-11-22 | d. 1884-02-02 | Solicitor and prolific editor, translator, and essayist. A correspondent of Mitf) #Hayward_da (Mrs. Hayward’s little girl | b. 1820-01-02 | Likely the hild of Mrs. Hayward and William Hayward. Mentioned by Mitford in her) #Hayward_H (Henry Hayward | b. 1795 | d. 1875-01 | Married Anne Dodd on December 27, 1819, which is mentioned by Mitford in her jou) #Hayward_John (John Hayward | A Watlington brewer, the brother of William Hayward.) #Hayward_MrsW (Mary Ann Hayward | b. 1762 | Likely the spouse of William Hayward the elder. Lived in Watlington. Mother of H) #Hayward_Wm_father (William Hayward | b. 1761-03-05 | d. 1822-12-26 | A Watlington brewer, the spouse of Mrs. Hayward and father of William Hayward an) #Hayward_Wm_son (William Hayward | b. 1794 | d. 1863 | With his father, he ran a brewing establishment in Watlington. He married Jane W) #Hazlitt_Wm (William Hazlitt | b. 1778-04-10 | d. 1830-09-18 | Essayist and critic, acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford. Author of Table Talk ) #Hearne_Thos (Thomas Hearne | b. 1678-07 | d. 1735-06-10 | ) #Heath_C (Charles Heath | b. 1785-03-01 | d. 1848-11-18 | Son of engraver James Heath. He studied under his father and became an accomplis) #Heath_J (James Heath | b. 1757-04-19 | d. 1834-11-15 | An accomplished engraver, he produced many prints over his lifetime, and worked ) #Heber_Rich (Richard Heber | b. 1773-01-05 | d. 1833-10-04 | Heber was a book collector and one of the founders of the Roxburghe club. Member) #Helme_Eliz (Elizabeth Helme | b. 1743-08-08 | d. 1814 | Writer of educational works for children and translator from the French and the ) #Hemans_Felicia (Felicia Hemans | b. 1793-09-25 | d. 1835-05-16 | Best-known for sentimental and nationalistic poetry such as Casabianca (The boy ) #Henry_Miss (Miss Henry | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Foscari at Covent Garden Theatre in 1828. ) #Henry_V (Henry V | b. 1386-09-16 | d. 1422-08-31 | King of England and of France and Lord of Ireland from 1413 to 1422, second mona) #HenryII (Henry II | b. 1133 | d. 1189-07-06 | Henry II, the son of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Empress Matilda, was denominat) #HenryVI (Henry VI | b. 1421-12-06 | d. 1471-05-21 | The only child of Henry V, Henry VI succeeded his father as King of England and ) #Herbert_T (Sir Thomas Herbert | b. 1606 | d. 1682-03-01 | Herbert was a Parliamentarian during the English Civil Wars. He served as Charle) #Herbert_Wm (William Herbert | b. 1778-01-12 | d. 1847-05-28 | Clergyman, poet, translator, naturalist, and botanical illustrator. Member of Pa) #Hervey_Wm (William Hervey | b. 1732-05-13 | d. 1815-01-15 | ) #Hessey_J (James Hessey | London bookseller and printer with John Taylor, Taylor and Hessey. Hessey owned ) #Heude_Wm (William Heude | b. 1789 | d. 1825 | Mitford read his A Voyage up the Persian Gulf, and a Journey Overland from India) #Highmore_Susanna (Susanna Highmore Duncombe | b. 1725-12-05 | d. 1812-10-28 | An intimate of Samuel Richardson, who admired her literary skills, and of Hester) #Hill_Charles (Charles Hill | Schoolmaster at Silchester, Berkshire, England. Spouse of Mitford servant Lucy H) #Hill_Lucy (Lucy Sweetser Hill | b. 1790-05-02 | Beloved servant for twelve years in the Mitford household who, on 7 August 1820 ) #Hill_Mr (Mr. Hill | Received one of Molly's two puppies, born in 1819. Unknown whether this person i) #Hoare_MA (Mary Anne Pratt Hoare | b. 1818 | d. 1872 | Short story writer for Household Words and other periodicals. Wrote under Mrs. H) #Hoare_RC (Richard Colt Hoare | b. 1758-12-09 | d. 1846-05-19 | Hoare took several tours to continental Europe as well as to Ireland, Wales, and) #Hobbema_M (Meindart Hobbema | b. 1638-10-31 | d. 1709-12-17 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, a student of .) #Hobbes (Thomas Hobbes | b. 1588-05-04 | d. 1679-04-12 | ) #Hobhouse_JC (John Cam Hobhouse | b. 1786-06-27 | d. 1869-06-03 | A friend and traveling companion of Lord Byron who contributed notes to the four) #Hodgkinson_Mrs (Mrs. Hodgkinson | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1829; letter is addressed to her at A) #Hodgskin_Thos (Thomas Hodgskin | b. 1787-12-12 | d. 1869-08-21 | Mitford read his Travels in the North of Germany. Anti-capitalist and utilitaria) #Hofland_B (Barbara Wreaks Hofland | b. 1770 | d. 1844-11-04 | Frequent correspondent of Mitford's, mentioned often in her Journal of 1819-1823) #Hofland_TC (Thomas Christopher Hofland | b. 1777-12-25 | d. 1843-01-03 | Landscape painter, and second husband of the author Barbara Hofland.) #Hogarth (William Hogarth | b. 1697-11-10 | d. 1764-10-26 | Painter, printmaker, and caricaturist.) #Hogg_J (James Hogg | b. 1770 | d. 1835-11-21 | Scottish ballad collector, poet, and novelist who wrote in Scots and English and) #Hoggins_Sarah (Sarah Hoggins Cecil | b. 1773-01-01—1773-12-31 | d. 1797-01-01—1797-12-31 | Known as the Cottage Countess, Sarah Hoggins was a farmer's daughter who married) #Holcroft_Thos (Thomas Holcroft | b. 1745-12-10 | d. 1809-03-23 | British author and journalist, friend and associate of literary-political radica) #Holden_Henry (Henry Holden | b. 1596 | d. 1662-03 | Roman Catholic Doctor of Divinity, theologian and professor at the Sorbonne. Whe) #Holden_John (John Holden | Mitford sent him a puppy that she got from Mr. Webb on July 1 1819.) #Holden_Miss (Miss Holden | Potentially related to John Holden. Mitford sent poems to her on July 1 1819.) #Holford_Marg_younger (Margaret Holford Hodgson | b. 1778-06-01 | d. 1852-09-11 | Associated with Joanna Baillie and Robert Southey. Her mother, also named Margar) #Holland_Mrs (Mrs. Holland | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1838. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Holton_Mrs (Mrs. Holton | Spouse of . They lived in Wokingham and were friends with the Webbs. Source: Jou) #Holton_Paul (Paul Holton | Wine and spirits merchant at Wokingham. Spouse of . They were friends with the W) #Home_John (John Home | b. 1722-09-13 | d. 1808-09-04 | Scottish clergyman and playwright, author of the tragedy Douglas.) #Homer (Homer | d. | Considered the first and greatest epic poet; In Mitford’s time, considered to be) #Hone_Wm (William Hone | b. 1780-06-03 | d. 1842-11-08 | Writer and publisher of social, political, and religious satire, investigative j) #Hood_Thos (Thomas Hood | b. 1799-05-23 | d. 1845-05-03 | Poet, humorist, and frequent contributor to periodicals such as The London Magaz) #HookhamT (Thomas Hookham | b. 1739 | d. 1819 | Proprietor of Hookham's Circulating Library in London from 1764 into the 19th ce) #Horace (Horace | b. -0065-12-08 | d. -0008-11-27 | Ancient Roman politician, military leader, poet, and critic.) #Horne_RH (Richard Hengist Horne | b. 1802-12-31 | d. 1884-03-13 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1839 and 1849.) #Horrebow_Mr (Mr. Horrebow | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Foscari at Covent Garden Theatre in 1828. ) #Howard_John (John Howard | b. 1726-02-09 | d. 1790-01-20 | As High Sheriff of Bedfordshire, John Howard dedicated himself to inspecting Eng) #Howard_SirRob (Sir Robert Howard | b. 1626-01 | d. 1698-09-03 | A Royalist sympathizer knighted in the field and imprisoned during the English C) #Howard_Tho (Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk | b. 1538-03-10 | d. 1572-06-02 | Convicted of treason and executed for the charge of involvement in the Ridolfi p) #Howell_Mrs (Mrs. Howell | Likely a neighbor of Mitford either at Bertram House or Three Mile Cross, where ) #Howell_W (Will Howell | Mitford mentions Will Howell in her Journal on August 13, 1820, and he appears t) #Howitt_Mary (Mary Howitt | b. 1799-03-12 | d. 1888-01-30 | Prolific poet, short story writer, translator, editor, and memoirist; her husban) #Hudswell_Mrs (Mrs. Hudswell | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Hughes_John (John Hughes | b. 1790-01-02 | d. 1857-12-13 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of Margaret Wilkinson Hughes and) #Hughes_Marg (Margaret Wilkinson Hughes | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of John Hughes. Second daughter ) #Hugo_Victor (Victor Hugo | b. 1802-02-26 | d. 1885-05-22 | French novelist, poet, and artist. Member of the Senate and the National Assembl) #hume (David Hume | b. 1711-05-07 | d. 1776-08-25 | The most influential philosopher of the Scottish Enlightenment, Hume championed ) #Hume_Jos (Joseph Hume | b. 1777-01-22 | d. 1855-02-20 | Known as the Apothecary, a radical M.P. who represented Aberdeen in the House of) #Hunt (Leigh Hunt | b. 1784-10-19 | d. 1859-08-28 | One of the founders and editors of The Examiner.) #Hunt_Mrs (Hannah Cooper | ) #Hunt_Robert (Robert Hunt | Brother of Leigh Hunt and John Hunt who founded The Examiner. One of the earlies) #Hutchinson_John (John Hutchinson | b. 1615-01—1616-12 | d. 1664-09-11 | A Cambridge-educated Parliamentarian leader of Puritan convictions during the En) #Hutchinson_Julius (Julius Hutchinson | b. 1750 | d. 1811 | A lateral descendant of Sir John Hutchinson through his brother Charles (1637-16) #Hutchinson_Lucy (Lucy Hutchinson | b. 1620 | d. 1681 | An exceptionally well-educated and self-assured early modern woman whose literar) #Hutchinson_Thos (Thomas Hutchinson | b. 1704 | d. 1744-05-07 | A lateral descendant of Sir John Hutchinson through his brother Charles (1637-16) #Hutton_Cath (Catherine Hutton | b. 1756-02-11 | d. 1846-03-13 | Mitford read her The Miser Married: A Novel. Her letters were published posthumo) #Hyde_Anne (Anne Hyde, Duchess of York and Albany | b. 1637-03-12 | d. 1771-03-31 | Anne Hyde was the wife of King James II, and sister of Henry Hyde. Like her brot) #Hyde_Henry (Henry Hyde, Second Earl of Clarendon | b. 1638-06-02 | d. 1709-10-31 | Spent much of his childhood in Belgium and the Netherlands because of his father) #Inchbald_E (Elizabeth Inchbald | b. 1753-10-15 | d. 1821-08-01 | Author of A Simple Story, which Mitford mentions reading in her Journal on Octob) #Ingoldsby (Sir Richard Ingoldsby | b. 1617-08-10 | d. 1685-09-09 | A Colonel in the New Model Army, Member of Parliament representing Buckinghamshi) #Ireton_hist (Henry Ireton | b. 1611 | d. 1651 | A prominent leader of the Parliamentary faction against Charles I and, after the) #Irving_Wash (Washington Irving | b. 1783-04-03 | d. 1859-11-28 | American author and early adopter of the linked story collection mode of publica) #Jack_boy (Jack | Mitford calls him the droll boy who lived at Mr. Body's 2 years ago & then went ) #Jackson_Mr (Mr. Jackson | In Mitford’s letter of July 5, 1819, she mentions Mr. Jackson as the surgeon who) #James_Emily (Emily James | b. 1782 | d. 1863-08-29 | Friend of Mary Russell Mitford, and sister to Elizabeth James and Susan James an) #James_Miss (Elizabeth James | b. 1775 | d. 1861-11-25 | Close friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. She was the eldest daugh) #James_Mrs (Susan Haycock James | b. 1754-10-17 | d. 1841 | Susan or Susannah Haycock, wife of Thomas James and mother of Elizabeth Mary Jam) #James_oldPretender (James Francis Edward Stuart | b. 1688-06-10 | d. 1755-01-01 | Son of the deposed James II of England and Ireland and James VII of Scotland. As) #James_Susan (Susan James | b. 1788 | d. 1860-12-27 | Friend of Mary Russell Mitford, and sister to Elizabeth James and Emily James an) #JamesI (James I of England and Ireland, and James VI of Scotland | b. 1566-06-19 | d. 1625-03-27 | James VI of Scotland from 24 July 1567 and James I of England and Ireland from 2) #JamesII (James II of England and Ireland, and James VII of Scotland | b. 1633-10-14 | d. 1701-09-16 | Last Roman Catholic and Stuart king of England, he succeeded the throne after th) #Jameson_Anna (Anna Jameson | b. 1794-05-17 | d. 1860-03-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1838 and also a friend of Elizabeth B) #Jane (Jane | Maidservant at Bertram House, who left the Mitford's service in early . Surname ) #Jenkins_Mrs (Mrs. Jenkins | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Jennings_Ag (Agnes Jennings | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in the 1850s. She wrote to her at Portla) #Jephson_Em (Emily Jephson | b. 1802 | d. 1861-12-05 | A friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1829 and 1855. Mitfor) #Jeremy_Caro (Caroline Jeremy | b. 1786-07-01 | d. 1863-11-15 | An acquaintance of Mitfordin 1819. Mitford visited her in Wokingham, along with ) #Jeremy_H (Henry Jeremy | b. 1787-07-06 | d. 1849-02-15 | Brother of Mitford friend Caroline Jeremy. Called to the bar in 1818 at Middle T) #Jerrold_Doug (Douglas William Jerrold | b. 1803-01-03 | d. 1857-06-08 | Playwright, novelist, and editor. Contributor to the Monthly Magazine , Blackwoo) #Jesus (Jesus | b. 0001 | d. 0034 | Hebrew preacher and religious leader and the most important figure of the Christ) #Johnson (Samuel Johnson | b. 1709-09-18 | d. 1784-12-13 | English author, lexicographer, biographer, essayist and travel writer. His works) #Johnson_Miss (Miss Johnson | Friend of Mitford’s. Unmarried sister of Mr. Johnson. Mitford helps her sort out) #Johnson_Mr (John Johnson | d. 1821-04-05 | Friend who leaves his collection of political books to Northmore upon his death ) #Johnson_Mrs (Mrs. Johnson | The sister by marriage of Mr. Johnson and an acquaintance of Mitford.) #Johnstone_CI (Christian Todd M'Leish Johnstone | b. 1781-06-12 | d. 1857-08-26 | Author of the anonymous novel, Clan-Albin, the pseudonymous Cook and Housewife M) #Johnstone_Jack (John (Jack) Johnstone | b. 1749-08-01 | d. 1828-12-26 | Irish actor, primarily a comedian; also a singer of tenors parts, called Jack or) #Joliffe_Mrs (Mrs. Joliffe | Mitford mentions in her Journal on February 10, 1820 that she corrected some poo) #Jolliffe_Mr (Mr. Jolliffe | Friend of the Mitford family, who offered the family lumber to build a cottage i) #Jolliffe_Mrs (Mrs. Jolliffe | Likely the spouse of Mr. JolliffeForename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Jolliffe_Thos (Rev. Thomas Jolliffe | b. 1780 | d. 1872 | Alumni of Reading School and Trinity College, Cambridge. Rector of Babington fro) #Jones_C (Mr. C. Jones | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Active la) #Jones_John (Major General Sir John Thomas Jones | b. 1783-03-25 | d. 1843-02-26 | First-class cricketer and British army officer in the Royal Engineers during the) #Jones_Thomas (Thomas Jones | A saddler of Three Mile Cross. Noted by Needham on a list of local tradespeople ) #Jonson_B (Ben Jonson | b. 1572-06-11 | d. 1637-08-06 | Early modern English playwright and contemporary of William Shakespeare. Jonson ) #Jordan_Dorothea (Dorothea (Dolly) Jordan | b. 1761-11-22 | d. 1816-07-05 | Actor specializing in comic roles and breeches parts. Born Dorothea Bland, frequ) #Josephine_Miss (Miss Josephine | Child actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in) #Joy_Miss (Miss Joy | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1836. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Julius_Caesar (Julius Caesar | b. -0100-07-13 | d. -0044-03-15 | Roman military commander and emperor, assassinated on the Ides of March, as docu) #Junius (Junius | b. | d. -0509 | ) #Junius_pseudo (Junius | Pseudonymous author of The Letters of Junius, active during the 1770s. Still uni) #Kean_Edmund (Edmund Kean | b. 1787-11-04 | d. 1833-05-15 | Considered one of the greatest actors of Mitford's era; known for performing tra) #Keats (John Keats | b. 1795-10-31 | d. 1821-02-23 | Romantic-era poet, known for his Odes. Trained in the field of medicine, he work) #Keep_Harriet (Harriet Keep | Servant in the Mitford household from around 1822-1830. Source: Needham Papers, ) #Keep_William (William Keep | Last name is supplied byNeedham; name appears among other local tradespeople, ta) #Kelly_FH (Miss Kelly | b. 1805-06-30 | d. 1887-03-19 | Mitford mentions traveling to London to see Miss Kelly perform in her Journal on) #Kemble_C (Charles Kemble | b. 1775-11-25 | d. 1854-11-12 | British actor, the younger brother of John Phillip Kemble and Sarah Siddons. Alt) #Kemble_Frances (Frances (Fanny) Kemble | b. 1809-11-27 | d. 1893-01-15 | Frances or Fanny Kemble was a member of the Kemble acting clan, the daughter of ) #Kemble_JP (John Philip Kemble | b. 1757-02-01 | d. 1823-02-26 | Member of Kemble acting clan, brother of Sarah Siddons. One of the best-known ac) #Kemble_MrsC (Maria Thérèse de Camp Kemble | b. 1777-01-17 | d. 1838-09-03 | Actor, later Mrs. Charles Kemble. Likely born Marie Thérèse de Camp or du Fleury) #KempeAJ (Alfred John Kempe | b. 1785 | d. 1846 | Mitford read his Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Saxony.) #Kenyon_John (John Kenyon | b. 1784 | d. 1856 | A friend of Mary Russell Mitford and soi-distant cousin of Elizabeth Barrett Bro) #Kerridge_Mr (Mr. Kerridge | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Kettle_Dr (Dr. Ralph Kettle | b. 1563 | d. 1643-07-17 | Kettle Hall, Oxford, built during his reign as head of Trinity College, Oxford.) #King_Wm (Dr. William King | b. 1685-03-16 | d. 1763 | Principal of St. Mary's Hall, University of Oxford, and leader of the Jacobite i) #Kingsley_Chas (Charles Kingsley | b. 1819-06-12 | d. 1875-01-23 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1853. Spouse of Fanny Grenfell Kingsl) #Kingsley_Fanny (Frances (Fanny) Grenfell Kingsley | b. 1814 | d. 1891 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of Charles Kingsley.) #Kinsey_Wm (William Morgan Kinsey | b. 1788 | d. 1851-04-06 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Trinity College, Oxford scholar and Chu) #Kirby_Benjamin (Benjamin (Ben) Kirby | b. 1811-07-11 | Son of John and Sarah Kirby, and brother of Joseph Kirby, he developed a close r) #Kirby_Joseph (Kirby Joseph | b. 1807-08-09 | d. 1877-09-23 | Son of John and Sarah Kirby, and brother of Benjamin Kirby. Married Maria Bailey) #Kirkby_James (James Kirkby | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1845. Unidentified. Dates unknown.) #Kirkland_C (Caroline Stansbury Kirkland | b. 1801-01-11 | d. 1864-04-06 | Author of three books on American frontier life, including New Home; Who'll Foll) #Knowles_Sheridan (James Sheridan Knowles | b. 1784-05-12 | d. 1862-11-30 | Actor and author, known as Sheridan Knowles. Friend of William Hazlitt, Charles ) #Knox_Rbt (Robert Knox | b. 1641-02-08 | d. 1720-06-19 | Merchant sea captain for the British East India Company, along with his father. ) #Knyvett_Chas (Charles Knyvett | Young clergyman to whom Mitfordlends six of Dr. Russell's sermons in 1819. Sourc) #Knyvett_MissH (Miss H. Knyvett | Mitford visited her in 1819. Lived on the Isle of Wight. Possible relation of Ch) #Kotzebue (August von Kotzebue | b. 1761-05-03 | d. 1819-03-23 | Author and diplomat. Kotzebue was a prolific playwright. Charles Kemble adapted ) #LabaumeE (Eugène Labaume | b. 1783-08-14 | d. 1849-02-05 | According to title pages of his works, he was Captain of the [French] Royal Geog) #Lacy_Miss (Miss Lacy | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Lady_Fairfax_hist (Anne, Lady Fairfax | b. 1618 | d. 1665-10-16 | Anne was the fourth daughter of Horace Vere, first Baron Vere of Tilbury and Mar) #Lamb_Caro (Caroline Ponsonby Lamb | b. 1785-11-13 | d. 1828-01-25 | English author. Daughter of Frederick Ponsonby, 3rd Earl of Bessborough and Lady) #Lamb_Chas (Charles Lamb | b. 1775-02-10 | d. 1834-12-27 | British author, best known for his Essays of Elia (1823-1833), many of which ori) #Lamb_Mary (Mary Lamb | b. 1764-12-03 | d. 1847-05-20 | An elder sister of Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb was a noted author of prose fiction a) #Landon_LE (Laetitia Elizabeth Landon | b. 1802-08-14 | d. 1838-10-15 | Landon attended the St. Quintin School, and was taught by Frances Rowden, along ) #Lane_Wm (William Lane | b. 1745—1746 | d. 1814-01-29 | London bookseller and publisher William Lane pioneered the circulating library, ) #Langley_Eliza (Eliza Langley | d. 1897 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford and a shop assistant to Reading booksell) #Langton_Miss (Miss Langton | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u) #Lavater_Johann (Johann Lavater | b. 1741-11-15 | d. 1801-01-02 | Swiss poet, writer, philosopher, physiognomist, and theologian.) #Lawrence_Mr (Mr. Lawrence | An associate of the Webb family in 1819. May be a relative of Jane Ogbourn Webb,) #Lawrence_Wm (William Lawrence | b. 1783-07-16 | d. 1867-07-05 | Lawrence contributed to ideas about the material origin of human consciousness a) #LeCamus_Antoine (Antoine Le Camus | b. 1722 | d. 1772 | French physician and writer, author of La Médecine de l'esprit.) #Lediard_John (Lediard John | A young man who worked for the Mitfords during the 1830s and 1840s, and who is f) #Lee_Mr (Mr. Lee | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Lee_Nath (Nathaniel Lee | b. 1653 | d. 1692-05-06 | Lee’s best-known work is his 1677 tragedy The Rival Queens, or the Death of Alex) #Lee_T (Mr. T. Lee | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Legh_T (Thomas Legh | b. 1793 | d. 1857-05-08 | Illegitimate eldest son of Thomas Peter Legh. Member of Parliament. Mitford read) #Lester_E (Elizabeth B. Lester | Mitford read her The Quakers: A Tale. Dates unknown. Active 1817. Source: WorldC) #Letchworth_Mrs (Mrs. Letchworth | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Lewington_Mr (Mr. Lewington | A businessperson who worked for Mr. Payn. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Lewis_William_Thomas (William Thomas Lewis | b. 1748 | d. 1811-01-13 | English actor, called Gentleman Lewis, known for fop roles. Appeared at Haymarke) #Ley_Mr (Mr. Ley | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ) #Leyden_John (John Leyden | b. 1775-09-08 | d. 1811-08-28 | Scottish antiquary, poet, and orientalist who assisted Walter Scott in compiling) #Liebensrood (Mr. Liebensrood | Father and head of a family visited by the Mitfords. Forename unknown. Dates unk) #Liebensrood_son (Liebensrood | Son of Mr. Liebensrood and member of a family visited by the Mitfords. Forename ) #Liston_John (John Liston | b. 1776 | d. 1846-03-22 | English actor, specializing in comedy, including Cockney parts. His most famous ) #Liston_SarahT (Sarah Tyrer Liston | b. 1781 | d. 1854 | English comic actor known for her singing voice and roles in burlesque operas, a) #Lock_Mr (Mr. Lock | A supporter of Charles Fysshe Palmer. Dates unknown. The identification of Mr. L) #Lockhart_Charlotte (Charlotte Lockhart Hope-Scott | b. 1827 | d. 1858-10-20 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Daughter of J. G. Lockhart and Sarah Sc) #Lockhart_JG (John Gibson Lockhart | b. 1794-07-12 | d. 1854-11-25 | A prominent writer for Blackwood's Magazine in its early years, Lockhart joined ) #LopedeVega (Félix Lope de Vega y Carpio | b. 1562-11-25 | d. 1635-08-27 | Prolific and renowned Spanish writer of the Baroque period, active from 1580 int) #Lorrain_Cl (Claude Lorrain | b. 1600 | d. 1682-11 | ) #LouisXVI (Louis XVI, King of France | b. 1754-08-23 | d. 1793-01-21 | Last King of France during the Ancien Régime, he ruled as absolute monarch until) #Lovejoy_Geo (George Lovejoy | b. 1808 | d. 1883-07-19 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1840 and 1850 and a Reading book) #Lovejoy_Martha (Martha (Patty) Lovejoy | b. 1836 | d. 1856 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1846. Daughter of George Lovejoy and ) #Lovett_Wm (William Lovett | b. 1800-05-08 | d. 1877-08-08 | After working as a ropemaker in Cornwall, Lovett sought better work in London. H) #Lucas_John (John Lucas | b. 1807-07-04 | d. 1874-04-30 | A friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1828 and 1853. Fashio) #Lucetti (Lucetti | May be a fellow traveller with Joseph Acerbi; however, he is not mentioned by na) #MacareeClarke_Mrs (Matilda Hill Macaree Clarke | b. 1760-02-26 | d. 1835-02-04 | Miss James was her companion and, with Mrs. Stuart, (widow of the Archbishop of ) #Macartney_Geo (Sir George Macartney | b. 1737-05-03 | d. 1806-03-31 | The East India Company and the British government sent Macartney on an embassy t) #Macauley_C (Catharine Macauley | b. 1731-03-21 | d. 1791-06-22 | Important English historian during the eighteenth century, celebrated and vilifi) #Macfarlane_Chas (Charles MacFarlane | b. 1799 | d. 1858 | Scottish writer and correspondent of Mitford’s. In her Journal of May and June 1) #Machiavelli (Niccoló di Bernardo dei Machiavelli | b. 1469-05-03 | d. 1527-06-21 | One of the figures whose birthdate is printed in The Literary Pocket Book, owned) #Macpherson_J (James Macpherson | b. 1736-10-27 | d. 1796-02-17 | ) #Macready_Laetitia (Laetitia Macready | b. 1794 | d. 1857 | William Charles Macready's sister; she kept house for him before his marriage an) #Macready_Wm (William Macready | b. 1793-03-03 | d. 1873-04-27 | English actor, one of the most prominent tragedians of his era. He appeared at C) #Madison_Mrs (Mrs. Madison | Mitford dined with her at the Jolliffe's in 1820. May also be spelled Maddison. ) #Magnay_C (Christopher Magnay | d. 1826-10-27 | Lord Mayor of London from 1821 to 1822.) #Mahomet (Mahomet | b. 0570 | d. 0632-06-08 | French and medieval Latin spelling of Muhammad; used by Mitford to refer to the ) #Maitland_Eb (Ebenezer Fuller Maitland | b. 1780-04-23 | d. 1858 | Son of wealthy merchant and Bank of England director Ebenezer Maitland, he marri) #Maitland_Mr (Mr. Maitland | Acquaintance of Mitford; unknown whether he is identical with Ebenezer Maitland.) #Malcolm_J (James Peller Malcolm | b. 1767-08 | d. 1815 | Mitford read his Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London from the Roman I) #Malthus_Thomas (Thomas Malthus | b. 1766-02-13 | d. 1834-12-29 | Author of An Essay on the Principle of Population published in 1798.) #Malton_Mr (Mr. Malton | Solicitor whose services the Mitfords used.) #Margaret_Anjou (Margaret of Anjou | b. 1430-03-23 | d. 1482-08-25 | Margaret of Anjou, daughter of René I of Anjou, King of Naples, married Henry VI) #Mariam_Tecla (Tecla Mariam | According to James Bruce in Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile, In the Y) #Marie_Antoinette (Marie Antoinette, Queen of France | b. 1755-02-11 | d. 1793-10-16 | Born an Archduchess of Austria, she was the daughter of Francis I, Holy Roman Em) #MarieTherese_France (Marie-Thérèse Charlotte de France, Duchesse d'Angloulême | b. 1778-12-19 | d. 1851-10-19 | Eldest child of Louis XVI of France and Queen Charlotte, and the only person to ) #Marlowe_Chris (Christopher (Kit) Marlowe | b. 1564 | d. 1593-05-30 | English Early-modern-era playwright, poet, and translator; wrote The Tragical Hi) #Marmy_pet (Marmy | One of Mitford's dogs at Bertram House in 1819.) #Marriott_John (Rev. John Marriott | b. 1780 | d. 1825-03-31 | Clergyman, poet, and dedicatee of Canto Two of Walter Scott's Marmion. Curate of) #Marsh_Henry (Henry (Harry) Marsh | MRM's letters in December 1820 indicate that Henry Marsh was involved in a local) #Marsh_Mrs (Mrs. Marsh | Likely the spouse of Harry Marsh. Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dat) #Marshall_Alan (Alan Marshall | Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Head of Humanities, and a faculty member) #Marshall_Miss (Miss Marshall | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Marshall_MrsLA (Mrs. L. A. Marshall | Wrote for juvenile and Evangelical audiences. Wrote under the pseudonym Meta. Pa) #Marsham_Robt (Robert Marsham | b. 1708-01-27 | d. 1797-09-04 | English naturalist and author of Indications of Spring (1789), a founding work i) #Marten_H (Henry Marten | b. 1602 | d. 1680-09-09 | A republican and Parliamentarian, Marten supported the New Model Army and the es) #Martin_A (Albinus Martin | b. 1791 | d. 1871-10-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1840 and 1843. A student of Jose) #Martin_Lucy (Lucy Martin | Beer retailer who lived in Three Mile Cross. Noted by Needham on a list of local) #Martyn_H (Henry Martyn | b. 1781-02-18 | d. 1812-10-16 | Church of England clergyman, chaplain to the British East India Company, and mis) #MaryII (Mary II, Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland | b. 1662-04-30 | d. 1694-12-28 | Ruled England jointly with King William III after the Glorious Revolution as Kin) #MaryQoS (Mary I of Scotland | b. 1542-12 | d. 1587-02-08 | Daughter of James V of Scotland and Mary of Guise, Mary Stuart acceded to the th) #Massinger_Phil (Philip Massinger | b. 1583 | d. 1640-03-17 | Early-modern-era playwright and associate of Shakespeare and Fletcher with the K) #Mast_pet (Mast | Mitford’s dog. More research needed.) #Master_Betty (Master Betty | b. 1791-09-13 | d. 1874-08-24 | A celebrated child actor, known as Master Betty and the Young Roscius. Appeared ) #Mathews_Geo (George Mathews | Wrongly convicted of robbery and later exonerated. Author, with attorney James H) #Matthews_George (George Matthews | Schoolmaster who worked at the Free School in Three Mile Cross. Noted by Needham) #MatthewsH (Henry Matthews | b. 1789 | d. 1828 | Mitford read his Diary of an Invalid.) #Maturin_Charles (Charles Maturin | b. 1782-09-25 | d. 1824-10-30 | ) #Maurice_Mr (Mr. Maurice | Unknown person named in Mitford’s 5 July 1819 letter to Mary Webb. More research) #May_Fly (May Fly | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819. Sister of Mossy.) #May_J (James May | Possibly James May, attorney, Friar Street, Reading according to Coles.) #May_William (May William | Needham identifies him as the Magistrates’ Clerk. Dates unknown.) #McCoy_Rich (Richard C. McCoy | b. 1946-10-09 | Distinguished Professor of English at Queens College and the Graduate Center, CU) #McCracken_Flesher (Caroline McCracken-Flesher | b. 1958 | UW George Duke Humphrey Distinguished Professor in the Department of English at ) #McLeod_John (John McLeod | b. 1777 | d. 1820-11-08 | Naval surgeon and author of Narrative of a Voyage, in His Majesty’s Late Ship Al) #MDonough_F (Felix M'Donough | b. 1768 | d. 1836 | Surname also spelled MacDonough. Mitford read his Hermit in London. Active 1820-) #Mears_Mr (Mr. Mears | Actor who appeared in Mitford's plays: Julian at Covent Garden Theatre in 1823; ) #MeekeMrs (Elizabeth Meeke | b. 1761-11-13 | d. 1826-10 | In Mitford's time, believed to be Mary Meeke of Staffordshire. Recently identifi) #Melville (Herman Melville | b. 1819-08-01 | d. 1891-09-28 | American novelist and poet. After his father’s death, he worked as a schoolteach) #Merry_Anne (Anne Merry | b. 1793 | d. 1871 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Spouse of William Merry.) #Merry_William (William Merry | b. 1793 | d. 1873 | A friend and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford and Elizabeth Barrett-Brownin) #Michael_Ras (Ras Michael | Governor of Tigré, Abyssinia during James Bruce’s expedition Source: ODB.) #Michelangelo (Michelangelo | b. 1475-03-06 | d. 1564-02-18 | Early-modern artist famous for sculptures, such as David and La Pieta, and fresc) #Mildenhall_Mr (Mr. Mildenhall | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Millington (Gilbert Millington | b. 1598 | d. 1666-09-19 | Elected Member of Parliament for Nottingham in the Long Parliament of 1640 to 16) #Mills_Chas (Charles Mills | b. 1788-07-29 | d. 1826-10-09 | Mitford read his The History of the Crusades.) #Milman_HH (Henry Hart Milman | b. 1791-02-10 | d. 1868-09-24 | After a brilliant career at Brasenose College, Oxford, Milman was ordained into ) #Milner_John (John Milner | b. 1752-10-14 | d. 1826-04-19 | Son of Joseph Milner, tailor and Helen Marsland. A Clergy member of Winchester.) #Milton (John Milton | b. 1608-12-09 | d. 1674-11-08 | English poet and polemical essayist who wrote in support of Parliamentary and Pu) #Miranda_pet (Miranda | A greyhound owned by Mitford, described by her as blue all sprinkled with little) #Mitford_Geo (George Mitford | b. | d. | Father of Mary Rusell Mitford, George Mitford was the son of Francis Midford, su) #Mitford_RobertO (Robert Osbaldeston Mitford | b. 1781-01-26 | d. 1870-06-18 | A paternal relative and correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1816 and 1) #Mob_pet (Mob | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819.) #MolesworthRbt (Robert Molesworth | b. 1656-09-07 | d. 1725-05-22 | Anglo-Irish writer and political figure, Member of Parliament and of the Privy C) #Moliere (Molière | b. 1622-01-15 | d. 1673-02-17 | French actor, playwright, and writer of court entertainments; specialized in sat) #Molly_hound (Molly | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819. She later had a spaniel of) #Molly_pet (Molly | Mitford's dog, whom she describes in a letter of 1820-11-27 as a pretty little S) #Monck_JB (J. B. Monck | Member of Parliament for Reading area 1820-1830, who frequently franked Mary Rus) #Monck_Mrs (Mary Stephens Monck | Wife of John Berkeley Monck, the Member of Parliament for Reading. Francis Needh) #Montagu (Edward Montagu, Earl of Sandwich | b. 1625-07-27 | d. 1672-05-28 | Montagu fought during the first Civil War as a Parliamentarian, but later change) #Montagu_MW (Mary Wortley Montagu | b. 1689-05-15 | d. 1762-08-21 | ) #Montague_Captain (Captain Montague | Mentioned in Francis Needham’s biographical listings of people in Mitford’s circ) #Monteagle_TSR (Thomas Spring-Rice, Baron Monteagle | b. 1790-02-08 | d. 1866-02-07 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford. Moderate Anglo-Irish Whig politician wh) #Moore_DrJ (Dr. John Moore | b. 1729-12-07 | d. 1802-02-21 | John Moore, M.D., physician and author, wrote A View of Society and Manners in I) #Moore_Thos (Thomas Moore | b. 1779-05-28 | d. 1852-02-25 | Irish poet, singer, and musical composer; friend of Byron. Author of Irish Melod) #More_Hannah (Hannah More | b. 1745-02-02 | d. 1833-09-07 | Hannah More began her career in 1770s London as a successful playwright and asso) #Morpeth_GH (George Howard, Viscount Morpeth | b. 1773-09-17 | d. 1848-10-07 | English peer and politically moderate Member of Parliament and statesman who ser) #Morris_Mr (Mr. Morris | Associated with Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Morton_Thos (Thomas Morton | b. 1764 | d. 1838-03-28 | English author and theater manager. Author of Speed the Plough (1798).) #Moses_pet (Moses | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819.) #Mossy_pet (Mossy | Mitford’s dog; He died on Saturday, August 21, 1819 at Bertram House. Mossy was ) #Moulton_B_Ara (Arabella Moulton-Barrett | b. 1813-07-04 | d. 1868-06-11 | Sister of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning and her frequent correspondent. A correspon) #Moulton_B_Ed (Edward Barrett Moulton-Barrett | b. 1785-05-28 | d. 1857-04-17 | Father of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning. Inheritor and administrator of his grandfa) #Moulton_B_Hen (Henrietta Moulton-Barrett Cook | b. 1813-07-04 | d. 1860-11-23 | Sister of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in) #MowerA (Arthur Mower | Mitford read his The White Cottage. Dates unknown. Active 1811 to 1837. Source: ) #Mozart (Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart | b. 1756-01-27 | d. 1791-12-05 | ) #MRM (Mitford Mary Russell | b. 1787-12-16 | d. 1855-01-10 | Poet, playwright, writer of prose fiction sketches, Mary Russell Mitford is, of ) #MRM_maledog_pet (An unnamed male dog owned by Mitford in 1819 (a different dog from the female greyhound Miranda). | An unnamed male dog owned by Mitford in 1819 (a different dog from the female gr) #Mrs_Hall (Hall | An acquaintance of Mitford and Mrs. Dickinson.) #Mude_Mr (Mr. Mude | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Mudie_Rob (Robert Mudie | b. 1777-06-28 | d. 1842-04-29 | Newspaper editor and author. Author of Glenfergus. Also wrote The Copyright Ques) #Munden_Joseph_Shepherd (Joseph Shepherd Munden | b. 1758-05 | d. 1832-02-06 | Comic actor who frequently played sailor and drunken roles, though occasionally ) #Murphy_Ar (Arthur Murphy | b. 1727-12-27 | d. 1805-06-18 | Mitford read his The Way to Keep Him. A Comedy in Five Acts.) #Murray_Hugh (Hugh Murray | b. 1779 | d. 1846-03-04 | Geographer and travel writer. Mitford read his Historical Account of Discoveries) #Murray_John (John Murray | b. 1778-11-27 | d. 1843-06-27 | John Murray (second of that name) was proprietor of the publishing house bearing) #MuschatN (Nicol Muschat | b. 1695 | d. 1721 | Executed for murdering his wife in 1721, he was one of the criminals mentioned i) #Napoleon (Napoleon I | b. 1769-08-15 | d. 1821-05-05 | Military commander and political leader. During the French Revolution and Revolu) #Nares_Mr (Mr. Nares | In her Journal on June 7 1820 Mitford mentions seeing him and Mr. MacFarlane the) #Nelly_pet (Nelly | One of Mitford's greyhounds at Bertram House in 1819.) #Nelson (Horatio Nelson | b. 1758-09-29 | d. 1805-10-21 | British flag officer and Vice Admiral during the Napoleonic Wars. His death at t) #Newbery_J (Jacob Newbery | Solicitor at various addresses in Lincoln Inn Fields, London; and at Friar Stree) #Newbery_Mrs (Mrs. Newbery | Spouse of Jacob Newbery. Name variously spelled Newbery and Newberry. Forename u) #Newell_Mr (Mr. Newell | Associated with William Hayward.Married to Mrs. Newell.) #Newell_Mrs (Mrs. Newell | Mitford called on her at Wokingham. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Newman_but (Newman | The butler of Mitford's friend Dr. Richard Valpy. Forename unknown. Dates unknow) #Newman_Miss (Miss Newman | Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Nicholls_Geo (George Nicholls | b. 1781-12-31 | d. 1865-03-24 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Bank of England s) #Nicholls_H (Harriet Maltby Nicholls | b. 1786-04-10 | d. 1869-05-14 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Mother of Jane Ni) #Nicholls_John (John Nicholls | b. 1745 | d. 1832 | Solicitor and Member of Parliament for Bletchingley and for Tregony. Author of R) #Nichols_J (John Nichols | b. 1745-02-02 | d. 1826-11-26 | John Nichols the elder, father of John Bowyer Nichols, also a printer-publisher.) #Nicholson_Jeremiah (Jeremiah Nicholson | d. 1771-07-18 | Francis Needham identifies Nicholson as the husband of Mrs. Nicholson in Our Vil) #Nicholson_Mrs (Nicholson unknown | According to Francis Needham, a historical Mrs. Nicholson is the basis of the ch) #Nooth_C (Charlotte Nooth | b. 1780 | A friend of Dr. Richard Valpy, who resided at Kew, Surrey, but often visited Par) #Norbrook (David Norbrook | b. 1950-06-01 | Emeritus Merton Professor of Renaissance English literature at Oxford University) #Norman_Master (Master Norman | Child actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in) #Northmore_Thos (Thomas Northmore | b. 1766 | d. 1851 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford, friend of John Johnson and co-founder w) #Norton_Andrews (Andrews Norton | b. 1786-12-31 | d. 1853-09-18 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1841 and 1843. Unitarian clergym) #Nott_GeorgeFr (Nott George Frederick | b. 1768-05-14 | d. 1841-10-25 | Son of Samuel Nott (1740-1793). Clergymen and prebendary of Winchester and super) #Ogbourn_Miss (Miss Ogbourn | Possibly the relation of Mrs. Webb, whose paternal name was Ogbourn.) #OHara_Kane (Kane O'Hara | b. 1711—1712 | d. 1782 | Popular Irish playwright and musician, O'Hara wrote many comic operas, including) #OKeefe (John O’Keeffe | b. 1747-06-24 | d. 1833-02-04 | Irish actor who began his career as a painter. Performed at Smock Alley Theatre,) #OKeeffe_Ad (Adelaide O'Keeffe | b. 1776-11-05 | d. 1865-09-04 | Author of poetry for children and historical novels for adults. She contributed ) #ONeill_Eliz (Elizabeth O'Neill | b. 1791 | d. 1872-10-29 | Appeared at Crow Street Theatre, Dublin and Covent Garden Theatre, London. Acted) #Opie_Amelia (Opie Amelia Alderson | b. 1769-11-12 | d. 1853-12-02 | A prolific novelist from 1790 through 1834, contemporary with Mitford, and an ac) #Opie_J (John Opie | b. 1761-05-16 | d. 1807-04-09 | Historical and portrait painter. Professor of painting at the Royal Academy. He ) #ORegan (William O'Regan | b. | Mitford read his Memoirs of the Legal, Literary, and Political Life of the Late,) #Orger_MA (Mary Ann Orger | b. 1788-02-25 | d. 1849-10-01 | English actor and playwright, specializing in comedy and farce; appeared as Mrs.) #Ormsby_James (James Wilmot Ormsby | b. | Mitford read his Letters from the Continent. According to the title page, he was) #OttoII (Otto II of Wittelsbach | b. 1206-04-07 | d. 1253-11-29 | House of Wittelsbach, Bavaria, known as Otto the Illustrious; historical figure ) #Otway_Thos (Thomas Otway | b. 1652-03-03 | d. 1685-04-14 | English Restoration-era playwright and poet whose best-known works include the t) #Ouvry_Jane (Jane Nicholls Ouvry | b. 1819-05-20 | d. 1856-01-08 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Spouse of the Rev) #Ouvry_PT (Rev. Peter Ouvry | b. 1811-10-19 | d. 1891-06-02 | An acquaintance of Mary Russell Mitford between 1847 and 1855. Spouse of Jane Ni) #Ovid (Ovid | b. -0043-03-20 | d. 0016-11-30 | Roman orator and poet.) #Owenson_S (Sydney Owenson, Lady Morgan | b. 1781-12-25 | d. 1859-04-14 | Irish author, amateur performer, and Romantic-era literary celebrity.) #Packer_Chas (Charles Sandys Packer | b. 1810 | d. 1883-07-13 | Musician, born in Reading, who composed the music for Mitford's opera Sadak and ) #Palmer_CF (Charles Fyshe Palmer | b. 1769 | d. 1843-01-24 | Charles Fyshe Palmer was the son of Charles Fyshe Palmer and Lucy Jones. He marr) #Palmer_Mad (Madelina Gordon Sinclair Palmer | b. 1772-06-19 | d. 1847 | Lady Madelina Gordon was born on June 10, 1772, the daughter of Alexander Gordon) #Palmerston_HJT (The Right Honourable The Viscount Lord Henry John Temple Palmerston | b. 1784-10-20 | d. 1865-10-18 | Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, 12 June 1859 to 18 October 1865 and 6 Febr) #Pardoe_J (Julia Pardoe | b. 1806-12-03 | d. 1862-11-26 | Pioneering travel writer, particularly on Turkey, Hungary, and Portugal; novelis) #Parfitt_Jos (Joseph Parfitt | Acquaintance of Mitford's, a young man who admired her friend Eliza Webb. Mentio) #Parfitt_Sarah (Sarah Parfitt | Young acquaintance of Mitford's, who was enchanted by her upon their meeting. Me) #Parry_Mrs (Mrs. Parry | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Parsons_Thos (Thomas William Parsons | b. 1819-08-18 | d. 1892-09-03 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1854. Notable Italian language schola) #Patmore_PG (Peter George Patmore | b. 1786 | d. 1855 | Frequent periodical contributer. In the early 1820s, he authored Picture Galleri) #Patty (Patty Surname unknown. Dates unknown.) #Payn_Mr (Mr. Payn | Spouse of Mrs. Payn. They live near Seymour Court. Forename unknown. Dates unkno) #Payn_Mrs (Mrs. Payn | Spouse of Mr. Payn. The couple live near Seymour Court. Forename unknown. Dates ) #Peacock_TL (Thomas Love Peacock | b. 1785-10-18 | d. 1866-01-23 | Poet, essayist, satiric novelist. Most famous novels were published between 1815) #Pearson_Hugh (Hugh Pearson | b. 1817 | d. 1882-04-09 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1852. Vicar of St. Andrews Church, So) #Peel_Rbt (Robert Peel | b. 1788-05-02 | d. 1850-02-07 | Prime Minster from 10 December 1834 to 8 April 1835, and again from 30 August 18) #PembrokeI (William Herbert | b. 1501 | d. 1570-03-17 | ) #Pennant_Thomas (Thomas Pennant | b. 1726-06-14 | d. 1798-12-16 | Correspondent of Gilbert White in his Natural History and Antiquities of Selborn) #Percy_Thos (Thomas Percy | b. 1729-04-13 | d. 1811-09-30 | Author and antiquarian, Thomas Percy collected and edited Reliques of Ancient En) #Perry_Horatia (Horatia Anne Perry | b. 1793-07-05 | d. 1861-09-22 | Daughter of James Perry, who invited Mitford to a dinner party in London in Dece) #Perry_James (James Perry | b. 1756-10-30 | d. 1821-12-04 | Born as James Pirie in Scotland, he presumably anglicized his name on moving to ) #Peters_Hugh (Hugh Peters | b. 1598-06-29 | d. 1660-10-16 | Chaplain to the New Model Army. Executed as a regicide for his role in the trial) #Petrarch (Petrarch | b. 1304-07-20 | d. 1374-07-19 | Petrarch's scholarship and poetry helped to initiate the Italian Renaissance. He) #Philips_Mr (Mr. Philips | A Reading millwright mentioned in Mitford’s discussion of the Reading elections ) #Phillips_Chas (Charles Phillips | b. 1787 | d. 1859-02-01 | Irish author and barrister. Mitford mentions him a letter of 1819, along with Ed) #Phillips_Miss (Miss Phillips | Actor who appeared in her first professional role as Claudia in Rienzi at the Th) #Piles_Mr (Mr. Piles | May be a local veternarian. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Pincott_Leonora (Leonora Pincott | b. 1805 | d. 1884 | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Pithers_Mr (Mr. Pithers | Owner of a field near Bertram House. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Pitt_Chris (Christopher Pitt | b. 1699 | d. 1748-04-13 | English poet, translator, and clergyman. Translated into English the Aeneid and ) #Pitt_Geo (George Pitt | b. 1751-09-19 | d. 1828-07-20 | Sold a portion of the estate at Stratfield Saye, Hampshire to the crown in 1814;) #PittWm_younger (William Pitt | b. 1759-05-28 | d. 1806-01-23 | Called William Pitt the younger to differentiate him from his father, William Pi) #Pius7_Pope (Pope Pius VII | b. 1742-08-14 | d. 1823-08-20 | Pius the VII reigned as Pope (patriarch of the Catholic Church) from 1800 to 182) #Pleydell_B (William Pleydell-Bouverie | b. 1779-05-11 | d. 1869-04-09 | Member of Parliament for Downton and Salisbury and local dignitary who served as) #Pliny_Elder (Pliny the elder | b. 0023 | d. 0079-08-25 | Roman natural historian, author of Naturalis Historia in thirty-seven books. Sou) #Plumer_Thos (Sir Thomas Plumer | b. 1753-10-10 | d. 1824-04-05 | English judge and politician. Plumer served as a Commissioner in bankruptcy and ) #PlumptreAnnabella (Annabella Plumtre | b. 1769 | d. 1838 | Younger sister of Anne Plumptre and her collaborator. The sisters translated Ger) #PlumptreAnne (Anne Plumtre | b. 1760-02-22 | d. 1818-10-20 | Sister of Annabella Plumptre and her collaborator. The sisters translated and wr) #Plutarch (Plutarch | b. 0045—0047 | d. 0119—0125 | Studied at the School of Athens, and was a priest at Delphi. Most famous works a) #PocockeT (Thomas Pococke | b. | Mitford read his A Journal of a Soldier of the 71st. According to the title page) #Poll_pet (Poll | Mitford's tabby cat at Bertram House in 1819.) #Poole_J (John Poole | b. 1786 | d. 1872 | Wrote many theatrical satires and farces over a sixty-year career between 1810 a) #Pope_Alex (Alexander Pope | b. 1688-05-21 | d. 1744-05-30 | Augustan-era Catholic poet whose achievements include the mock epics The Rape of) #Pope_Jane (Jane Pope | b. 1744 | d. 1818-07-30 | Began her career as a child actor in 1756 and went on to play soubrette roles. S) #PorteousJ (John Porteous | b. 1695 | d. 1736 | Captain of the City Guard of Edinburgh, attacked and killed by a lynch mob for o) #Porter_AM (Anna Maria Porter | b. 1780 | d. 1832-09-21 | Sister of the popular historical novelist Jane Porter, Anna Maria Porter wrote p) #Porter_Jane (Jane Porter | b. 1775-12-03 | d. 1850-05-24 | Sibling of writer Anna Maria Porter, with whom she collaborated; and painter Rob) #Portsmouth_JCW (John Charles Walopp Portsmouth | b. 1767-12-18 | d. 1853-07-14 | Legally declared insane since 1809 in a well-publicized series of court hearings) #Potter_R (Rev. Robert Potter | b. 1771 | d. 1804-08-09 | While a clergyman in Scarning, Norfolk, and the Master of Seckar's School, he co) #Powell_Mrs (Mrs. Powell | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1820. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Praed_Winthrop (Winthrop Praed | b. 1820-07-26 | d. 1839-07-15 | Although Praed began his career at Cambridge with Whig sympathies, he was return) #Pratt_SJ (Samuel Jackson Pratt | b. 1749-12-25 | d. 1814-10-04 | Actor, author, and literary celebrity, the friend of Mary Robinson and Sarah Sid) #Price_Stephen (Stephen Price | b. 1783 | d. 1840 | American theater manager and leasee of Drury Lanebetween 1826 and 1827. Mitfordr) #Pride_T (General Sir Thomas Pride | b. 1608 | d. 1658-10-23 | Pride was a Parliamentary general during the Civil Wars. He was responsible for ) #Princess_E_hist (Elizabeth Stuart | b. 1635-12-28 | d. 1650-09-08 | Second daughter of Charles I and Queen Henrietta Maria. She was a prisoner of Pa) #PrincessCharlotte (Charlotte Augusta, Princess of Wales and Saxe Coburg | b. 1796 | d. 1817 | Only child of the Prince Regent and Princess Caroline and second in line to the ) #Pringle_Thos (Thomas Pringle | b. 1789-01-05 | d. 1834-12-05 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. He emigrated to South Africa in 1820, w) #Procter_BW (Bryan Procter | b. 1787-11-21 | d. 1874-10-05 | A friend of Charles Lamb, Procter contributed poetry to the Naturalist's Calenda) #Pulci (Luigi Pulci | b. 1432-08-15 | d. 1484-11-11 | Forentine poet, patronized by the Medici family.) #Qu_Henrietta (Henrietta Maria of France | b. 1609-11-25 | d. 1669-09-10 | Daughter of Henry IV of France and Marie de Medici. House of Bourbon. Spouse of ) #Quayle_Mr (Mr. Quayle | Mentioned in Mitford’s letters of November 6 and 16 1821 as a friend willing to ) #Queen_Anne (Queen Anne | b. 1655-02-06 | d. 1714-08-01 | Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland on 8 March 1702. In 1707, after the Acts) #Queen_Caroline (Caroline, Queen Consort of the United Kingdom | b. 1768-05-17 | d. 1821-08-07 | The cousin and later the estranged wife of the Prince Regent (later George IV). ) #Quillinan_Ed (Edward Quillinan | b. 1791-08-12 | d. 1851-07-08 | Son of a wine merchant of Irish descent who made his fortune in Portugal, his fa) #Racine (Jean-Baptiste Racine | b. 1639-12-22 | d. 1699-04-21 | Noted seventeenth-century French playwright, the contemporary of Molière and Cor) #Radcliffe_Ann (Ann Ward Radcliffe | b. 1764-07-09 | d. 1823-02-07 | Best known for Gothic romances The Mysteries of Udolpho (novel, 1794) and The It) #Raggett_Mr (Mr. Raggett | Spouse of Mrs. Raggett. In Mitford's Journal in 1819, she records that he is bli) #Raggett_Mrs (Mrs. Raggett | Spouse of Mrs. Raggett. In Mitford's Journal in 1819, she indicates that Mrs. Ra) #Rainy_Mr (Mr. Rainy | Person who came to see Bertram House in 1819. Source: Journal.) #Raleigh_Wal (Sir Walter Raleigh | b. 1552 | d. 1618-10-29 | Early modern English courtier, military leader, explorer, and poet. He was a cou) #Ramsay_Mary (Mary Ramsay | b. 1804 | d. 1819-10-20 | Friend of Mitford and Miss Jamesin 1819. The 6th daughter of George Ramsay (1769) #Raphael (Raphael | b. 1483 | d. 1520-04-06 | Medieval Italian artist and architect.) #Rapley_Betty (Betty Rapley | Dates unknown.) #Rapley_Ha (Hannah Rapley | Mitford mentions in her Journal on 24 January 1820 that Hannah Rapley had begun ) #Rapley_John1 (John (Jack) Rapley | b. 1809-10-25 | Son of William and Sarah Rapley. Baptismal data as noted by Needham along with o) #Rapley_John2 (John Rapley | b. 1811-12-01 | Son of John and Elizabeth Rapley. Baptismal data as noted by Needham along with ) #Redding_Cyrus (Cyrus Redding | b. 1785 | d. 1870 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1832. Newspaper and magazine founder,) #Reed_Andrew (Andrew Reed | b. 1787-11-27 | d. 1862-02-25 | Congregational minister. Mitford read his No Fiction.) #Reeve_Henry (Henry Reeve | b. 1813-09-09 | d. 1895-10-21 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1838. Studied at Norwich Grammar Scho) #Reeve_Mrs (Mrs. Reeve | From Whitley. More research needed.) #Rembrandt (Rembrandt | b. 1606-07-15 | d. 1669-10-04 | Famous Dutch Golden Age painter and printmaker. A prolific painter and printmake) #RennellT (Thomas Rennell | b. 1787 | d. 1824-06-30 | Mitford read his Remarks on Scepticism. According to the title page, in 1819 he ) #Repton (Humphry Repton | b. 1752-04-21 | d. 1818-03-24 | Most important landscape designer of the second half of the eighteenth century. ) #Reynolds_JH (John Hamilton Reynolds | b. 1794-09-09 | d. 1852-11-15 | Prolific poet, journalist and reviewer, the friend of Leigh Hunt and John Keats ) #Reynolds_Josh (Sir Joshua Reynolds | b. 1723-07-16 | d. 1792-02-23 | The most celebrated and sought-after English portrait painter of the second half) #RichardI (Richard I of England | b. 1157-09-08 | d. 1199-04-06 | House of Plantaganet; Angevin dynasty. Son of Henry II of England and Eleanor of) #RichardII (Richard II of England | b. 1367-01-06 | d. 1400-02-14 | English monarch, 1367-1400. House of Plantaganet. Son of Edward, Prince of Wales) #RichardIII (Richard III of England King of England and Lord of Ireland | b. 1452-10-02 | d. 1485-08-22 | House of Plantaganet. King of England and Lord of Ireland from 1483 to 1485. Aft) #Richardson_H (Henry Kemp Richardson | Coles says this is Henry Kemp Richardson of Reading, see p.471, note 5. One of t) #Richardson_Jon (Jonathan Richardson | b. 1667-01-12 | d. 1745-05-28 | Portrait painter and writer on the theory and practice of painting and art colle) #Richardson_Sam (Samuel Richardson | b. 1689-08-19 | d. 1761-07-04 | English author and printer. Author of influential eighteenth-century sentimental) #Richelieu (Armand Jean du Plessis | b. 1585-09-09 | d. 1642-12-04 | Became a cardinal of the Catholic Church in 1622 and served as Louis XIII's chie) #Ricketts_Miss (Miss Ricketts | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1830. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Rienzo_hist (Cola di Rienzo, Tribune of Rome | b. 1313 | d. 1354-10-08 | The historical figure on whom Mitford's character, Cola di Rienzi, is based. Rie) #Rigsby_R (R. Rigsby | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1847. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Ritchie_AnneT (Anne Thackeray Ritchie | b. 1837-06-09 | d. 1919-02-26 | Novelist, adapter of folk and fairy tales, and biographer, Lady Ritchie wrote a ) #Rivers_Lord (Horace Beckford | b. 1777-12-02 | d. 1831-01-23 | Before inheriting the title, Horace Beckford was a member of Crockford’s Club an) #Robertson_William (William Robertson | b. 1721-09-19 | d. 1793-06-01 | Scottish historian, clergyman, and Principal of the University of Edinburgh, aut) #Robins_Geo (George Robins | b. 1777-05-29 | d. 1847-02-08 | Auctioneer and theater patron. Acquaintance of Byron, Sheridan, and J.P. Kemble.) #Robinson_H (Henry Robinson | In a Mitford letter of July 29, 1825, this name appears as that of an attorney n) #Robinson_HC (Henry Crabb Robinson | b. 1775-05-13 | d. 1867-02-05 | Journalist and solicitor. He worked as a war correspondent during the Peninsular) #Robinson_MaryD (Mary Darby Robinson | b. 1757-11-27 | d. 1800-12-26 | Actor in Shakespearean and breeches parts, mentored by Garrick. Friend of Georgi) #Rogers_Sam (Samuel Rogers | b. 1763-07-30 | d. 1855-12-18 | Banker, poet and literary and art patron. Author of The Pleasures of Memory (179) #Roscoe_T (Thomas Roscoe | b. 1791-06-23 | d. 1871-09-24 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1829. Prolific travel writer, playwri) #Rose_Wm (William Stewart Rose | b. 1775 | d. 1843-04-29 | Tory M.P. and Anti-Jacobin writer. Associate of Walter Scott. Mitford read his L) #Ross_Capt (John Ross | b. 1777-06-24 | d. 1856-08-30 | Mitford read his A Voyage of Discovery, Made Under the Orders of the Admiralty, ) #Rousseau (Jean-Jacques Rousseau | b. 1712-06-28 | d. 1778-02-07 | 18th-century French philosopher, novelist, and memoirist, whose political philos) #Rowden_Fr (Frances Rowden St. Quintin | Educator, author, and Mitford tutor. Also taught Caroline Lamb and L.E.L.. Worke) #Roworth_Mary (Mary Valpy Roworth | b. 1786 | d. 1854-01 | Eldest of the daughters of Dr. Richard Valpy and his second wife, Mary Benwell, ) #Rubens (Peter Paul Rubens Sir | b. 1577-06-28 | d. 1640-05-30 | A portrait, landscape, and history painter in oils, Rubens is best-known for his) #Ruisdael_Jacob (Jacob van Ruisdael | b. 1628—1629 | d. 1682-03-10 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, nephew of Salomon van Ruysdael, and cousin o) #Russell_Constance (Lady Constance Russell | b. 1832 | d. 1925 | A correspondent and friend of Mary Russell Mitford, when she moved to a cottage ) #Russell_David (David Russell | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1831. Dates unknown.) #Russell_Henry_1stBar (Henry Russell, first baronet Russell | b. 1751-08-08 | d. 1836-01-18 | Having begun his career as a lawyer, he was appointed to the supreme court of ju) #Russell_Henry_2ndBar (Henry Russell, 2nd baronet Russell | b. 1783-05-17 | d. 1852-04-19 | Son of Sir Henry Russell, first baronet of Swallowfield, who inherited the Swall) #Russell_John (Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell | b. 1792-08-18 | d. 1878-05-28 | 3rd son of John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford by his first wife, Georgiana Byng. ) #Russell_Lady (Rachel Wriothesley Russell | b. 1637-09-19 | d. 1723-09-29 | The daughter of Thomas Wriothesley, fourth earl of Southampton; her letters invo) #Russell_LadyMarie (Lady Marie-Clotilde Russell Russell Mottet de la Fontaine Marie-Clotilde | b. 1794-06-03 | d. 1872-01-31 | Lady Marie-Clotilde Russell was a great friend of Mitford, particularly later in) #Russell_M (Mitford Russell Mary | b. 1750 | d. 1830-01-02 | Mary Russell was the youngest child of the Rev. Dr. Richard Russell and his seco) #Russell_MaryDicker (Mary Dicker Russell | Mary Russell Mitford's maternal grandmother. Mary Dicker was the daughter of Wil) #Russell_Richard (Rev. Dr. Richard Russell | b. 1695-10-05 | d. 1783-02-25 | Mary Russell Mitford's maternal grandfather. The Rev. Dr. Richard Russell was th) #Rutt_John (John Towill Rutt | b. 1760-04-04 | d. 1841-03-03 | Political radical and writer. Dissenter and later Unitarian. He edited the The T) #Ruysdael_Jacob (Jacob van Ruysdael | b. 1629 | d. 1681 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, the son of Salomon van Ruysdael, the cousin ) #Ruysdael_Salomon (Salomon van Ruysdael | b. | d. 1670-11-03 | Dutch Golden Age landscape painter, the father of Jacob van Ruysdael, and the un) #Saabye (Hans Egede Saabye | b. 1746-07 | d. 1817-08-31 | Parish priest in Denmark and missionary to Greenland. Mitford read an English tr) #Sackville_Chas (Charles Sackville | b. 1638-01-24 | d. 1706-01-29 | Restoration-era courtier, rake, and wit, the associate of Sir Charles Sedley, Ro) #Saladin (Saladin | b. 1137 | d. 1193-03-04 | Known by his Arabic honorific,Salah ad-Din, westernized as Saladin. First Sultan) #Salame_Ab (Abraham Salamé | Mitford read his A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816. Date) #Salisbury_hist (William Cecil, Earl of Salisbury | b. 1591-03-28 | d. 1668-12-03 | In 1648, Salisbury was a member of the deputation who negotiated the failed Trea) #Sally (Sally | Servant at Bertram House, dismissed on September 15, 1820, when the Mitfords mov) #Sargent_John (John Sargent | b. 1780 | d. 1833 | Evangelical-learning Church of England clergyman. Mitford read his Memoirs of th) #Savigny_JBH (Jean-Baptiste-Henri Savigny | b. 1793 | d. 1843 | Mitford read a translation of his Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816, co-a) #Say_hist (William Say | b. 1604 | d. 1666 | A regicide, Say was one of the Commissioners at the trial of Charles I and signe) #ScafeJ (John Scafe | Mitford read his King Coal's Levée. Active 1815-1820; dates unknown. Source: Wor) #Schiller_F (Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller | b. 1759-11-10 | d. 1805-05-09 | German poet, playwright, historian, and philosopher, Schiller studied medicine a) #Schimmelpenninck_MA (Mary Anne Galton Schimmelpennick | b. 1778-11-25 | d. 1856-08-29 | Mitford read her A Tour to Alet and La Grande Chartreuse.) #Schlegel_AW (August Wilhelm von Schlegel | b. 1767-09-08 | d. 1845-05-12 | Brother of Friedrich Wilhelm von Schlegel, advisor to Madame de Staël and tutor ) #SchlegelF (Friedrich von Schlegel | b. 1771-03-10 | d. 1829-01-12 | Important figure in Jena Romanticism, the first wave of German Romantic literatu) #Scott_John (John Scott | b. 1784-10-24 | d. 1821-02-21 | Journalist and editor who revived The London Magazine in 1820 and edited it unti) #Scott_John_LdEldon (John Scott, Earl of Eldon | b. 1751-06-04 | d. 1838-01-13 | John Scott, later created the first Earl of Eldon, was an English barrister, jud) #Scott_Wal (Sir Walter Scott | b. 1771-08-15 | d. 1832-09-21 | Scottish advocate, antiquarian, poet, and novelist. Also worked as clerk of the ) #Sedgwick_Cath (Catharine Maria Sedgwick | b. 1789-12-28 | d. 1867-07-31 | American novelist and correspondent of Mitford.) #Sedgwick_Theo2 (Theodore Sedgwick, Jr. | b. 1780-12-09 | d. 1839 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1835 and 1840. Brother of Cather) #Selby_Mr (Mr. Selby | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Selby_PJ (Prideaux John Selby | b. 1788-07-23 | d. 1867-03-27 | Important naturalist and illustrator in the 1820s, 30s, and 40s, friend and neig) #Selim_pet (Selim | Mitford's ferocious long-haired white cat. The cat may have been a Turkish angor) #Senior_Jane (Jane Elizabeth (Jeanie) Hughes Senior | b. 1828-12-10 | d. 1877 | Social reformer and relief worker during the Franco-Prussian War, and co-founder) #Serle_TJ (Thomas James Serle | b. 1798-10-28 | d. 1889-03-20 | Actor, playwright, and theater manager who appeared with Kean and Charles Kemble) #Serres_OW (Olivia Wilmot Serres | Niece and biographer of James Wilmot who claimed that he was the author of the L) #Sevigne_Mad (Madame Sévigné | b. 1626-02-05 | d. 1696-04-17 | 17th-century French aristocrat and salonniere, celebrated as a letter writer.) #Seward_Martha (Martha Seward | An acquaintance of Mary Webb. Needs additional research.) #Seward_Wm (William Seward | b. 1747-01 | d. 1799-04-24 | Mitford read his four-volume collection of literary and biographical anecdotes, ) #Sforza_hist (General Francesco Sforza, Duke of Milan | b. 1401-07-23 | d. 1466-03-08 | Sforza defeated Venice and its ally Florence under Doge Francesco Foscari. Mary ) #Shakespeare (William Shakespeare | b. 1564-04 | d. 1616-04-23 | Early modern era actor, theater manager, poet, and playwright. Part owner of pla) #Sharpe_CK (Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe | b. 1781-05-15 | d. 1851-03-17 | Editor of Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entitled The Heart of Mid-Lot) #Shaw_Sam (Sam Shaw | Coauthor with James Bruce of An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Br) #ShawLefevre_C1 (Charles Shaw Lefevre | b. 1759-09-20 | d. 1823-04-27 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1805 and a moderate Tory Member of Pa) #Sheffield_John (John Sheffield, Duke of Buckingham and Normanby | b. 1648-04-07 | d. 1721-02-24 | English poet, Tory politician, and favorite of Queen Anne who served as Lord Pri) #Shelley_MW (Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelley | b. 1797-08-30 | d. 1851-02-01 | Daughter of William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft. Novelist, playwright, essayi) #Shelley_PB (Percy Bysshe Shelley | b. 1792-08-04 | d. 1822-07-08 | Romantic-era poet, novelist, essayist, and playwright. Best known for lyric poem) #Shepherd_HJ (Henry John Shepherd | b. 1784 | d. 1855 | Barrister at law, Recorder for Abingdon, and Commissioner for the Court of Bankr) #Sheridan_RichardB (Richard Brinsley Sheridan | b. 1751 | d. 1816-07-07 | Successful playwright and longtime owner-manager of Drury Lane Theatre. A promin) #Sherwood_Mr (Mr. Sherwood | Practiced medicine in Reading. He was a friend of John Berkeley Monck, and likel) #Shoberl_F (Frederic Shoberl | b. 1775 | d. 1852-03-22 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford between 1830 and 1835. Founder, with Hen) #Shoberl_T (Theodosia Shoberl | d. 1838-12-18 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1849.Spouse of Frederic Shoberl.) #Siddons_Sarah (Sarah Kemble Siddons | b. 1755-07-05 | d. 1831-06-08 | Considered the best tragic actor of her era, better than her three actor-brother) #Sidmouth_Lady2 (Mary Anne Scott Townshend Addington, Lady Sidmouth | d. 1842-04-26 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1830. Second wife of Henry Addington,) #Simonds_H (Henry Simonds | b. 1785 | d. 1874 | Potentially the H. Symonds mentioned in Mitford’s Journal on November 2 1820. So) #Simonds_MrB (William Blackall Simonds | b. 1762 | d. 1843 | Potentially the Monsieur Simon mentioned in Mitford’s Journal on November 2 1820) #Simonds_MrsB (Elizabeth Blackall Simonds | b. 1764 | d. 1842 | Potentially the Mrs. Blackall Symonds mentioned in Mitford’s Journal on December) #Sinclair_SrJohn (Sir John Sinclair | b. 1754-05-10 | d. 1835-12-21 | Sir John Sinclair was perhaps most politically active in the 1780s and 1790s whe) #Skerrett_Marianne (Marianne Skerrett | The 1888 volume of Notes and Queries indicates that Marianne and Henrietta Skerr) #Slade_F (Slade Frederick | Called at Bertram House in 1819. Dates unknown.) #Sloman_Mrs (Mrs. Sloman | b. 1799 | d. 1858-02-08 | Actor, specialized in tragedy. Performed at Drury Lane and Covent Garden Theatre) #Slops (Slops | May be a Mitford family pet.) #Smith_Ad (Adam Smith | b. 1723-06-05 | d. 1790-07-17 | Scottish Enlightenment philosopher, Doctor of Laws, and later Rector of the Univ) #Smith_Ch (Charlotte Turner Smith | b. 1749-05-04 | d. 1806-10-28 | Best known as a poet and reviver of the sonnet tradition in the late eighteenth ) #Smith_Dora (Dora Smith | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1847. Dates unknown.) #Smith_Farmer (Farmer Smith | b. 1801 | ) #Smith_Horace (Horace Smith | b. 1779-12-31 | d. 1849-07-12 | Born Horatio Smith. Co-author with his brother James of the literary parody coll) #Smollett_Tob (Tobias Smollett | b. 1721-03-19 | d. 1771-09-17 | Novelist and poet, as well as editor, translator, critic, and medical practition) #Soane_Geo (George Soane | b. 1790 | d. 1860-07-12 | Second son of the architect John Soane. He wrote numerous melodramas for the sta) #Solomon (Solomon | May be the name of a Mitford servant or pet. Surname not given.) #Somerville_Miss (Margaret Agnes Somerville Bunn | b. 1799 | d. 1883 | Actor who appeared as Miss Somerville and later performed under her married name) #Sophocles (Sophocles | b. -0496 | d. -0406 | As an Athenian citizen, Sophocles held many roles, such as serving on the treasu) #Southey_R (Robert Southey | b. 1774-08-12 | d. 1843-03-21 | English poet, historian, essayist, and biographer. Early friend of Coleridge. He) #Spence_Jos (Joseph Spence | b. 1699-04-28 | d. 1768-08-20 | Clergyman and garden designer, Professor of Poetry, and Regius Professor of Hist) #Spenser_Edmund (Edmund Spenser | b. 1552 | d. 1599-01-13 | Early modern poet and courtier, author of The Faerie Queen. Served in the milita) #Spurling_Mr (Mr. Spurling | An associate of Mr. Elliott, possibly an attorney. Forename unknown. Dates unkno) #Starkey_DP (Digby Pilot Starkey | b. 1806 | d. 1876 | Irish poet and playwright; friend of Maria Edgeworth. A correspondent of Mary Ru) #Staunton_Geo (Sir George Staunton | b. 1737-04-10 | d. 1801-01-14 | In 1792 Staunton was apointed principal secretary to Lord Macartney’s embassy to) #Steele_Richard (Sir Richard Steele | b. 1672-03-12 | d. 1729-09-01 | English playwright, editor and essayist who founded the journal The Tatler and l) #Stendahl (Marie-Henri Beyle | b. 1783-01-23 | d. 1842-03-23 | Mitford read the English translation of his Lives of Haydn and Mozart, published) #Stevenson_Em (Emily Stevenson | Possibly the daughter of Mr. Stevenson. Dates unknown.) #Stevenson_Mr (Mr. Stevenson | Possibly the father of Emily Stevenson. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Stewart_Major (Major Stewart | Mitford's Journal of 1820 mentions both a Mr. Stewart and a Major Stewart. Relat) #Stewart_Mr (Mr. Stewart | Mitford's Journal of 1820 mentions both a Mr. Stewart and a Major Stewart. Relat) #Stoddard_RH (Richard Henry Stoddard | b. 1825-07-02 | d. 1903-05-12 | Influential American reviewer and critic; also editor of compilations of English) #Stovin_Mrs (Mrs. M. Stovin | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1824. Forename unknown. Lived at Newb) #StQuentin (M. St. Quentin | Spouse of Frances Rowden, who was his second wife. They married in Paris. Founde) #Strafford (Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford | b. 1593-04-13 | d. 1641-05-12 | Caroline-era administrator and Lord Deputy for Ireland who was tried, convicted,) #Strong_Elizabeth (Elizabeth Strong | Baker of Three Mile Cross, as noted by Needham on a list of local tradespeople, ) #Strong_George (George Strong | Bricklayer and beer retailer of Three Mile Cross, as noted by Needhamon a list o) #Strutt_Jos (Joseph Strutt | b. 1749 | d. 1802 | Artist and antiquarian who collected and illustrated historical costume, arms, s) #Stuart_ChasEd (Charles Edward Stuart | b. 1720-12-31 | d. 1788-01-31 | The famously beautiful son of the Old Pretender (James, son of the deposed King ) #Stuart_H (Henry Stuart, Duke of Gloucester | b. 1639-07-08 | d. 1660-09-13 | Youngest son of Charles I and Henrietta Maria. He visited his father in prison, ) #Sunderland_Countess (Dorothy Sidney Spencer Smythe, Countess of Sunderland | b. 1617-10 | d. 1684-02 | As a young woman, Lady Dorothy Sidney was celebrated for her wit and beauty and ) #Swan_Mr (Henry Swan | On the 17th, convicted of bribery at an election for the borough of Penrhyn, in ) #Sweet_Rbt (Robert Sweet | b. 1783 | d. 1835-01-20 | Plant breeder, horticulturalist, ornithologist, and author of several important ) #Swift_J (Jonathan Swift | b. 1667-11-30 | d. 1745-10-19 | Irish clergyman and author, later Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. Autho) #Symmons_Chas (Charles Symmons | b. 1749 | d. 1826-04-27 | Mitford read his The Prose Works of John Milton: with a Life of the Author.) #Talbot_Geo (George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury | b. 1528 | d. 1590-11-18 | Appointed by Queen Elizabeth I to imprison Mary Queen of Scots in 1568 at Sheffi) #Talfourd_Mrs (Rachael Rutt Talfourd | b. 1793 | d. 1875-02-12 | The eldest daughter of John Towill Rutt, she married Thomas Noon Talfourd in 182) #Talfourd_Thos (Thomas Noon Talfourd | b. 1795-05-26 | d. 1854-03-13 | Close friend, literary mentor, and frequent correspondent of Mary Russell Mitfor) #Talma_Francois (Francois Joseph Talma | b. 1763-01-15 | d. 1826-10-19 | French actor and dentist who was a favorite of Napoleon Bonaparte.) #Talmage_Mrs (Mrs. Talmage | Mitford dined at Wokingham & met Mrs. Talmage as well as Mr. Morris.) #Tasso (Tasso | b. 1544-03-11 | d. 1595-04-25 | Poet and courtier from Naples. He was the author of the pastoral drama Aminta (1) #Taunton_Mrs (Mrs. Taunton | Mitford met her when dining at Mr. Green's in 1820. Forename unknown. Dates unkn) #Taylor_J (John Taylor | b. 1781 | d. 1864 | London writer and publisher with James Augustus Hessey as the publishing firm Ta) #Taylor_Jane (Jane Taylor | b. 1783-09-23 | d. 1824-04-13 | Collaborator with her sister Ann and Adelaide O'Keeffe on poetry for children. M) #Taylor_Jer (Jeremy Taylor | b. 1613-08-15 | d. 1667-08-13 | Church of England clergyman and author, known as the Shakespeare of Divines and ) #Taylor_JH (James Henry Taylor | b. 1843-04-09 | The illegitimate son of Kerenhappuch Taylor. Born about 1843 at Three Mile Cross) #Taylor_John (John Taylor | b. 1757 | d. 1832 | Began his career in London as an oculist; Mary Robinson dedicates her poem Sight) #Taylor_Joseph (Joseph Taylor | b. 1762 | d. 1844 | Mitford read his Antiquitates Curiosae. Source: VIAF, WorldCat.) #Taylor_K (Kerenhappuch (K.) Taylor | Known as K., she was a servant in the Mitford household intermittently from 1840) #Tennyson (Alfred Tennyson | b. 1809-08-06 | d. 1892-10-06 | Poet laureate of the UK from 1850 to 1892, following Wordsworth. Buried in Westm) #Thackeray_TJ (Thomas James Thackeray | b. 1796 | d. 1850 | Musician and librettist/lyricist. Wrote The Mountain Sylph (two-act opera, 1834)) #Thackeray_WM (William Makepeace Thackeray | b. 1811-07-18 | d. 1863-12-24 | English journalist, novelist, editor, amateur artist, and lecturer. He wrote for) #Thelwall_John (John Thelwall | b. 1764-07-27 | d. 1834-02-17 | Radical political writer, lecturer, poet, and novelist, who was associated with ) #Thomas_Mr (Mr. Thomas | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Thompson_Mr (Mr. Thompson | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Thomson_Hugh (Hugh Thompson | b. 1860-06-01 | d. 1920-05-07 | Book and periodical illustrator best known for his pen-and-ink illustrations of ) #Tichburne_hist (Robert Tichborne | b. 1604 | d. 1682-07 | Parliamentarian and regicide, he was one of the signers of the death warrant of ) #Tierney_SrMat (Sir Matthew Tierney | b. 1776-11-04 | d. 1845-10-28 | Tierney was a physician who studied medicine in Edinburgh and Glasgow and later ) #Tindal_Mrs_Acton (Henrietta Harrison Tindal | b. 1817-07-19 | d. 1879-05-06 | Author of volumes of poetry, as well as stories and articles in magazines, and n) #Titian (Titian | b. 1488—1490 | d. 1576-08-27 | 16th-century Italian painter, based in Venice, with an international clientele. ) #Tobin_John (John Tobin | b. 1770-01-28 | d. 1804-12-07 | An unsuccessful playwright during his lifetime, Tobin submitted and had rejected) #Traill_James (James Traill | Second to John Henry Christie in his 1821 duel with John Scott. Both men were in) #Trollope_Fr (Frances Milton Trollope | b. 1779-03-10 | d. 1863-10-06 | Prolific and celebrated reform novelist and travel writer. Author of The Domesti) #Tubb_Daniel (Daniel Tubb) #Tuckerman_H (Henry Theodore Tuckerman | b. 1813-04-20 | d. 1871-12-17 | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1853. American travel writer, essayis) #Tully_Miss (Miss Tully | According to the Preface to , Miss Tully is the sister of Richard Tully, Esq., h) #Tuppen_Capt (William Tuppen | In Mitford's time, a captain retired from the Royal West regiment of the London ) #Tuppen_Mrs (Mrs. Tuppen | Spouse of William Tuppen. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #TwissH (Horace Twiss | b. 1787-02-28 | d. 1849-05 | ) #Ude_L (Louis Eustache Ude | b. 1769 | d. 1846 | Served as cook to Louis XVI, as maître d’hôtel to the Earl of Sefton, as chef to) #Valpy_Anne (Anne Valpy | b. 1765-09-14 | d. 1835-04-15 | ) #Valpy_Ant (Anthony Blagrave Valpy | b. 1791-02-10 | d. 1871-03-30 | Son of Dr. Richard Valpy and Mary Benwell. Spouse of Anna Harris Valpy. They had) #Valpy_Catherine (Catherine Valpy French | b. 1795-08-04 | d. 1873 | One of four daughters of Dr. Richard Valpy and his second wife, Mary Benwell; sh) #Valpy_Ed (Mr. Edward Valpy | b. 1764-04 | d. 1832-04-15 | ) #Valpy_John (A. J. (John) Valpy | b. 1786-10-30 | d. 1854-11-19 | Abraham John Valpy, called John or A.J. Dr. Richard Valpy’s second son, Abraham ) #Valpy_Miss (Valpy | A friend of MRM, and one of Dr. Richard Valpy’s as yet unmarried daughters by hi) #Valpy_Penelope (Penelope Valpy French | b. 1798 | d. 1869-03-17 | One of the daughters of Dr. Valpy by his second wife Mary Benwell. She was bapti) #Valpy_Richard (Dr. Richard Valpy | b. 1754-12-07 | d. 1836-03-28 | Richard Valpy (the fourth of that name) was the eldest son of Richard Valpy [III) #Valpy_Sarah (Sarah Frances {Fanny} Valpy Shuter | b. 1790-09-03 | d. 1870-07 | Sarah Frances, called Frances or Fanny, third daughter Dr. Richard Valpy and his) #Vanbrugh (Sir John Vanbrugh | b. 1664-01 | d. 1726-03-26 | A noted architect and successful playwright who wrote original comedies and adap) #Vandyke (Sir Anthony van Dyck | b. 1599-03-22 | d. 1641-12-09 | Flemish portrait painter who became celebrated in England for his portraits of C) #Vane_hist (Henry (Harry) Vane | b. 1613-03 | d. 1662-06-14 | Henry Vane was a Parliamentarian during the English Civil Wars and later served ) #VauxJH (John Hardy Vaux | b. 1782 | d. | Career thief, forger, and swindler, convicted and transported to Australia three) #Vestris_L (Lucia Elizabeth Vestris | b. 1797-03-03 | d. 1856-08-08 | A famous English actor and opera singer who amassed a large fortune over her per) #Victoria_Queen (Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | b. 1819-05-24 | d. 1901-01-22 | After Elizabeth II, who surpassed her on 9 September 2015, Victoria was the long) #Villiers_Geo (George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham | b. 1628-01-30 | d. 1687-04-16 | Restoration-era poet, courtier, and rake, friend of Rochester.) #Vines_Mr (Mr. Vines | Coles says this is the son of Edward Vines, possibly named Jacob, see p. 524, no) #Virgil (Virgil | b. -0070-10-15 | d. -0020-09-21 | Roman poet, author of the Aeneid.) #Visconti_E (Ennio Quirino Visconti | b. 1751-11-01 | d. 1818-02-17 | Expert on Roman sculpture and other antiquities of the ancient world. With his f) #Voltaire (Voltaire | b. 1694 | d. 1778 | Major figure of the French Enlightenment: philosopher, historian, naturalist, es) #Voules_Mr (Mr. Voules | Friend of the Mitfords who visited Bertram House and Three Mile Cross. Likely th) #Voules_Mrs (Mrs. Voules | Friend of the Mitfords. She adopts one of Molly's puppies in 1820. Likely the sp) #Waddington_J (Julia Rattray Waddington | b. 1801 | d. 1862 | Author of four novels. A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Da) #Wakefield_D (Daniel Wakefield | b. 1776 | d. 1846-07-19 | Mentioned in letter of Mitford to Talfourd of June 21 1821, known to Mitford and) #Walker_CE (Charles Edward Walker | b. 1818 | Author of historical tragedies and melodramas written between 1818 and 1829, inc) #Walker_John (John Walker | b. 1781-05-29 | d. 1859-01-05 | English chemist, inventor of the friction match in the late 1820s.) #Walker_Mr (Mr. Walker | Friend of the Mitfords who visited Bertram House. Forename unknown. Dates unknow) #Walker_Mrs (Mrs. Walker | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1842. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Walker_P (Peter Walker | Father of the playwright Charles E. Walker. It is noted that he was a Westminste) #Wallace_William (William Wallace | b. 1270-04-03 | d. 1305-08-23 | The Scottish warrior who led the soldiers against the English in the Scottish Wa) #Wallack_Mr (Mr. Wallack | An actor whom Mitford critiqued for his performance as Brutus.) #Waller_Edmund (Edmund Waller | b. 1606-03-03 | d. 1687-10-21 | Poet and politician remembered for the deviousness of his politics, the wealth o) #Walpole_Hor (Horace Walpole | b. 1745-12-10 | d. 1797-03-02 | English politician, antiquarian, and author. Youngest son of Sir Robert Walpole,) #Walton_I (Izaak Walton | b. 1594 | d. 1683-12-15 | Wrote The Compleat Angler and a book of short biographies, The Lives of John Don) #Wanley_N (Nathaniel Wanley | b. 1634-03 | d. 1680 | Mitford read his The Wonders of the Little World.) #Warde_Mr (James Prescott Warde | b. 1792 | d. 1840 | Acted under Mr. Warde. Tragedian who appeared at Drury Lane and Covent Garden Th) #Wardle_GL (Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle | b. 1762 | d. 1833-11-30 | Radical politician and Member of Parliament for Okehampton from 1807 to 1812. Wi) #Warry_Jos2 (Joseph Warry | b. 1775-11-08 | d. 1822-08-04 | Radical Whig trademan with premises at Minster Street, Reading, who went to Fran) #Warwicke_Miss (Miss Warwicke | Associated with Reading. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Washington_Geo (George Washington | b. 1732-02-22 | d. 1799-12-14 | Virginia landholder, colonial military officer, Commander-in-Chief of the Contin) #Waterton_Mrs (Mrs. Waterton | Mitford correspondent in 1819. Forename unknown. Dates unknown.) #Watteau (Jean-Antoine Watteau | b. 1684-10 | d. 1721-07-18 | French painter known for his bucolic landscapes and country scenes in the Late-B) #Webb_Eliza (Eliza Webb | b. 1797-03-03 | d. 1851-03-24 | Elizabeth Webb, called Eliza, was a neighbor and friend of Mary Russell Mitford.) #Webb_James (James Webb | b. 1769 | d. 1822-01-11 | Prominent manufacturer in the Wokinghambrewing industry, and community leader in) #Webb_Jane (Jane Webb Hayward | b. 1797-03-03 | d. 1847-03 | Friend of Mary Russell Mitford, the daughter of James Webb and Jane Elizabeth Og) #Webb_John (John Webb | b. 1761 | Likely Uncle John, uncle to Eliza and Mary Webb and younger brother to James Web) #Webb_Mary_elder (Aunt Mary Webb | Friend ofMary Russell Mitford. Sister or sister-in-law of James Webb and aunt of) #Webb_Mary_younger (Mary Webb | b. 1796-04-15 | Close friend and frequent correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford. Mary Webb was t) #Webster_J (Mr. J. Webster | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Webster_John (John Webster | b. 1580 | d. 1634 | Early-modern era playwright, author of the Duchess of Malfi.) #Webster_Mrs (Mrs. Webster | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Weirdon_Miss (Miss Weirdon | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1831. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Wellington_Duke (Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington | b. 1769-05-01 | d. 1852-09-14 | Before his fame in the Napoleonic Wars, Wellesley served in the Irish House of C) #Wentworth_WC (William Charles Wentworth | b. 1790-08 | d. 1872-03-20 | Mitford read his A Description of the Colony of New South Wales.) #Weyland_John (John Weyland | b. 1774-12-04 | d. 1854-05-08 | Tory journal editor and political figure. He and William Roberts founded the Chr) #Whateley_Elijah (Elijah Whateley | Wheelwright and carpenter of Three Mile Cross. He is listed by Needham solely as) #Wheeler_James (James Wheeler | A friend of Mitford in 1819-1823. Mitford visited him in Wokingham, along with t) #Wheeler_John (John Wheeler | Spouse of Mrs. John Wheeler.) #Wheeler_Kate (Kate Wheeler | Friend of Miss James. Mitford refers to her as providing home remedies and advic) #Wheeler_Mrs (Mrs. John Wheeler | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1840. Spouse of John Wheeler. Forenam) #Whim (Whim | Mitford's spaniel at Bertram House in 1819.) #White_Mr (Mr. White | Associated with Reading. A Mr. White was an original member of the Ilsley Coursi) #White_Tom (Tom White | Mentioned in connection with Captain Tuppen, may be a relation of Mr. White of R) #White_WF (W. F. White | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u) #WhiteGilbert (Gilbert White | b. 1720-07-18 | d. 1793-06-26 | Gilbert White obtained deacon's orders in 1746 and was fully ordained in 1749; h) #whitekitten_WEpet (white kitten | Female white kitten belonging to Mitford that she proposes to give to Elford. Mi) #Whittaker_Geo (George B. Whittaker | b. 1793-03 | d. 1847-12-13 | George B. Whittaker, publisher and bookseller, was the eldest son of the Rev. Ge) #Whittaker_WB (William Budd Whittaker | b. 1794-12-10 | d. 1834-05-12 | William Budd Whittaker was born in 1794in New Alresford, the second child of the) #Wienholt_Miss (Miss Wienholt | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford, date unknown. Forename unknown. Dates u) #Wilhelmina_Prussia1709 (Frederika Sophie Wilhelmine of Prussia | b. 1709-07-03 | d. 1758-10-14 | House of Hohenzollern, granddaughter of George I of Great Britain, daughter of F) #Wilkie_Wil (William Wilkie | b. 1721-10-05 | d. 1772-10-10 | Scottish poet and minister of Ratho, most known for his epic in nine books, The ) #WilliamIII (William III of England and Ireland and William II of Scotland | b. 1650-11-04 | d. 1702-03-08 | Protestant monarch, House of Hanover. Ousted King James II from power during the) #WilliamIV (William IV, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | b. 1765-08-21 | d. 1837-06-20 | House of Hanover. Successor to his brother George IV, William enjoyed comparativ) #Williams_G (Mr. G. Williams | Actor who appeared in Mitford's play, Charles I at the Victoria Theatre in 1834.) #Williams_Miss (Miss Williams | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1837. Forename unknown. Dates unknown) #Williams_Mr (Mr. Williams | Forename unknown. Dates unknown. May be related to Miss Williams.) #Williams_Thos (Thomas Williams | b. 1755 | d. 1839 | Dissenting lay preacher and writer on politics and Calvinist religion, active 17) #Willis_David (David Willis | b. 1806-12-25 | Son of John and Elizabeth Willis. Baptismal data noted by Needham along with oth) #Willis_John (John Willis | Blacksmith recorded by Needhamon a list of local tradespeople drawn from the Pos) #Willis_NP (Nathaniel Parker Willis | b. 1806-01-20 | d. 1867-01-20 | American poet, journalist, periodical editor, and public lecturer. Also publishe) #Willis_Thomas (Thomas Willis | Blacksmith whose name is recorded by Needham on a list of local tradespeople dra) #Wilmot_James (James Wilmot | b. 1726 | d. 1807 | In 1817, his niece Olivia Serres claimed that he was the author of the Letters o) #Wilmot_John (John Wilmot | b. 1647-04-01 | d. 1680-07-26 | ) #Wilson_Andrew (Andrew Wilson | b. | d. 1736-04-14 | One of the criminals mentioned in Criminal Trials Illustrative of the Tale Entit) #Wilson_John (John Wilson | b. 1785-05-18 | d. 1854-04-03 | John Wilson wrote under the pseudonym Christopher North for Blackwood's Magazine) #Wilson_RT (Sir Robert Thomas Wilson | b. 1777-08-17 | d. 1849-05-09 | Liberal Member of Parliament for Southwark from 1818 to 1831. Served in British ) #Windham_Wm (William Windham | b. 1750 | d. 1810-06-04 | Politican and friend of Edmund Burke. Early in his political career he was a fri) #WindsorEE_ed (Editor of the Windsor and Eton Express | Mitford refers to this person as the Windsor paper man. Presumably the editor or) #Wishart_Geo (George Wishart | b. 1599 | d. 1671-07-26 | Close friend, political supporter, and biographer of James Graham, Duke of Montr) #Wm_Conq (William the Conqueror | b. 1028 | d. 1087-09-09 | Led the Norman invasion of England, defeating the Anglo Saxon King Harold in 106) #Woodburn_J (John Woodburn) #Wordsworth_Dor (Dorothy Wordsworth | b. 1771-12-25 | d. 1855-01-25 | Sister of William Wordsworth; her diary entries, poems, and sketches were not pu) #Wordsworth_Dora (Dorothy (Dora) Wordsworth | b. 1804-08-16 | d. 1847-07-09 | Daughter of Wordsworth, named for her aunt Dorothy Wordsworth and called Dora.) #Wordsworth_Wm (William Wordsworth | b. 1770-04-07 | d. 1850-04-23 | First-generation poet of the Romantic era, Lake Poet and friend of fellow poet C) #Wrangham_Fr (Francis Wrangham | b. 1769-06-11 | d. 1842-12-27 | Prominent Anglican clergyman, author, and book collector who became Archdeacon o) #WrightJ (John Wright | b. 1770 | d. 1844 | Mitford read his Report of the Action, Wright v. Clement: for certain libels pub) #Wylde_H (Harriet Wylde Valpy | b. 1788-01-03 | d. 1864-06-18 | Spouse of A.J. (John) Valpy, they were married in Burrington, Somerset in Februa) #Wyndham_HP (Henry Penruddocke Wyndham | b. 1736-06-04 | d. 1819-05-03 | Whig M.P. Mitford read his edited volume, The Diary of the late George Bubb Dodi) #Yarnold_Mr (Mr. Yarnold | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Yates_Miss (Miss Yates | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1840. Acted under Miss Yates. Forenam) #Yates_Mrs (Mrs. Yates | A correspondent of Mary Russell Mitford in 1835. Forename unknown. Likely the mo) #Young_CM (Charles Mayne Young | b. 1777-01-10 | d. 1856 | Actor who performed at Covent Garden and Drury Lane between 1807 and 1832. Acted) #Young_Ed (Edward Young | b. 1683-07-03 | d. 1765-04-05 | Clergyman and poet, author of Night-Thoughts, important promulgator of the late-) #Young_Mr (Mr. Young | Medical doctor from Reading. Dates unknown.) #Younge_Mr (Mr. Younge | Actor who appeared in Rienzi at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1828. Acted und) #Zouch_T (Thomas Zouch | b. 1737-09-12 | d. 1815-12-17 | Prebendary of Durham and scholar of Izaak Walton. Mitford read his Memoirs of th) #Admetus (Admetus | A king in Greek mythology, he wins the princess Alcestis by achieving the feat o) #Ahab (Ahab | Historic and legendary ancient King of Israel, married to Jezebel.) #Alcestis (Alcestis | A princess in Greek mythology known for her loyalty to her husband and for retur) #Amaziah (Amaziah of Judah | Historical and legendary ancient King of Judah, member of the House of David; th) #Apollo (Apollo | In Greek mythology, the son of Zeus and Leto; one of the twelve Olympians. He wa) #Baal (Baal | Levantine diety associated with Hadad, a storm and fertility god in ancient worl) #Bluebeard_fict (Bluebeard | Title character in French folktale of the same name. Story was best known in Mit) #Cassandra (Cassandra | Daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy, Cassandra was a prophet in anci) #Cupid (Cupid | Classical god of sexual desire and erotic love, known as Eros in ancient Greece ) #David_OT (David | Old Testament figure from the Christian Bible. Apocryphal king of a united kingd) #Deborah (Deborah | Hebrew leader, prophet, and judge, who predicted a woman would kill Sisera, the ) #Hassan_Bedreddin (Prince Bedreddin Hassan | A character in Arabian aTles (also known as One Thousand and One Nights) who app) #Hebe (Hebe | Greek mythological figure, the goodess of youth and the daughter of Zeus and Her) #Hercules (Hercules | Roman god, the son of Jupiter and the mortal Alceme. Known as Heracles in Greek ) #Jael (Jael | Jael fulfilled Deborah’s prophecy that a woman would kill Sisera, the Canaanite ) #Jezebel (Jezebel | Queen of the Israelites, married to King Ahab, who influenced him to worship mul) #John_Apostle (John the Apostle | b. 0006 | d. | Traditionally (and contestedly) the author of the Gospel of John, the fourth boo) #Jonah (Jonah | Prophet from the Hebrew Bible and Old Testament famous for surviving the experie) #Judas_NT (Judas | New Testament figure from the Christian Bible. One of the Jesus's twelve discipl) #Judith_OT (Judith | Apocryphal Old Testament figure from the Christian Bible. Famous for seducing th) #Judy (Judy | Wife of Mr. Punch in manifestations of the Punch and Judy slapstick puppet show ) #Lazarus (Lazarus | According to the Gospel of St. John the Evangelist, Jesus Christ raised or resur) #Master_Fuller (Master Fuller | Old Master Fuller is a figure found in Collectanea Curiosa, where he appears as ) #Nathan (Nathan | Apocryphal Old Testament prophet from the Christian Bible; he related his vision) #Niobe (Niobe | Greek mythological figure who boasted of her fourteen children, (called the Niob) #Peter_NT (Peter | New Testament figure from the Christian Bible. One of Jesus's twelve disciples o) #Prometheus_Aes_char (Prometheus | Prometheus, the title character in the tragedies attributed to Aeschylus such as) #Punch (Punch | The Punch and Judy slapstick puppet shows of England had their roots in the 16th) #Pygmalion (Pygmalion | Mitford generally refers to the version of the myth from Ovid’s Metamorphoses in) #Rapley_Jack_OV (Jack Rapley) #Rehoboam (Rehoboam) #Satan (Satan | In Judeo-Christian theology, the opponent of God and mankind. The word’s derivat) #Venus (Venus | Roman goddess of love and beauty; her counterpart in Greek mythology is Aphrodit) #Vesta (Vesta | Vesta is the Roman goddess of hearth and domesticity. The temple to Vesta was ke) #Abbe_de_L_Epee_DD (Abbé de L’Épée | character in Deaf and Dumb) #Abbot_J (Abbot | Unnamed Abbot Character in Julian.) #Admetus_char (Admetus | Character in Alcestis by Euripides.) #Alberti (Alberti | Alberti is a character in Rienzi; Captain of the Guard. Played by Mr. Thompson a) #Alfonso_J (Alfonso | Character of the king of Naples, disguised as Theodore, in Julian.) #Alice (Alice | Possibly a deleted character in Mitford's Charles I. Coles identifies the undate) #Ambassador_R (Ambassador | The character of the unnamed Ambassador in Rienzi.) #Annabel_J (Annabel | Wife of Julian, in Julian.) #Annaly_Lady_char (Annaly Lady | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond.) #Annaly_Miss_char (Annaly Miss | Daughter of Lady Annaly in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond.) #Antigone_A (Antigone | Title character in Antigone.) #ArchBishop_Jul (Archbishop | Character of an unnamed Archbishop in Julian.) #Ariel (Ariel | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest who serves Prospero under magical duress.) #Ascanius (Ascanius | Character from Virgil’s Aeneid.) #Aspatia (Aspatia | Character in The Maid’s Tale.) #Balfour_John (John Balfour | Character in Old Mortality.) #Bardolph_WS (Bardolph | Character in Shakespeare’s Henry V and Henry IV Part I, Henry IV Part II, and th) #Beatrice_MuchAdo (Beatrice | Niece of Leonato, character in Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing.) #Bellario (Bellario | Character in Philaster, also called Euphrasia.) #Bennet_Mrs_fict (Mrs. Bennet | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.) #Berta_R (Berta | Attendant to Claudia in Rienzi.) #Bertone_J (Bertone | Bertone, nicknamed Bert, is the character of a servant to Count D'Alba in Julian) #Betsy_ShopLodger_OV (Betsy | One of the two characters in Our Village who lodges with the shopkeepers, and te) #Blacksmith_OV (George | Character of a blacksmith introduced in the introductory sketch of Our Village. ) #BlacksmithsWife_OV (blacksmith's wife | Character introduced in the introductory sketch of Our Village . She and her hus) #Blondel_fict (Blondel | Fictional character loosely based on a 13th-century French trouvére or troubador) #Bradshaw (Lord President Bradshaw | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Bradwardine_Baron_WS (Baron of Bradwardine | Jacobite character in Walter Scott’s Waverley ; He lives at Tully-Veolan, and is) #Bramble_Matthew (Matthew Bramble | character in The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker by Smollett.) #BramMay_companion_OV #BranghtonMiss_Evelina (Miss Branghton | Character in Evelina; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ) #Brent_Joel_OV (Joel Brent | Protagonist of A Village Beau, the Our Village story, where he courts Harriet. H) #BriggsMr_Cecilia (Mr. Briggs | Character in Fanny Burney’s Cecilia .) #Brulgruddery_D (Dennis Brulgruddery | A character in the George Colman the younger play, John Bull the Englishman’s Fi) #BustlingDame_OV (bustling dame | Character mentioned in the introductory sketch of Our Village . She is noted for) #Byron_Harriet (Harriet Byron | Character from Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison who is r) #Cafarello (Lord Cafarello | Lord Cafarello is a character in Rienzi; one of the members of the Colonna facti) #Caliban (Caliban | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest who chafes against his magically-enforced) #Calvi_J (Calvi | a Sicilian noble in Julian) #Camilla (Camilla Donato | daughter of Senator Donato in Mitford’s play Foscari) #Camilla_char (Camilla | Title character in Camilla; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of her in ) #Camillo_R (Camillo | Camillo is a character in Rienzi; Rienzi's servant. Played by Mr. C. Jones as pe) #Cantwell (Dr. Cantwell | Title character in Bickerstaff’s comedy The Hypocrite , an adaptation of Tartuff) #Carton_Sidney (Sidney Carton | Protagonist in A Tale of Two Cities; he is a young, alcoholic London junior barr) #Catherine_Ab (Catherine | Character in The Abbot.) #Celso_F (Celso | Character in Foscari; mentioned in the Cast List as a follower of Erizzo. played) #Centinel_Ch1 (Centinel | A character in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Chas1_MRM (Charles the First | King of England in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Chas_Grandison_fict (Sir Charles Grandison | Title character of Samuel Richardson’s novel The History of Sir Charles Grandiso) #Clarissa_fict (Clarissa | Title character of Samuel Richardson’s novel Clarissa. Became proverbial for an ) #Claudia_R (Claudia | daughter of Cola di Rienzi in Rienzi.) #Clementina_della_Poretta (Clementina della Poretta | A character from Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison, who r) #Clerk_OV (clerk | Character of the county clerk who performs the marriage ceremony between Hannah ) #Collins_Mr_fict (Mr. Collins | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.) #Colonna_Ang (Angelo Colonna | Character in Rienzi.) #Colonna_Lady (Lady Colonna | Wife of Stephen Colonna in Rienzi.) #Colonna_Stph (Stephen Colonna | Character in Rienzi. Father of Angelo Colonna) #Constance_KJ (Constance | Character in The Life and Death of King John.) #Cook1 (Cook | Cook Mitford hired in Reading for Bertram House on February 13, 1819. Works for ) #Cook2 (Cook | Cook Mitford hired Reading for Bertram House on March 14, 1820. She is employed ) #Cook3 (Cook | Cook Mitford hired Readingfor Bertram House, ahead of their move to Three Mile C) #Cook_Ch1 (Cook | Solicitor to the Commons in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Coriolanus_C (Coriolanus | Title character in Coriolanus) #Cosmo (Cosmo Donato | son of Senator Donato in Foscari) #Cromwell_MRM (Oliver Cromwell | Cromwell’s character in King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Curate_OV (Mr. B. | The character of the curate is introduced in the first sketch of Our Village . H) #Cypress_Mr (Mr. Cypress | Character in Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey. Identified by Mitford and others as a sa) #DAlba (Count D’Alba | a powerful Nobleman in Julian.) #Dandie_Dinmont (Dandie Dinmont | Character in Guy Mannering.) #Darcy_fict (Fitzwilliam Darcy | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.) #Dauphin_WS (The Dauphin | The character of the Dauphin is the son of the King of France in Shakespeare’s H) #Deans_Jeanie_WS (Jeanie Deans | character in The Heart of Midlothian by Walter Scott , heroine and sister of Eff) #Denison_Jenny_WS (Jenny Denison | Character in Old Mortality by Walter Scott . Edith Bellenden’s maid.) #Desdemona_O (Desdemona | character in Othello) #Dido_Aeneid (Dido | Character from Virgil’s Aeneid; Aeneas’s wife.) #Dirk_Hatteraick (Dirk Hatteraick | character in Guy Mannering.) #Dogberry_MA (Dogberry | character in Much Ado About Nothing) #Doge_F (Doge Foscari | character in Mitford’s play Foscari See also historical counterpart: Doge Foscar) #Don_Quixote_char (Don Quixote | Title character in Don Quixote) #Donato (Donato Senator | character in Foscari) #Dousterwivel_WS (Dousterwivel | Character in The Antiquary) #Downes (Downes | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #DubsterMr_Camilla (Camilla | Character in Camilla; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ) #DukeSr_AYLI (Duke Senior | In As You Like It, the character of Duke Senior, the older brother of the usurpi) #Dulcinea_DQ (Dulcinea del Toboso | Name of idealized female character in Don Quixote (who is mentioned in the text ) #Edie_Ochiltree (Edie Ochiltree | character in The Antiquary.) #Ellis_Robert_OV (Robert Ellis | Character mentioned in the Our Village, volume 1 sketch Hannah as a poor competi) #Elspeth (Elspeth | Steenie’s grandmother in Walter Scott’s The Antiquary .) #Erizzo (Erizzo | Count Erizzo, character in Mitford’s play Foscari) #Evans_John_OV (John Evans | One of the villagers mentioned in the introductory sketch of Our Village . He is) #Evans_JohnWife_OV (Mrs. Evans | Deceased wife of the Our Village sketch character John Evans. Forename not given) #Fairfax (Lord Fairfax | General of the Parliamentary Army in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Falstaff_WS (Falstaff | Character in Shakespeare’s Henry IV, part one, Henry IV, part two, and Merry Wiv) #Ferdinand (Ferdinand | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest who is shipwrecked on Prospero's Island, ) #Fiesco_fict (Fiesco | Title character of Mitford’s tragedy Fiesco.) #Flosky (Ferdinando Flosky | Character in Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey. Identified by Mitford and others as a sa) #Foscari_Fr (Foscari Francesco | character in Foscari) #Frances_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Frances | Character in the Our Village sketch Modern Antiques. She and her sister Theodosi) #Frangipani (Frangipani | Character in Rienzi, a partisan of Ursini, also a nobleman. Played by Mr. Bland ) #Friday (Friday | Character who becomes Robinson Crusoe's friend and companion in Daniel Defoe's T) #frost_bitten_gent_OV (frost-bitten gentleman) #Glenalvon (Glenalvon | Secondary character in Douglas.) #Gloucester (Duke of Gloucester | Son of King Charles I, a boy of seven years old in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Goodwin_Col (Colonel Goodwin | Roundhead character in The Roundhead's Daughter; father of the title character.) #Goodwin_Mabel (Mabel Goodwin | Title character in The Roundhead's Daughter.) #Great_Farmhouse_farmer_OV ( | Unnamed farmer, who lives with his wife at M. farmhouse and raises greyhounds, f) #Grisildi (Grisildi | Character in The Clerk's Tale from Canterbury Tales, also called Griselda or Pat) #Grizzle_Lord (Lord Grizzle | Character in the pantomime Tom Thumb. John Liston played Lord Grizzle in a Hayma) #Grizzy_Marriage (Miss Grizzy | Character in Marriage. Mitford’s favorite character from the novel; she admires ) #Gulliver (Lemuel Gulliver | Titular character in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels.) #Hacker_Ch1 (Hacker | Colonel of the Guard in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Hamlet_H (Hamlet | character in Hamlet) #Hammond_Ch1 (Hammond | Governor of the Isle of Wight in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Harriet_ShopLodger_OV (Harriet | One of the two characters introduced in Our Village who lodges with the shopkeep) #Harrison (Harrison | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Helen_H (Helen | character in Helen) #Helen_pet_OV (Helen | Favorite greyhound of the farmer, who lives with his wife at M. farmhouse, featu) #Hengo_B (Hengo | character in Bonduca) #Henry_Ab (Henry | Character in Walter Scott’s novel The Abbot.) #Herbert_Ch1 (Sir Thomas Herbert | A Gentleman attending on the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Hermione_WT (Hermione | character in The Winter’s Tale) #HughSir_Camilla (Camilla | Character in Camilla; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ) #Iago_O (Iago | Character in Othello.) #Imogen_C (Imogen | character in Cymbeline) #Ireton (Ireton | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Isabella_Dante (Isabella | Character from Dante’s Inferno.) #Isabella_Meas4Meas (Isabella | Sister of Claudio, character in Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure .) #Jack_Rover (Jack Rover | A character from the play Wild Oats.) #Jacky_Marriage (Miss Jacky | Character in Marriage; Mitford admires Ferrier’s characterization of her.) #Jailer_F (Jailer | character in Foscari) #Jem_Eusden (James (Jem) Eusden Eusden James Jem | Character described in the Our Villagesketch, The Hard Summer . He is one of the) #Jervois_Emily (Emily Jervois | Character in Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison. She is th) #Julian (Julian | Melfi’s son in Julian) #Justice_Lord (The Lord Chief Justice | Most powerful official of the law in England. Character in Shakespeare’s Henry I) #Katharine_H8 (Katharine | character in Henry VIII) #King_Corny (Corny | King Corny was the king of Ireland in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1817)) #King_Philip_WS (King Philip | King Philip is the King of France in Shakespeare’s King John) #LadyFairfax (Lady Fairfax | Married to Lord Fairfax in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #LadySingleton_fict (Lady Singleton | A character in Lady Morgan’s novel The O’Donnel’s.) #Lambourne_Kenil (Michael Lambourne | Character in Walter Scott’s novel Kenilworth. Nephew of innkeeper Giles Gosling.) #Laura_F (Laura | Senator Donato’s niece in Foscari, as mentioned in Cast List) #Leanti_J (Leanti | a Sicilian noble in Julian) #Leon (Leon | Character in Rule a Wife and Have a Wife by Beaumont and Fletcher) #Leontes_WT (Leontes | character in The Winter’s Tale) #Lieutenant_OV (Lieutenant | Character mentioned in the introductory sketch of Our Village . He also appears ) #Lizzy_fict (Elizabeth Bennet | Character in Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice.) #Lizzy_OV (Lizzy Brent | The three-year-old girl who often accompanies the narrator of Our Village on her) #LizzysFather_OV (Mr. Brent | Father of the character of LizzyLizzy, the three-year old girl who accompanies t) #LizzysMother_OV (Mrs. Brent | Mother of the character of Lizzy, the three-year old girl who accompanies the na) #Lucy_OV_fict (Lucy | Title character of the Our Village story. Lucy is a servant in the narrator's ho) #Macbeth (Macbeth | Title character in Macbeth.) #Macbeth_Lady (Lady Macbeth | Character in Macbeth) #Maclaughlan_Marriage (Lady MacLaughlan | Character in Marriage; Mitford admires Ferrier’s characterization of her.) #Maggs_Sally_DP (Sally Maggs | Character in Deaf as a Post) #Maimoune (Maimoune | Character from Arabian Tales.) #MandlebertE_char (Mr. Edgar Mandlebert | Character in Camilla; Mitford says of this character that the very name is as st) #Maritornes_DQ (Maritornes | Character in Don Quixote. Servant at the inn who makes an appointment with Don Q) #Marten (Marten | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Mary_Marriage (Mary | Heroine of Marriage. Mitford does not admire Ferrier’s depiction of her heroine,) #Marygold_pet_OV (Marygold | Fictional pet dog in Tom Cordery.) #Mason_OV (Mr. Strong | Character introduced in the first sketch of Our Village . He is said to be parti) #MasonsWife_OV (Mrs. Strong | Wife of the mason in Our Village. She is said to be tall, contrasting his shortn) #Master_Peter_DQ (Master Peter | Master Peter is the puppetmaster in Don Quixote; his puppets are destroyed in th) #May-flower_OV (May-flower | Greyhound dog who is featured as the narrator's companion in many Our Villageske) #MCrule_Mrs (Mrs. M’Crule | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1817)) #Meg_Merrilies (Meg Merrilies | character in Guy Mannering.) #Melfi (The Duke of Melfi | Uncle to Alfonso and Regent of the Kingdom of Naples in Julian) #Miranda (Miranda | Character in Shakespeare's The Tempest. She is the daughter of Prospero and is i) #Miss_Crawley_fict (Miss Crawley | A character in Lady Morgan’s novel Florence Macarthy.) #ModAntiques_ServingMaid_OV (elderly beau's maid | One of the servant characters in Modern Antiques from Our Village. Proper name n) #ModAntiquesBeau_OV (elderly beau | Unnamed character in the Our Village sketch, Modern Antiques, who is rumored to ) #ModAntiquesBrother_OV (elderly beau's brother | Character in Modern Antiques in Our Village. He is the younger brother of elderl) #Montgomery_J (James Montgomery | b. 1771-11-04 | d. 1854-04-30 | Editor of the Sheffield Iris and friend of Barbara Hofland. Political reformer a) #Montresor_Phil (Sir Philip Montresor | Royalist character in The Roundhead's Daughter.) #Morris_DrP (Dr. Peter Morris | Protagonist in John Gibson Lockhart’s 1819 novel, Peter’s Letters to his Kinfolk) #Mosse_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Elizabeth (Mossy) Mosse | Title character of the Our Village sketch, Mrs. Mosse. Nicknamed Mossy. She is a) #Mr_Dexter_fict (Mr. Dexter | A character in Lady Morgan’s novel The O’Donnel’s.) #Mrs_MCrule (Mrs. MCrule | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1812)) #Nerissa_MerchVenice (Nerissa | Portia’s maid, character in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice. Nerissa disguises ) #Nicholson_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Nicholson | Character in Our Village, volume 5, Early Recollections: A Widow Gentlewoman. Ac) #Nicky_Marriage (Miss Nicky | Character in Marriage; Mitford admires Ferrier’s characterization of her.) #North_Christopher (Christopher North | Pseudonym for John Wilson in Blackwood’s Magazine.) #Nuncio (Nuncio | Character in Rienzi. Known by his title; no proper name given.) #Nym_WS (Corporal Nym | Character in Shakespeare’s Henry V and Merry Wives of Windsor.) #Odysseus (Odysseus | Hero of Homer's The Odyssey, whose twenty-year journey to return home from the T) #OFaley_Miss_char (Miss O’Faley | Character in Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1817)) #Officer_OV (officer | Character introduced in Our Village. He lives with his family in a small detache) #OfficersEldestSon_OV (officer's son | Character introduced in Our Village as admiring Lizzy. Proper name not given.) #Oldbuck_Jonathan (John Oldbuck | character in The Antiquary.) #OLeary_FM (Terence Oge O’Leary | Character of an Irish hedge schoolmaster in Lady Morgan's novel Florence Macarth) #Olivia_F (Olivia | One of the Ladies in Foscari) #Orestes_Aes_char (Orestes | Orestes, title character in the play Choephoræ or the Libation Bearers, attribut) #Orestes_Eur_char (Orestes | Orestes, title character in the play Orestes attributed to Euripides.) #Orlando_AsYouLikeIt_char (Orlando de Boys | Orlando de Boys who falls in love with Rosalind in Shakespeare’s As You Like It.) #Ormond_H (Harry Ormond | Protagonist of Maria Edgeworth’s Ormond (1812).) #Ossian (Ossian | The narrator and purported author of a cycle of epic poems published by James Ma) #Othello_O (Othello | character in Othello) #OVNarrator (Our Village narrator | The narrator of all the Our Village stories. Though unnamed throughout the serie) #OVNarratorsFather (Our Village narrator's father | The character of the father of the narrator of the Our Village stories. In some ) #OVNarratorsMother (Our Village narrator's mother | The character of the mother of the narrator of the Our Village stories. In some ) #Paolo_J (Paolo | Paolo is the character of Julian's servant in Julian. Surname not given. Played ) #Paolo_R (Paolo | Paolo, the character in Rienzi.) #Penelope (Penelope | In The Odyssey, Penelope is the spouse of Odysseus who awaited his return and fe) #Penruddock_WF (Penruddock | character in Wheel of Fortune.) #Phaeton_Ovid (Phaeton | Character in Metamorphoses, book two. Phaeton attempts to drive his father the S) #Phoebe_OV (Phoebe | Character introduced in Our Village as the daughter of the Rose Inn landlord. Sh) #Pickle_P (Pickle Peregrine | Protagonist of Tobias Smollett’s The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, In Which ar) #Pierce_G (Pierce | Character of a jester who serves the King in Gaston de Blondeville.) #Pisani_F (Count Pisani | Character of Count Pisani in Foscari.) #Pleydell (Pleydell | character in Guy Mannering.) #Polonius (Polonius | Chief counselor of the king; character in Shakespeare’s Hamlet.) #Pride_Ch1 (Pride | The character of an Officer in the Parliamentary Army in Mitford's play, Charles) #PrinceEdward1767 (Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn | b. 1767-11-02 | d. 1820-01-23 | 4th son of King George III, his daughter became Queen Victoria, following the 18) #PrincessE_Ch1 (Elizabeth Stuart | b. 1635-12-28 | d. 1650-09-08 | The second daughter of Charles I and Queen Henrietta Maria. She was imprisoned d) #Prospero (Prospero | Main character from Shakespeare's The Tempest who, upon being shipwrecked on an ) #Queen_Ch1 (Queen Henrietta Maria | Queen of England in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Queen_Dollalolla (Queen Dollalolla | Comic role in Henry Fielding’s play Tom Thumb, adapted in Mitford’s day by Kane ) #Queen_Hamlet (Gertrude, Queen of Denmark | character in Hamlet) #Rachel_Aunt (Aunt Rachel | Character in Glenfergus by Mudie.) #Rebecca_Ivanhoe (Rebecca | character in Ivanhoe.) #RecruitingSerjeant_OV (Recruiting Serjeant | Character mentioned in Our Village who is courting Phoebe. In A Parting Glance a) #Renzi_J (Renzi | Character of an old Huntsman in Julian) #RetiredPublican_OV (Mr. H. | A particularly patriotic character introduced in Our Village. He is based on a n) #RetiredPublicansWife_OV (Mrs. H. | The wife of the character of the retired publican from the introductory sketch o) #RichardIII_WS (Richard III | Title character from Shakespeare's The Life and Death of Richard III, loosely ba) #Richelieu_EBL (Richelieu | Title character from Edward Bulwer-Lytton Richelieu, loosely based on the histor) #Rienzi_Cola (Cola di Rienzi | character in Rienzi.) #Robin_Goodfellow (Robin Goodfellow | Mischievous fairy or sprite from folklore. In Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's ) #Robinson_Crusoe (Robinson Crusoe | Titular character of Daniel Defoe's famous novel about a man shipwrecked near Tr) #Rolla_P (Rolla | character in Pizarro) #Rosa_R (Rosa | Attendant to Claudia in Rienzi) #RoseInnLandlord_OV (Rose Inn landlord | Character introduced in Our Village, the introductory sketch of the Our Village ) #RoseInnLandlordsSon_OV (Rose Inn landlord's son | This character is introduced in Our Village. He is the brother of Phoebe. Proper) #RoseInnLandlordsWife_OV (Rose Inn landlord's wife | This character is introduced in Our Village. She has a son, and a daughter named) #Rowena_WS (Rowena | Character in Ivanhoe) #Salisbury (Lord Salisbury | A Commissioner appointed by Parliament to treat with the King in Mitford's play,) #Sancho_Panza (Sancho Panza | Squire character, a former farmer enlisted by Don Quixote in his service, from D) #Sardanapalus_By (Sardanapalus | Title character from Byron's tragedy Sardanapalus, about a doomed Assyrian tyran) #Savelli (Lord Savelli | Lord Savelli is a character in Rienzi; one of the members of the Colonna faction) #Say (Lord Say | The character of a Commissioner appointed by Parliament to treat with the King i) #Sebastian_TN (Sebastian | Character in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.) #Selby_Lucy (Lucy Selby | A character in Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison.) #Selby_Nancy (Nancy Selby | A character Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison.) #Serjeant_Kite (Serjeant Kite | Character from George Farquhar's play The Recruiting Officer. Forename not given) #servant_Ch1 (Servant of Cromwell | The character of the servant belonging to Cromwell in Mitford's play, Charles I.) #Sforza (Sforza | Character of Sforza in Foscari. See also the character's historical counterpart:) #shivering_lady_OV (shivering lady | A character whom the narrator encounters in the Our Village story Frost and Thaw) #Shoemaker_OV (shoemaker | Character described in Our Village as a sober, industrious man. Proper name not ) #ShoemakersDaughter_OV (shoemaker's daughter | Character described in Our Village. She goes from the age of fourteen to sixteen) #ShoemakersWife_OV (shoemaker's wife | Character introduced in Our Village. Proper name not given.) #Shopkeeper_OV (shopkeeper | Character mentioned in Our Village. Proper name not given.) #ShopkeepersWife (shopkeeper's wife | Character mentioned in Our Village. Proper name not given.) #Smith_theHatter_OV (Mr. Smith | Character in the Our Village, volume 1 story Hannah. He is the father of the sui) #Smith_William_OV (William Smith | Character of the suitor of Hannah in the Our Village story of that name.) #SmithMr_Evelina (Mr. Smith | Character in Evelina; Mitford admires Burney’s characterization of him in her a ) #Sophy_PPchar (Sophy | Character in Tobias Smollett’s The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle (1751)) #Strong_John_OV (John Strong | Son of the Our Village character the mason and the mason's wife. He appears as a) #Teresa_R (Teresa | Attendant to Claudia in Rienzi) #Theodosia_Mrs_OV (Mrs. Theodosia | One of the two sister characters in the Our Village story Modern Antiques. Theod) #Tichburne (Tichburn | A Judge appointed by Parliament to try the King in Mitford’s play, Charles I.) #Trueman_T (Timothy Trueman | Pseudonym used by Mr. Johnson. Author of A Letter to the Independent Electors of) #Tubb_Dr_OV (Dr. Tubb | Title character of the doctor in the Our Village, volume two sketch. Francis Nee) #Ugolino (Count Ugolino | Character from Dante’s Inferno. Guilty of treason.) #Ulric_O (Ulric | character in Otto of Wittelsbach) #Ursini (Ursini | Leader of the Ursini family in Mitford’s Rienzi.) #Valore_J (Valore | a Sicilian noble in Julian) #Vane (Sir Harry Vane | A Commissioner appointed by Parliament to treat with the King in Mitford’s play,) #Varney_Kenil (Richard Varney | Character in Walter Scott’s novel Kenilworth. Squire to the Earl of Leicester.) #Vicar_OV (vicar | Character of the vicar from Our Village, volume 1, who, in the sketch A Parting ) #Viola_TN (Viola | Character in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.) #Viper_pet_OV (Viper | Mr. Sidney's pet terrier in An Old Bachelor.) #Volumnia_C (Volumnia | character in Coriolanus) #Wealthy_Renovator_OV (wealthy renovator | Character introduced in Our Village as an wealthy man who continually refurbishe) #Western_Sophia_TJchar (Western Sophia | Squire Western’s daughter, model of virtue, beauty, and all good qualities. Char) #Wheeler_OV (wheeler | Character introduced in Our Village as a very civil and courteous man. The curat) #WheelersWife_OV (wheeler's wife | Character introduced in Our Village. With her husband, she lodges the curate at ) #White_Spirit_WS (the White Spirit | The White Spirit is a supernatural guardian spirit character in Walter Scott’s T) #Willis_David_OV (David Willis | One of the cricket players featured in A Country Cricket Match. In his Mitford P) #Wilson_Dame_OV (Dame Wilson | A character in the Our Village sketch Hannah. She is the mother of Hannah and th) #Wilson_Hannah_OV (Hannah Wilson Smith | Title character of the Our Village story Hannah. She is wooed by the secretly we) #Wilson_John_OV (John Wilson | Character in the Our Village story Hannah. He is the deceased father of the titl) #Wilson_Susan_OV (Susan Wilson | Younger sister of the character Hannah, the title character of the Our Village s) #WmTell_SK (William Tell | Title character from Knowles's play William Tell, loosely based on the pseudohis) #Wolsey_H8 (Wolsey | character in Henry VIII) #Zeno_F (Count Zeno | Count Zeno in Foscari) indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (surname) contains a family (inherited) name, as opposed to a given, baptismal, or nick name. [13.2.1. Personal Names] (forename) contains a forename, given or baptismal name. [13.2.1. Personal Names] (generational name component) contains a name component used to distinguish otherwise similar names on the basis of the relative ages or generations of the persons named. [13.2.1. Personal Names] (name link) contains a connecting phrase or link used within a name but not regarded as part of it, such as van der or of. [13.2.1. Personal Names] (additional name) contains an additional name component, such as a nickname, epithet, or alias, or any other descriptive phrase used within a personal name. [13.2.1. Personal Names] (role name) contains a name component which indicates that the referent has a particular role or position in society, such as an official title or rank. [13.2.1. Personal Names] (place name) contains an absolute or relative place name. [13.2.3. Place Names] @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. Suggested values include: 1] #Abingdon (Abingdon, Berkshire, England | Abingdon (now called Abingdon on Thames or Abingdon-on-Thames,) is a market town); 2] #Adriatic_Sea (Adriatic Sea | Body of water that separates Italy from the Balkans.); 3] #Agincourt (Agincourt, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France | Agincourt is a commune in the Meurthe-et-Moselle department in northeastern Fran); 4] #Aldermaston (Aldermaston | Village that Mitford mentions visiting with her father and the dogs in the Journ); 5] #Alresford_Hamps (New Alresford, Hampshire, England | Birthplace of Mary Russell Mitford, who lived at 27 Broad Street until about the); 6] #America (the Americas | For generalized references to the Americas.); 7] #Amsterdam (Amsterdam, Netherlands | The capital and largest city init the Netherlands. A key center for finance and ); 8] #Antwerp_city (Antwerp, Belgium | The capital city of Antwerp Province in the Flemish Region, known colloquially a); 9] #Arborfield (Arborfield | A village in England. Mitford mentions in her Journal visiting Arborfield on Mar); 10] #Ashmolean_Old (Ashmolean | In Mitford's time, the Ashmolean collection was housed in the 1683 Old Ashmolean); 11] #AssizeHall_Reading (Assize Hall, Reading, Berkshire, England | Assize Court building in central Reading. The current Reading Crown Court Buildi); 12] #Athens (Athens | Ancient world city-state and currently the capital of Greece. During Mitford's t); 13] #Athens_city (Athens, Greece | The capital city of Greece. The city was named after Athena, the Greek goddess o); 14] #Atlantic (Atlantic Ocean | The ocean that extends between, on the Eastern side, Europe and Africa, and, on ); 15] #Audley_End (Audley End, Essex, England | During Mitford’s life, the Essexfamily seat of Richard Griffin, second Baron Bra); 16] #Austria (Austria | Country in central Europe, now the Republic of Austria, made up of nine federate); 17] #AveMariaLane (Ave Maria Lane, London, England | Runs between Ludgate Hill and Amen Court in the City of London. Home to the Stat); 18] #Baltimore (Baltimore, Maryland, USA); 19] #Banqueting_House (The Banqueting House, Whitehall, London, England | Designed by Inigo Jones, the Banqueting House in London is the only surviving re); 20] #Barbican ( | Area within the London City Corporation.); 21] #Barton_street (Barton Street, Westminster, London, England | J. B. Monck lived at 10 Barton Street in the 1820s. Mitford mentions this as his); 22] #Basingstoke (Basingstoke, Hampshire, England | Town in Hampshire, in south central England, near the source of the River Loddon); 23] #Bath_city (Bath, Somerset, England | A city in the county of Somerset in south west England, located in the valley of); 24] #Bear_Inn (The Bear Inn, Reading, Berkshire, England | Located at 22 Bridge Street in Reading. Building no longer standing.); 25] #Beaurepaire (Beaurepaire House South East England 51.3191 -1.09 | Beaurepaire House was the seat and estate of the Brocas family, located in Braml); 26] #Bedford (Bedford, Bedfordshire, England | The county town of Bedfordshire, in the east of England. It was founded at a for); 27] #Berkshire (Berkshire, England | The county of Berkshire, England, abbreviated Berks.); 28] #Berlin (Berlin, Germany); 29] #BernersSt (Berners Street, London, England | In London, location of nearest postal receiving office to Barbara Hofland’s addr); 30] #Bertram_house (Bertram House, Berkshire, England | Mansion built by George Mitford for his family residence, begun in April 1802 an); 31] #Bickham_village (Bickham, Somerset, England | Hamlet near Plymouth, and residence of Sir William Elford, who lived there until); 32] #BillingbearPk (Billingbear Park, Berkshire, England | During Mitford’s life, the Berkshire estate of Richard Griffin, second Baron Bra); 33] #Birmingham_city (Birmingham, West Midlands, England | A city in the West Midlands, formerly part of the historic county of Warwickshir); 34] #Bisham_Abbey (Bisham Abbey, Bisham, Berkshire, England | A manor house in Berkshire, named for the priory that once stood on the site. It); 35] #Bond_Street (Bond Street | A fashionable shopping street in the West End of London.); 36] #Boston (Boston, Massachusetts, USA | One of the oldest cities in America; an important New England seaport, trading c); 37] #Bramley_vil (Bramley, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire, located ten miles south of Reading, near Silchester.); 38] #Bramshill_city (Bramshill, Hampshire, England | A parish in the county of Hampshire, near Farley Hill and Swallowfield.); 39] #Brazil (Brazil | Largest country in South America.); 40] #Brenta (Brenta River, Italy | An Italian river that flows from the Trentino region in northern Italy into the ); 41] #Brentford (Brentford, Middlesex, England | In the nineteenth century, a village near Hownslow, west of London at the conflu); 42] #Brescia (Brescia, Lombardy, Italy | Northern Italian city ruled by the Venetian Republic in the mid-fifteenth centur); 43] #Brighton (Brighton, East Sussex, England | A resort town on the south coast of Great Britain, popularized by George IV whil); 44] #Bristol (Bristol, Bristol, England | City in county of the same name in south west England. Historically, an importan); 45] #Brussels (Brussels, Belgium); 46] #Buckinghamshire (Buckinghamshire, England | County in southeast England; one of the home counties nearest to London. County ); 47] #Bull_Ring (Bull Ring, Birmingham, Warwickshire, England | Began in the twelfth century as a central market district for Birmingham. From t); 48] #BurghfieldBr (Burghfield Bridge | Hamlet near Reading named after a bridge crossing the River Kennett. The existin); 49] #Burghley_House (Burghley House, Cambridgeshire, England | English country house that has been the seat of the Earls of Essex since Elizabe); 50] #Burnt_Common (Burnt Common | An area that was set aside for the poor upon the enclosure of Mortimer Common in); 51] #Cambridge_city (Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England | City on the river Cam, north of London, in Cambridgeshire. Location of Cambridge); 52] #Carisbrooke (Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight, England | Village near Newport on the Isle of Wight. Charles I was imprisoned at Carisbroo); 53] #ChalkFarm (Chalk Farm, London, England | District on the outskirts of London, between Camden Town and Hampstead: the site); 54] #Charing_Cross (Charing Cross, London, England | Before the early 20th century, Charing Cross referred to a district (and postal ); 55] #Cheshire_county (Cheshire, England | County in the north west of England. Its county town is Chester.); 56] #Chicago (Chicago, Illinois, USA); 57] #China (China | spacious and populous land in East Asia with an ancient history, of interest to ); 58] #Chippenham (Chippenham, Wiltshire, England | Market town in Wiltshire, east of Bath. Founded on the River Avon and served by ); 59] #Church_StMary (St Mary's Church | ); 60] #Cincinnati (Cincinnati, Ohio, USA | City in south west Ohio, settled in 1788 at the confluence of the Licking and Oh); 61] #Coley_Berks (Coley Park, Berkshire, England | An estate just south west of Reading. The Moncks owned Coley Park from 1810 and ); 62] #copse_Dearesley (Mr. Dearesley's copse | Mr. Dearesley's copse near Bertram House. Mitford went primrosing there in March); 63] #cottage_TMC (cottage at Three Mile Cross | House belonging to Richard Body in Three Mile Cross where Mary Russell Mitford m); 64] #Covent_Garden_Theatre (Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, London, England | A West End theater located in Covent Garden in the London borough of Westminster); 65] #Coventry_city (Coventry, Warwickshire, England | City in the West Midlands in England, formerly associated with Warwickshire.); 66] #Crecy (Crécy, Picardy, France | Village in northern France. Location of the Battle of Crécy in 1436, during whic); 67] #Devonshire (Devonshire, England | County in the south west of England bordering the English Channel and the Bristo); 68] #Devonshire_county (Devonshire | The county of Devonshire, now known as Devon, in the south west of England.); 69] #Donnington_Castle (Donnington Castle, Donnington, Berkshire, England | Ruined medieval castle, of which only the 14th-century gatehouse remains standin); 70] #Dorset_county (Dorsetshire, England | A county in southwest England on the English Channel coast. Known as Dorset toda); 71] #Drury_Lane_Theatre (Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, England | A West End theater located in Covent Garden in the London borough of Westminster); 72] #Dublin (Dublin, Leinster, Ireland | The capital and largest city of Ireland, located in the province of Leinster at ); 73] #Edinburgh (Edinburgh, Lothian, Scotland | The capital and second-largest city in Scotland, located on the Firth of Forth. ); 74] #Egham (Egham | According to her Journal, Mitford rode through Egham on June 27, 1820.); 75] #EgyptianHall (Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly, London, England | A London building in Piccadilly, designed in the Egyptian style, Egyptian Hall w); 76] #Elm_Court (Elm Court, Temple, London, England | Street in the Temple area of London. Mitford addressed letters to Talfourd at 2 ); 77] #Eng_Channel (The English Channel | Part of the Atlantic Ocean, it is a body of water that joins the North Sea to th); 78] #England (England | Country in the British Isles. Borders Scotland and Wales. London is the capital ); 79] #Englefield_House (Englefield House, Englefield, Berkshire, England | Elizabethan-era country house, currently a Grade II listed building open to the ); 80] #Essex_county (Essex, England | County in England, north east of London. County town is Chelmsford.); 81] #Europe (Europe | The European continent, extending in the thinking of Mitford's time roughly sout); 82] #Exchange_Alley (Exchange Alley, London, London, England | Known colloquially as Change Alley, this narrow street in London was the locatio); 83] #Exeter (Exeter | Exeter is a cathedral city in the southwest of England, in the county of Devon.); 84] #Exmouth (Exmouth, Devon, England); 85] #Farley_Hill (Farley Hill, Berkshire, England | Village in Berkshire, in the parish of Swallowfield. The Dickinsons lived there.); 86] #field_BBr (Fields at Burghfield Bridge | Fields at Burghfield Bridge. George Mitford goes there to get his daughter Field); 87] #field_BH (Fields at Bertram House | Fields belonging to the Bertram House estate. One location where Mitford goes vi); 88] #field_Body (Mr. Body's fields | Fields belonging to Richard Body. One location mentioned in her Journal where Mi); 89] #field_Davies (Mr. Davies's fields | Fields belonging to Mr. Davies.); 90] #field_Dearesley (Mr. Dearesley's field | Field belonging to the Mr. Dearsley, once part of the Bertram House estate, sold); 91] #field_Pithers (Mr. Pithers's fields | Field belonging to Mr. Pithers. One location where Mitford goes violetting in Ma); 92] #field_PW (Fields at Pinge Wood | Frequent destination for Mitford walks and drives, accompanied by Lucy & their d); 93] #field_TMC (Fields at Three Mile Cross | Fields near the cottage at Three Mile Cross.); 94] #FinchamsteadRidges (Finchamstead Ridges, Berkshire, England | Region of woodland and heathland, now owned as National Trust land in a parcel t); 95] #Florence; 96] #Forest_of_Ardennes (Forest of Ardennes | Forested, hilly region in Europe covering parts of the Ardennes mountain range a); 97] #Fotheringay (Fotheringhay Castle, Fotheringhay, Northamptonshire, England | Castle in the village of Fotheringhay where Mary, Queen of Scots was imprisoned,); 98] #France (France | Country in western Europe. Paris is the capital and largest city.); 99] #Gallows_piece (Gallows Piece, Berkshire, England | A piece of ground near Mortimer Common mentioned in Tom Cordery as a spot where ); 100] #garden_BH (garden at Bertram House | Garden at Bertram House estate.); 101] #Germany (Germany | A country in central-western Europe. Berlin is the capital and largest city.); 102] #Glasgow (Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland | Largest city in Scotland, on the River Clyde. Historically part of the county of); 103] #Grazeley_village (Grazeley, Berkshire, England | Village in Shinfield parish in Berkshire, the site of the the Mitford’s residenc); 104] #Greece (Greece | Southeastern European country at the southernmost tip of the Balkan peninsula. I); 105] #GroveCottage (Grove Cottage | One of the houses Mitfords view but do not choose in planning their relocation f); 106] #Guildhall_London (Guildhall, City of London, London, England | A building (and its main room, a medieval-era great hall) used as a town hall an); 107] #Hampshire_county (Hampshire, England | County on the southern coast of England, known historically as the County of Sou); 108] #Hampstead (Hampstead, Camden, London, England | Village nearLondon, north west of Charing Cross, now enclosed by it. Its populat); 109] #HampstTh (Hampstead Theatre, Swiss Cottage, Camden, London, England | Theater in the Swiss Cottage area near Hampstead, in the London Borough of Camde); 110] #Hampton_Court (Hampton Court Palace, Surrey, England | Built in the early sixteenth century by Cardinal Wolsey, then, after Wolsey’s fa); 111] #Hardwick_Hall (Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, England | Palatial Elizabethan country house in Derbyshire in the north Midlands of Englan); 112] #Hatton_Garden (Hatton Garden, Holborn, London, England | Hatton Garden is in the Holborn district of London. Center of the London jewelry); 113] #Haymarket_Theatre (Theatre Royal Haymarket, Westminster, London, England | Theatre in Westminster, London, on Suffolk Street in the West End. London’s thir); 114] #Henley (Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England | Town on the Thames near the intersection of Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Buckingha); 115] #Hertfordshire_county (Hertfordshire, England | A county in south east England. The county town is Hertford.); 116] #Hinchinbrooke (Hinchinbrooke House, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, England | Country house estate built around a thirteenth-century nunnery. During the disso); 117] #Holborn (Holborn, London, England | A district in central London between the West End and the City of London; now in); 118] #Holland (Holland | A region of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Until the Napoleonic invasion of 179); 119] #HollandHouse (Holland House, Kensington, London, England | Built in Kensington in 1605 for Sir Walter Cope; later owned by the Rich and the); 120] #Holmby_House (Holmby House, Althorp, Northamptonshire, England | Country house estate in Holdenby, near Althorp, Northamptonshire where King Char); 121] #Holy_Brook (Holy Brook | A channel that runs through Reading off the Kennet River.); 122] #Holyhead (Holyhead, Isle of Anglesey, Wales | City in Wales; a major Irish Sea port.); 123] #HounslowHeath (Hounslow Heath | Historically, a four thousand acre tract of heathland outside London near Hounsl); 124] #Hungary (Hungary | Central European country bordered by Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia); 125] #Hyde_Park; 126] #Ilsley (Ilsley | Unknown if this is either East or West Ilsey. George Mitford often visited, as M); 127] #India (India | In Mitford’s time, the East India Company and its private armies controlled Indi); 128] #Ireland (Ireland | An island in the North Atlantic and part of the British Isles in Europe, which c); 129] #Isle_of_Wight (Isle of Wight, England | An island in the English Channel off the coast of Hampshire. Was earlier owned b); 130] #Israel (Israel | In Mitford’s time, the ancient lost kingdom of the Hebrews, known as the land of); 131] #Italy (Italy | Country in south-central Europe; shaped as a peninsula that reaches deep into th); 132] #Jerusalem (Jerusalem, Israel | Ancient city sacred to Jews, Muslims, and Christians, and one of the oldest citi); 133] #Kensington (Kensington, London, England | A district of west London, now part of the Royal Boroughs of Chelsea and Kensing); 134] #Kentucky (Kentucky, USA | State in the southeastern United States, originally part of Virginia.); 135] #Kew_village (Kew, Richmond upon Thames, England | Once a village northeast of Richmond, now a suburban district part of the London); 136] #Kibes_Ln (Kibe's Lane); 137] #Kings_Bench_Prison (Kings Bench Prison, Southwark, London, England | A prison in Southwark, south London, that took its name from the King’s Bench co); 138] #LakeDistrict (The Lake District, England | Region in northwest England famous for its lakes, forests, and mountains (or fel); 139] #Lancaster (Lancaster, Lancashire, England | County town of Lancashire, on the river Lune.); 140] #LaTrappe (Soligny-la-Trappe, Orne, France | Site of La Trappe Abbey, the house of origin of the Order of Cistercians of the ); 141] #Leicester (Leicester, Leicestershire, England | City in the East Midlands of England, and the county town of Leicestershire. The); 142] #Lincolnshire (Lincolnshire, England | County in the north east of England. Its county town is Lincoln.); 143] #Lisbon_city (Lisbon, Portugal | The capital city of Portugal, located on the western Iberian peninsula; one of t); 144] #Lisson_Grove (Lisson Grove, Westminster, London, England | District in the City of Westminster, London, west of Regent’s Park. Student arti); 145] #Lockinge (Lockinge | Small parish that runs from Ilsley Downs to the Vale of White Horse district; hi); 146] #Loddon (River Loddon | Tributary of the Thames that flows 28 miles northward from Basingstoke through S); 147] #London_city (London, England | Capital city of England and the United Kingdom; one the oldest cities in Western); 148] #London_Stock_Exchange (London Stock Exchange, London, England | Originally located in London's Exchange Alley district, a site of commerce in th); 149] #Ludgate_Hill (Ludgate Hill, London, England | A hill in the City of London and the site of St. Paul’s Cathedral. It is one of ); 150] #Lyme_Regis (Lyme Regis, Dorset, England | Resort town on the coast in west Dorset. The Mitfords lived here for about a yea); 151] #M_farmhouse_OV (M. farmhouse | The farmhouse whose inhabitants Mitford recalls in A Great Farmhouse.); 152] #M_OV (M. | Abbreviation used for the area in which the great farmhouse is located, from the); 153] #Madrid (Madrid, Spain | Capital of Spain.); 154] #Magdalen_Coll (Magdalen College, Oxford University, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England | One of the constituent colleges of Oxford University.); 155] #Manchester (Manchester | Mitford mentions this place on November 15 1819); 156] #ManchesterHouse (Manchester House, 29 Imperial Road, Exmouth, Devon, England | Mitford dates her opening poem in the Journal from this location in January 1819); 157] #Marlow (Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England | Town in Buckinghamshire on the Thames. Mitford’s friends Mr. Johnson and Miss Jo); 158] #meadow_BH (meadows at Bertram House | Meadows belonging to the Bertram House estate.); 159] #meadow_Bridgwater (Mr. Bridgwater's meadows | Meadows owned by Mr. Bridgewater. One of the locations Mitford goes cowslipping ); 160] #meadow_Davies (Mr. Davies's meadows | Meadows owned by Mr. Davies. One of the locations Mitford goes to gather woodsor); 161] #meadow_TMC (meadows at Three Mile Cross | Meadows near the cottage at Three Mile Cross.); 162] #Meillerie (Meillerie, France | Meillerie is a village on the shores of Lake Geneva, in southeastern France.); 163] #Mexico (Mexico | Country between the United States and Central America.); 164] #Milan (Milan, Lombardy, Italy | Ancient Northern Italian city, elevated into a duchy in 1395. During the fifteen); 165] #Mint_new (New Mint, Little Tower Hill, London, England | A new Royal Mint was built on Little Tower Hill beginning in 1805, once space ha); 166] #Mortimer_Comm (Mortimer Common, Berkshire, England | Village east of Swallowfield. George Mitford and his friends go coursing there.); 167] #Mortimer_village (Mortimer, Berkshire, England | Village in Berkshire located seven miles south-west of Reading.); 168] #Mortimer_WEnd (Mortimer West End, Berkshire, England | ); 169] #Mt_Ida (Mount Ida | Sacred mountain of classical Greek antiquity.); 170] #Muscovy (Muscovy | Grand Duchy of Moscow, known in English as Muscovy. A medieval Rus’ principality); 171] #Naples (Naples, Italy | Capital city of the Kingdom of Naples from 1282 to 1816. Then the capital of the); 172] #Naseby (Naseby, Northamptonshire, England | Village in Northamptonshire, the site of the Battle of Naseby on 14 June 1645, t); 173] #New_York_city (New York City, New York, USA | Most populous city in the United States, founded as a trading post by the Dutch ); 174] #Newbery_house_St_Queen33 (33 Great Queen Street | A specific address on Great Queen Street. Most likely owned by Mr. Newbery. Ment); 175] #Newbury (Newbury, Berkshire, England | Market town on the River Kennet in Berkshire. Horseracing took place between 180); 176] #NewmanSt (Newman Street, London, England | Newman Street in London. Barbara Hofland’s address in the 1820s was 23 Newman St); 177] #Northumberland (Northumberland, England | County in north east England. County town is Alnwick. George Mitford was a desce); 178] #Oakhampton_House (Oakhampton House, Dunley, Worcestershire, England | Oakhampton House is a country estate in Dunley, owned by the descendants of Roya); 179] #Odiham (Odiham | ); 180] #Opera_House (English Opera House | ); 181] #Overton (Overton | Large parish. In 1831, the Hundred of Overton contained Ashe, Bradley, Deane, La); 182] #Oxford_Circuit (Oxford Circuit | Oxford Circuit was one of six assize circuits in England and Wales. Before 1830,); 183] #Oxford_city (Oxford, Oxfordshire, England | County town of Oxfordshire, in the south east of England about twenty-five miles); 184] #Oxford_Univ (University of Oxford, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England | Research university made up of constituent colleges; considered the oldest unive); 185] #Oxfordshire (Oxfordshire, England | A county in south east England. Location of Oxford University and Blenheim Palac); 186] #Painted_Chmbr (Painted Chamber, Westminster Palace, Westminster, London, England | ); 187] #Palestine (Palestine | In Mitford's time, refers not to a country, but to the geographic region in West); 188] #Pamber_forest (Pamber Forest, Hampshire, England | Forest in north Hampshire, near Silchester. Today, Pamber Forest and Silchester ); 189] #PaperMill_Marlow (Paper mill on the Thames | ); 190] #Paris (Paris, France | Capital of France and important center of trade, banking, publishing, fashion, a); 191] #Park_Windsor (Windsor Park | Mitford rode through on June 27, 1820.); 192] #Philadelphia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA | Founded in the seventeenth century as the capital of the Pennsylvania colony and); 193] #Piccadilly (Piccadilly, Westminster, London, England | A wide road in London’s West End that lends its name to the surrounding district); 194] #Pingewood (Pinge Wood | ); 195] #plantation_BH (Plantations at Bertram House | Plantations--planted woodlands--belonging to the Bertram House estate. One locat); 196] #Plymouth_city (Plymouth, Devonshire, England | City on the coast of Devonshire. After declines in the seventeenth century, incr); 197] #Portsmouth_Blockhouses (Portsmouth Blockhouses | Also known as the Portsmouth Block Mills, established in 1802 by Marc Isambard B); 198] #Pump_Court (Pump Court, Temple, London, England | Thomas Noon Talfourd’s address in London, in the Temple district; Mitford addres); 199] #Ravenna (Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy | City in the province of Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna region on the north east coast o); 200] #Reading_city (Reading, Berkshire, England | County town in Berkshire, in the Thames valley at the confluence of the Thames a); 201] #Reading_School (Reading School, Reading, Berkshire, England | Public grammar school originally founded as a Reading Abbey school, which dates ); 202] #Reading_Theatre (Reading Theatre, Reading, Berkshire, England | Theater in Reading. Exact location unknown. More research needed.); 203] #ReadingTownHall (Reading Town Hall | ); 204] #Red_Cow_Inn (The Red Cow Inn, Reading, Berkshire, England | Located in Reading. Likely the location listed in Horniman’s Directory (1827) at); 205] #Regents_Park (Regent’s Park, London, England | Now an upscale neighborhood in north London, Regent’s Park is named for the Roya); 206] #Rhine (Rhine River | Second largest river in central and western Europe; begins in the southeastern S); 207] #Rialto (The Rialto, Venice, Italy | Oldest of four bridges spanning the Grand Canal in Venice.); 208] #Richmond (Richmond, London, England | Richmond upon Thames, now a borough of London, formerly part of Surrey. The Hofl); 209] #Rome (Rome, Italy | City on the central Italian Peninsula on the River Tiber. One of the oldest citi); 210] #S_city_OV ( | Town described in the Our Village story, Lucy as a beautiful, Roman-walled town,); 211] #Saint_Amand (Saint-Amand-Montrond | Commune in France.); 212] #Savona (Savona, Italy | Seaport in northern Italy. Pope Pius VII and his Cardinals were driven to exile ); 213] #Scotland (Scotland | Country that occupies the northern third of the island of Great Britain. Part of); 214] #Seine_river (Seine River, France | The 481-mile long river that flows from northeastern France through Paris, Le Ha); 215] #Selborne_village (Selborne, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire in present-day South Downs National Oark. Gilbert White mad); 216] #Serpentine (The Serpentine | Artificial body of water, created in 1730 that occupies 40 acres in .); 217] #SeymourCt (Seymour Court, Buckinghamshire, England | Home of Mr. Johnsonand Miss Johnson, until Mr. Johnson’s death in 1821. Near Gre); 218] #Sheffield_Castle (Sheffield Castle and Manor Lodge | Location where Mary Queen of Scots was held captive in 1568 by order of Queen El); 219] #Shinfield (Shinfield, Berkshire, England | Village and parish south of Reading in Berkshire. Shinfield parish encompasses M); 220] #Shinfield_parish (Shinfield parish | Shinfield parish is located in the county of Berkshire and contains Three Mile C); 221] #Silchester (Silchester, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire, approximately nine miles from Reading, on the Berkshire co); 222] #SilchesterAmphitheatre (Silchester Amphitheatre, Silchester, Hampshire, England | Part of the Roman ruins near the town of Silchester. Calleva Atrebatum began as ); 223] #Sloane_St (Sloane Street, Kensington, London, England | Major London thoroughfare now in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Ru); 224] #Soho_Sq (Soho Square, Soho, London, England | A square in the Soho district of London. It was originally called King Square af); 225] #Somerset_House (Somerset House, Strand, London, England | Large neoclassical public building in central London on the Strand, overlooking ); 226] #Somersetshire (Somersetshire, England | County in southwest England, now known as Somerset. County town is Taunton.); 227] #Southhampton_city (Southhampton, Hampshire, England | Southampton is a major port city in the county of Hampshire on the south coast o); 228] #Spain (Spain); 229] #Spencers_Wood (Spencers Wood, Berkshire, England | Village south of Reading that adjoins Three Mile Cross to the north and lying ea); 230] #Spice_Islands (Spice Islands, Indonesia | An archipelago in the east of Indonesia that, from the sixteenth to the nineteen); 231] #St_Cyr (St. Cyr, France | Village five km west of Versailles in France, where Françoise d’ Aubigné died; s); 232] #St_James_Church_Bram (Church of St. James, Bramley, Hampshire, England | Church located in Bramley, Hampshire that dates from the twelfth century, underg); 233] #St_JohnsWood (St. John's Wood, Westminster, London, England | A district in the City of Westminster, London, historically part of Marylebone. ); 234] #St_Lawrence_Church (St. Lawrence Church, Reading, Berkshire, England | Ancient church on Friar Street in Reading. During Mitford’s time, it was the par); 235] #St_Marks_Place (St. Mark’s Place, Venice, Italy | The main public square in Venice, known as Piazza St. Marco. It is bounded on th); 236] #St_Michaels_Church_St_Albans (St. Michael’s Church, St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England | A parish church in St. Albans, a city in Hertfordshire, England.); 237] #St_QueenG (Great Queen Street | Mentioned in Mitford’s Journal during a visit to London on 27 June 1820, 28 June); 238] #Staffordshire (Staffordshire | ); 239] #StJamesSt (St. James’s Street, Westminster, London, England | The main thoroughfare in the district of St James’s in central London which runs); 240] #StJohns_Place (St. John’s Place, Lisson Grove, Regent’s Park, London, England | Occasional residence from 1817 onward of Benjamin Robert Haydon in Lisson Grove,); 241] #StPauls (St. Paul’s Cathedral, London, England | St Paul’s Cathedral, London, is a Church of England (Anglican) cathedral, the se); 242] #StQuintin_School (St. Quintin School, 22 Hans Place, Chelsea, London, England | Public school for girls founded by French emigre M. St. Quintin (or Quentin), a ); 243] #Strand (The Strand, London, England | A major street in central London that became a gathering place for writers and t); 244] #Stratfield_Saye (Stratfield Saye, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire, England. Alternative spellings are: Strathfieldsaye, Strat); 245] #Stratford_upon_Avon_city (Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England | A market town in Warwickshire, England, on the River Avon, best known as the bir); 246] #Strawberry_Hill (Strawberry Hill House, Twickenham, England | Horace Walpole’s house at Strawberry Hill, near Twickenham.); 247] #Swallowfield_Park (Swallowfield Park | Estate acquired through marriage by the second Earl of Clarendon. The estate sit); 248] #Swallowfield_village (Swallowfield, Berkshire, England | Village in Berkshire, where Mary Russell Mitford moved to a cottage in 1851, thr); 249] #Swan_Inn (Swan Inn, Three Mile Cross, Berkshire, England | A seventeenth-century public house and coaching inn next to which the Mitford fa); 250] #Switzerland (Switzerland | A country located in western-Central Europe.); 251] #Tadley (Tadley | Village that Mitford travels to with her father and the dogs while coursing on 1); 252] #Temple (Temple, London, England | District in central London, traditional location for barristers’ chambers and ot); 253] #Thames (River Thames, England | The longest river in England, the Thames has its source in Gloucestershire and f); 254] #Theale (Theale, Berkshire, England | Village and parish near Reading on the River Kennet, later part of the Kennet an); 255] #Theale_church (Holy Trinity Church, Theale, Berkshire, England | Anglican church built to replace a modest brick chapel built by clergyman Dr. Sh); 256] #Thermopylae (Thermopylae, Greece | In the ancient world, the militarily strategic location of a narrow passage to t); 257] #ThreeMileCross (Three Mile Cross, Berkshire, England | Village in the parish of Shinfield in Berkshire, where Mary Russell Mitford move); 258] #Totnes_village (Totnes, Devonshire, England | Market town near the River Dart in Devonshire, and residence of Sir William Elfo); 259] #Tours_France (Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France | City in France on the lower part of the River Loire.); 260] #Tower_of_London (Tower of London, London, England | Dating from the Norman Conquest of England, this famous complex of fortified tow); 261] #Tripoli (Tripoli | Ancient seaport in North Africa, now the capital and largest city in Libya. In t); 262] #Twickenham (Twickenham, Richmond upon Thames, London, England | Twickenham, a town on the Thames, now part of Greater London. In the eighteenth ); 263] #USA (United States of America); 264] #Vaucluse (Vaucluse, France | A department in southeast France, named after the Fontaine-de-Vaucluse, a famous); 265] #Vendee (Vendee | Department in western France, traditionally believed to be the birthplace of Eli); 266] #Venice (Venice, Italy | An Italian city, consisting of 118 islands in the Venetian lagoon and located in); 267] #Vict_Theatre (Royal Victoria Theatre, London, England | This minor theatre opened in 1818 on the south side of Waterloo bridge, in order); 268] #Vienna (Vienna, Austria | Capital and the largest city in Austria. Historically, a center for music in Eur); 269] #Vigo (Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain | Coastal city in northwest Spain near the Portuguese border.); 270] #W_Hill_OV (W. Hill | A steep, corkscrew-like hill described in A Great Farmhouse on which the farmer'); 271] #Wales (Wales | Located in the United Kingdom; a country in southwest Great Britain.); 272] #Ware (Ware, Hertfordshire, England); 273] #Warwick_Gaol (Warwick Gaol, Warwick, Warwickshire, England | Warwick Gaol was a functioning county jail located next to a town building that ); 274] #Waterloo_Belgium (Waterloo, Walloon Brabant, Belgium | Municipality in Belgium, south of Brussels. The battle of Waterloo, at which Nap); 275] #Watlington (Watlington | Small market town on the edge of the Chiltern Hills. By the late eighteenth cent); 276] #Westminster_Abbey (Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England | Gothic style church in Westminster, London, where English monarchs have traditio); 277] #Westmnst_Palace (Palace of Westminster, Westminster, London, England | Located in Westminster, London, along the Thames River. This is the meeting plac); 278] #Westmnstr (City of Westminster, London, England | In Mitford’s time, a district of Greater London and the location of St. James's ); 279] #Whitby_Hill (Whitby Hill | To be developed with further research. Could be the same as Whitby Park. See not); 280] #Whitby_Park (Whitby Park | Location of Mr. and Mrs. Newell's farm in St. Giles parish, Berkshire, likely th); 281] #Whitehall (Whitehall, Westminster, London, England | The word Whitehall, used without specific reference to the palace, refers metony); 282] #Whitehall_Palace (Whitehall Palace, Westminster, London, England | Main London residence of English monarchs from 1530 until 1698, when a major par); 283] #Whiteknights (Whiteknights, Berkshire, England | Berkshire estate of George Spencer-Churchill, the sixth Duke of Marlborough. Pur); 284] #WhitleyWood (Whitley Wood | Hamlet near Reading.); 285] #Wiltshire_county (Wiltshire, England | A landlocked county that borders Berkshire, Gloucesteshire, Oxfordshire, Hampshi); 286] #Winchester_city (Winchester, Hampshire, England | City and county town of Hampshire. Site of Winchester Cathedral and Winchester C); 287] #Windermere (Windermere, Cumbria, England | One of two longest and deepest lakes in England, in the Lake District, located n); 288] #Windsor_Castle (Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England | The largest and the oldest-occupied castle in the world, Windsor Castle was buil); 289] #Windsor_city (Windsor, Berkshire, England | Market town in Berkshire, about twenty miles from Reading and twenty miles from ); 290] #Wokefield_Park (Wokefield Park | Estate purchased by the Bernard Brocas shortly before his death in 1777, and ext); 291] #Wokingham_city (Wokingham, Berkshire, England | A market town in south east England in Berkshire, near Reading. The Mitfords som); 292] #Woodcock_Ln (Woodcock Lane | Could refer to Woodcock Lane in either Wokingham or Reading. This entry may chan); 293] #Yorkshire_county (Yorkshire, England | Historic county in northern England and the largest county in the United Kingdom); 294] #Arden (Forest of Arden | Fictional Forest of Arden, setting for As You Like It. Variously identified with); 295] #Brobdingnag (Brobdingnag | Fictional country populated by giantsin Swift’s novel Gulliver’s Travels.); 296] #FairyLand_Spenser (Faery land | Fictional setting of Spenser's Faerie Queen.); 297] #Island_Barataria (Barataria | Fictional island of which Sancho Panza is awarded governorship in Don Quixote.); 298] #Poyais (Poyais | A fictional nation in Central America that the Scottish soldier and con artist G); 299] #ProsperosIsland (Prospero’s Island | Fictional island settled by the shipwrecked Prospero in The Tempest.); 300] #Ridges_OV (Ridges | An elevated ridge where the Our Village narrator and her friends climb in donkey); 301] #RobinsonCrusoesIsland (Robinson Crusoe’s Island | Fictional island in Robinson Crusoe.); 302] #Rose_Inn_OV (Rose Inn | The Rose Inn is mentioned many times as the local inn in Our Village. It is base); 303] #St_Johns_Church (St. John’s Church | Fictional name used in Our Village for St. Lawrence Church, an ancient church in); 304] #Styx (River Styx | River in ancient Greek mythology that separates the realms of the living from th); 305] #W_Park_OV (W. Park | Mentioned in the Our Village story, Bramley Maying, and probably refers to Wokef) #Abingdon (Abingdon, Berkshire, England | Abingdon (now called Abingdon on Thames or Abingdon-on-Thames,) is a market town) #Adriatic_Sea (Adriatic Sea | Body of water that separates Italy from the Balkans.) #Agincourt (Agincourt, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France | Agincourt is a commune in the Meurthe-et-Moselle department in northeastern Fran) #Aldermaston (Aldermaston | Village that Mitford mentions visiting with her father and the dogs in the Journ) #Alresford_Hamps (New Alresford, Hampshire, England | Birthplace of Mary Russell Mitford, who lived at 27 Broad Street until about the) #America (the Americas | For generalized references to the Americas.) #Amsterdam (Amsterdam, Netherlands | The capital and largest city init the Netherlands. A key center for finance and ) #Antwerp_city (Antwerp, Belgium | The capital city of Antwerp Province in the Flemish Region, known colloquially a) #Arborfield (Arborfield | A village in England. Mitford mentions in her Journal visiting Arborfield on Mar) #Ashmolean_Old (Ashmolean | In Mitford's time, the Ashmolean collection was housed in the 1683 Old Ashmolean) #AssizeHall_Reading (Assize Hall, Reading, Berkshire, England | Assize Court building in central Reading. The current Reading Crown Court Buildi) #Athens (Athens | Ancient world city-state and currently the capital of Greece. During Mitford's t) #Athens_city (Athens, Greece | The capital city of Greece. The city was named after Athena, the Greek goddess o) #Atlantic (Atlantic Ocean | The ocean that extends between, on the Eastern side, Europe and Africa, and, on ) #Audley_End (Audley End, Essex, England | During Mitford’s life, the Essexfamily seat of Richard Griffin, second Baron Bra) #Austria (Austria | Country in central Europe, now the Republic of Austria, made up of nine federate) #AveMariaLane (Ave Maria Lane, London, England | Runs between Ludgate Hill and Amen Court in the City of London. Home to the Stat) #Baltimore (Baltimore, Maryland, USA) #Banqueting_House (The Banqueting House, Whitehall, London, England | Designed by Inigo Jones, the Banqueting House in London is the only surviving re) #Barbican ( | Area within the London City Corporation.) #Barton_street (Barton Street, Westminster, London, England | J. B. Monck lived at 10 Barton Street in the 1820s. Mitford mentions this as his) #Basingstoke (Basingstoke, Hampshire, England | Town in Hampshire, in south central England, near the source of the River Loddon) #Bath_city (Bath, Somerset, England | A city in the county of Somerset in south west England, located in the valley of) #Bear_Inn (The Bear Inn, Reading, Berkshire, England | Located at 22 Bridge Street in Reading. Building no longer standing.) #Beaurepaire (Beaurepaire House South East England 51.3191 -1.09 | Beaurepaire House was the seat and estate of the Brocas family, located in Braml) #Bedford (Bedford, Bedfordshire, England | The county town of Bedfordshire, in the east of England. It was founded at a for) #Berkshire (Berkshire, England | The county of Berkshire, England, abbreviated Berks.) #Berlin (Berlin, Germany) #BernersSt (Berners Street, London, England | In London, location of nearest postal receiving office to Barbara Hofland’s addr) #Bertram_house (Bertram House, Berkshire, England | Mansion built by George Mitford for his family residence, begun in April 1802 an) #Bickham_village (Bickham, Somerset, England | Hamlet near Plymouth, and residence of Sir William Elford, who lived there until) #BillingbearPk (Billingbear Park, Berkshire, England | During Mitford’s life, the Berkshire estate of Richard Griffin, second Baron Bra) #Birmingham_city (Birmingham, West Midlands, England | A city in the West Midlands, formerly part of the historic county of Warwickshir) #Bisham_Abbey (Bisham Abbey, Bisham, Berkshire, England | A manor house in Berkshire, named for the priory that once stood on the site. It) #Bond_Street (Bond Street | A fashionable shopping street in the West End of London.) #Boston (Boston, Massachusetts, USA | One of the oldest cities in America; an important New England seaport, trading c) #Bramley_vil (Bramley, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire, located ten miles south of Reading, near Silchester.) #Bramshill_city (Bramshill, Hampshire, England | A parish in the county of Hampshire, near Farley Hill and Swallowfield.) #Brazil (Brazil | Largest country in South America.) #Brenta (Brenta River, Italy | An Italian river that flows from the Trentino region in northern Italy into the ) #Brentford (Brentford, Middlesex, England | In the nineteenth century, a village near Hownslow, west of London at the conflu) #Brescia (Brescia, Lombardy, Italy | Northern Italian city ruled by the Venetian Republic in the mid-fifteenth centur) #Brighton (Brighton, East Sussex, England | A resort town on the south coast of Great Britain, popularized by George IV whil) #Bristol (Bristol, Bristol, England | City in county of the same name in south west England. Historically, an importan) #Brussels (Brussels, Belgium) #Buckinghamshire (Buckinghamshire, England | County in southeast England; one of the home counties nearest to London. County ) #Bull_Ring (Bull Ring, Birmingham, Warwickshire, England | Began in the twelfth century as a central market district for Birmingham. From t) #BurghfieldBr (Burghfield Bridge | Hamlet near Reading named after a bridge crossing the River Kennett. The existin) #Burghley_House (Burghley House, Cambridgeshire, England | English country house that has been the seat of the Earls of Essex since Elizabe) #Burnt_Common (Burnt Common | An area that was set aside for the poor upon the enclosure of Mortimer Common in) #Cambridge_city (Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England | City on the river Cam, north of London, in Cambridgeshire. Location of Cambridge) #Carisbrooke (Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight, England | Village near Newport on the Isle of Wight. Charles I was imprisoned at Carisbroo) #ChalkFarm (Chalk Farm, London, England | District on the outskirts of London, between Camden Town and Hampstead: the site) #Charing_Cross (Charing Cross, London, England | Before the early 20th century, Charing Cross referred to a district (and postal ) #Cheshire_county (Cheshire, England | County in the north west of England. Its county town is Chester.) #Chicago (Chicago, Illinois, USA) #China (China | spacious and populous land in East Asia with an ancient history, of interest to ) #Chippenham (Chippenham, Wiltshire, England | Market town in Wiltshire, east of Bath. Founded on the River Avon and served by ) #Church_StMary (St Mary's Church | ) #Cincinnati (Cincinnati, Ohio, USA | City in south west Ohio, settled in 1788 at the confluence of the Licking and Oh) #Coley_Berks (Coley Park, Berkshire, England | An estate just south west of Reading. The Moncks owned Coley Park from 1810 and ) #copse_Dearesley (Mr. Dearesley's copse | Mr. Dearesley's copse near Bertram House. Mitford went primrosing there in March) #cottage_TMC (cottage at Three Mile Cross | House belonging to Richard Body in Three Mile Cross where Mary Russell Mitford m) #Covent_Garden_Theatre (Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, London, England | A West End theater located in Covent Garden in the London borough of Westminster) #Coventry_city (Coventry, Warwickshire, England | City in the West Midlands in England, formerly associated with Warwickshire.) #Crecy (Crécy, Picardy, France | Village in northern France. Location of the Battle of Crécy in 1436, during whic) #Devonshire (Devonshire, England | County in the south west of England bordering the English Channel and the Bristo) #Devonshire_county (Devonshire | The county of Devonshire, now known as Devon, in the south west of England.) #Donnington_Castle (Donnington Castle, Donnington, Berkshire, England | Ruined medieval castle, of which only the 14th-century gatehouse remains standin) #Dorset_county (Dorsetshire, England | A county in southwest England on the English Channel coast. Known as Dorset toda) #Drury_Lane_Theatre (Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, England | A West End theater located in Covent Garden in the London borough of Westminster) #Dublin (Dublin, Leinster, Ireland | The capital and largest city of Ireland, located in the province of Leinster at ) #Edinburgh (Edinburgh, Lothian, Scotland | The capital and second-largest city in Scotland, located on the Firth of Forth. ) #Egham (Egham | According to her Journal, Mitford rode through Egham on June 27, 1820.) #EgyptianHall (Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly, London, England | A London building in Piccadilly, designed in the Egyptian style, Egyptian Hall w) #Elm_Court (Elm Court, Temple, London, England | Street in the Temple area of London. Mitford addressed letters to Talfourd at 2 ) #Eng_Channel (The English Channel | Part of the Atlantic Ocean, it is a body of water that joins the North Sea to th) #England (England | Country in the British Isles. Borders Scotland and Wales. London is the capital ) #Englefield_House (Englefield House, Englefield, Berkshire, England | Elizabethan-era country house, currently a Grade II listed building open to the ) #Essex_county (Essex, England | County in England, north east of London. County town is Chelmsford.) #Europe (Europe | The European continent, extending in the thinking of Mitford's time roughly sout) #Exchange_Alley (Exchange Alley, London, London, England | Known colloquially as Change Alley, this narrow street in London was the locatio) #Exeter (Exeter | Exeter is a cathedral city in the southwest of England, in the county of Devon.) #Exmouth (Exmouth, Devon, England) #Farley_Hill (Farley Hill, Berkshire, England | Village in Berkshire, in the parish of Swallowfield. The Dickinsons lived there.) #field_BBr (Fields at Burghfield Bridge | Fields at Burghfield Bridge. George Mitford goes there to get his daughter Field) #field_BH (Fields at Bertram House | Fields belonging to the Bertram House estate. One location where Mitford goes vi) #field_Body (Mr. Body's fields | Fields belonging to Richard Body. One location mentioned in her Journal where Mi) #field_Davies (Mr. Davies's fields | Fields belonging to Mr. Davies.) #field_Dearesley (Mr. Dearesley's field | Field belonging to the Mr. Dearsley, once part of the Bertram House estate, sold) #field_Pithers (Mr. Pithers's fields | Field belonging to Mr. Pithers. One location where Mitford goes violetting in Ma) #field_PW (Fields at Pinge Wood | Frequent destination for Mitford walks and drives, accompanied by Lucy & their d) #field_TMC (Fields at Three Mile Cross | Fields near the cottage at Three Mile Cross.) #FinchamsteadRidges (Finchamstead Ridges, Berkshire, England | Region of woodland and heathland, now owned as National Trust land in a parcel t) #Florence #Forest_of_Ardennes (Forest of Ardennes | Forested, hilly region in Europe covering parts of the Ardennes mountain range a) #Fotheringay (Fotheringhay Castle, Fotheringhay, Northamptonshire, England | Castle in the village of Fotheringhay where Mary, Queen of Scots was imprisoned,) #France (France | Country in western Europe. Paris is the capital and largest city.) #Gallows_piece (Gallows Piece, Berkshire, England | A piece of ground near Mortimer Common mentioned in Tom Cordery as a spot where ) #garden_BH (garden at Bertram House | Garden at Bertram House estate.) #Germany (Germany | A country in central-western Europe. Berlin is the capital and largest city.) #Glasgow (Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland | Largest city in Scotland, on the River Clyde. Historically part of the county of) #Grazeley_village (Grazeley, Berkshire, England | Village in Shinfield parish in Berkshire, the site of the the Mitford’s residenc) #Greece (Greece | Southeastern European country at the southernmost tip of the Balkan peninsula. I) #GroveCottage (Grove Cottage | One of the houses Mitfords view but do not choose in planning their relocation f) #Guildhall_London (Guildhall, City of London, London, England | A building (and its main room, a medieval-era great hall) used as a town hall an) #Hampshire_county (Hampshire, England | County on the southern coast of England, known historically as the County of Sou) #Hampstead (Hampstead, Camden, London, England | Village nearLondon, north west of Charing Cross, now enclosed by it. Its populat) #HampstTh (Hampstead Theatre, Swiss Cottage, Camden, London, England | Theater in the Swiss Cottage area near Hampstead, in the London Borough of Camde) #Hampton_Court (Hampton Court Palace, Surrey, England | Built in the early sixteenth century by Cardinal Wolsey, then, after Wolsey’s fa) #Hardwick_Hall (Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, England | Palatial Elizabethan country house in Derbyshire in the north Midlands of Englan) #Hatton_Garden (Hatton Garden, Holborn, London, England | Hatton Garden is in the Holborn district of London. Center of the London jewelry) #Haymarket_Theatre (Theatre Royal Haymarket, Westminster, London, England | Theatre in Westminster, London, on Suffolk Street in the West End. London’s thir) #Henley (Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England | Town on the Thames near the intersection of Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Buckingha) #Hertfordshire_county (Hertfordshire, England | A county in south east England. The county town is Hertford.) #Hinchinbrooke (Hinchinbrooke House, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, England | Country house estate built around a thirteenth-century nunnery. During the disso) #Holborn (Holborn, London, England | A district in central London between the West End and the City of London; now in) #Holland (Holland | A region of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Until the Napoleonic invasion of 179) #HollandHouse (Holland House, Kensington, London, England | Built in Kensington in 1605 for Sir Walter Cope; later owned by the Rich and the) #Holmby_House (Holmby House, Althorp, Northamptonshire, England | Country house estate in Holdenby, near Althorp, Northamptonshire where King Char) #Holy_Brook (Holy Brook | A channel that runs through Reading off the Kennet River.) #Holyhead (Holyhead, Isle of Anglesey, Wales | City in Wales; a major Irish Sea port.) #HounslowHeath (Hounslow Heath | Historically, a four thousand acre tract of heathland outside London near Hounsl) #Hungary (Hungary | Central European country bordered by Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia) #Hyde_Park #Ilsley (Ilsley | Unknown if this is either East or West Ilsey. George Mitford often visited, as M) #India (India | In Mitford’s time, the East India Company and its private armies controlled Indi) #Ireland (Ireland | An island in the North Atlantic and part of the British Isles in Europe, which c) #Isle_of_Wight (Isle of Wight, England | An island in the English Channel off the coast of Hampshire. Was earlier owned b) #Israel (Israel | In Mitford’s time, the ancient lost kingdom of the Hebrews, known as the land of) #Italy (Italy | Country in south-central Europe; shaped as a peninsula that reaches deep into th) #Jerusalem (Jerusalem, Israel | Ancient city sacred to Jews, Muslims, and Christians, and one of the oldest citi) #Kensington (Kensington, London, England | A district of west London, now part of the Royal Boroughs of Chelsea and Kensing) #Kentucky (Kentucky, USA | State in the southeastern United States, originally part of Virginia.) #Kew_village (Kew, Richmond upon Thames, England | Once a village northeast of Richmond, now a suburban district part of the London) #Kibes_Ln (Kibe's Lane) #Kings_Bench_Prison (Kings Bench Prison, Southwark, London, England | A prison in Southwark, south London, that took its name from the King’s Bench co) #LakeDistrict (The Lake District, England | Region in northwest England famous for its lakes, forests, and mountains (or fel) #Lancaster (Lancaster, Lancashire, England | County town of Lancashire, on the river Lune.) #LaTrappe (Soligny-la-Trappe, Orne, France | Site of La Trappe Abbey, the house of origin of the Order of Cistercians of the ) #Leicester (Leicester, Leicestershire, England | City in the East Midlands of England, and the county town of Leicestershire. The) #Lincolnshire (Lincolnshire, England | County in the north east of England. Its county town is Lincoln.) #Lisbon_city (Lisbon, Portugal | The capital city of Portugal, located on the western Iberian peninsula; one of t) #Lisson_Grove (Lisson Grove, Westminster, London, England | District in the City of Westminster, London, west of Regent’s Park. Student arti) #Lockinge (Lockinge | Small parish that runs from Ilsley Downs to the Vale of White Horse district; hi) #Loddon (River Loddon | Tributary of the Thames that flows 28 miles northward from Basingstoke through S) #London_city (London, England | Capital city of England and the United Kingdom; one the oldest cities in Western) #London_Stock_Exchange (London Stock Exchange, London, England | Originally located in London's Exchange Alley district, a site of commerce in th) #Ludgate_Hill (Ludgate Hill, London, England | A hill in the City of London and the site of St. Paul’s Cathedral. It is one of ) #Lyme_Regis (Lyme Regis, Dorset, England | Resort town on the coast in west Dorset. The Mitfords lived here for about a yea) #M_farmhouse_OV (M. farmhouse | The farmhouse whose inhabitants Mitford recalls in A Great Farmhouse.) #M_OV (M. | Abbreviation used for the area in which the great farmhouse is located, from the) #Madrid (Madrid, Spain | Capital of Spain.) #Magdalen_Coll (Magdalen College, Oxford University, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England | One of the constituent colleges of Oxford University.) #Manchester (Manchester | Mitford mentions this place on November 15 1819) #ManchesterHouse (Manchester House, 29 Imperial Road, Exmouth, Devon, England | Mitford dates her opening poem in the Journal from this location in January 1819) #Marlow (Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England | Town in Buckinghamshire on the Thames. Mitford’s friends Mr. Johnson and Miss Jo) #meadow_BH (meadows at Bertram House | Meadows belonging to the Bertram House estate.) #meadow_Bridgwater (Mr. Bridgwater's meadows | Meadows owned by Mr. Bridgewater. One of the locations Mitford goes cowslipping ) #meadow_Davies (Mr. Davies's meadows | Meadows owned by Mr. Davies. One of the locations Mitford goes to gather woodsor) #meadow_TMC (meadows at Three Mile Cross | Meadows near the cottage at Three Mile Cross.) #Meillerie (Meillerie, France | Meillerie is a village on the shores of Lake Geneva, in southeastern France.) #Mexico (Mexico | Country between the United States and Central America.) #Milan (Milan, Lombardy, Italy | Ancient Northern Italian city, elevated into a duchy in 1395. During the fifteen) #Mint_new (New Mint, Little Tower Hill, London, England | A new Royal Mint was built on Little Tower Hill beginning in 1805, once space ha) #Mortimer_Comm (Mortimer Common, Berkshire, England | Village east of Swallowfield. George Mitford and his friends go coursing there.) #Mortimer_village (Mortimer, Berkshire, England | Village in Berkshire located seven miles south-west of Reading.) #Mortimer_WEnd (Mortimer West End, Berkshire, England | ) #Mt_Ida (Mount Ida | Sacred mountain of classical Greek antiquity.) #Muscovy (Muscovy | Grand Duchy of Moscow, known in English as Muscovy. A medieval Rus’ principality) #Naples (Naples, Italy | Capital city of the Kingdom of Naples from 1282 to 1816. Then the capital of the) #Naseby (Naseby, Northamptonshire, England | Village in Northamptonshire, the site of the Battle of Naseby on 14 June 1645, t) #New_York_city (New York City, New York, USA | Most populous city in the United States, founded as a trading post by the Dutch ) #Newbery_house_St_Queen33 (33 Great Queen Street | A specific address on Great Queen Street. Most likely owned by Mr. Newbery. Ment) #Newbury (Newbury, Berkshire, England | Market town on the River Kennet in Berkshire. Horseracing took place between 180) #NewmanSt (Newman Street, London, England | Newman Street in London. Barbara Hofland’s address in the 1820s was 23 Newman St) #Northumberland (Northumberland, England | County in north east England. County town is Alnwick. George Mitford was a desce) #Oakhampton_House (Oakhampton House, Dunley, Worcestershire, England | Oakhampton House is a country estate in Dunley, owned by the descendants of Roya) #Odiham (Odiham | ) #Opera_House (English Opera House | ) #Overton (Overton | Large parish. In 1831, the Hundred of Overton contained Ashe, Bradley, Deane, La) #Oxford_Circuit (Oxford Circuit | Oxford Circuit was one of six assize circuits in England and Wales. Before 1830,) #Oxford_city (Oxford, Oxfordshire, England | County town of Oxfordshire, in the south east of England about twenty-five miles) #Oxford_Univ (University of Oxford, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England | Research university made up of constituent colleges; considered the oldest unive) #Oxfordshire (Oxfordshire, England | A county in south east England. Location of Oxford University and Blenheim Palac) #Painted_Chmbr (Painted Chamber, Westminster Palace, Westminster, London, England | ) #Palestine (Palestine | In Mitford's time, refers not to a country, but to the geographic region in West) #Pamber_forest (Pamber Forest, Hampshire, England | Forest in north Hampshire, near Silchester. Today, Pamber Forest and Silchester ) #PaperMill_Marlow (Paper mill on the Thames | ) #Paris (Paris, France | Capital of France and important center of trade, banking, publishing, fashion, a) #Park_Windsor (Windsor Park | Mitford rode through on June 27, 1820.) #Philadelphia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA | Founded in the seventeenth century as the capital of the Pennsylvania colony and) #Piccadilly (Piccadilly, Westminster, London, England | A wide road in London’s West End that lends its name to the surrounding district) #Pingewood (Pinge Wood | ) #plantation_BH (Plantations at Bertram House | Plantations--planted woodlands--belonging to the Bertram House estate. One locat) #Plymouth_city (Plymouth, Devonshire, England | City on the coast of Devonshire. After declines in the seventeenth century, incr) #Portsmouth_Blockhouses (Portsmouth Blockhouses | Also known as the Portsmouth Block Mills, established in 1802 by Marc Isambard B) #Pump_Court (Pump Court, Temple, London, England | Thomas Noon Talfourd’s address in London, in the Temple district; Mitford addres) #Ravenna (Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy | City in the province of Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna region on the north east coast o) #Reading_city (Reading, Berkshire, England | County town in Berkshire, in the Thames valley at the confluence of the Thames a) #Reading_School (Reading School, Reading, Berkshire, England | Public grammar school originally founded as a Reading Abbey school, which dates ) #Reading_Theatre (Reading Theatre, Reading, Berkshire, England | Theater in Reading. Exact location unknown. More research needed.) #ReadingTownHall (Reading Town Hall | ) #Red_Cow_Inn (The Red Cow Inn, Reading, Berkshire, England | Located in Reading. Likely the location listed in Horniman’s Directory (1827) at) #Regents_Park (Regent’s Park, London, England | Now an upscale neighborhood in north London, Regent’s Park is named for the Roya) #Rhine (Rhine River | Second largest river in central and western Europe; begins in the southeastern S) #Rialto (The Rialto, Venice, Italy | Oldest of four bridges spanning the Grand Canal in Venice.) #Richmond (Richmond, London, England | Richmond upon Thames, now a borough of London, formerly part of Surrey. The Hofl) #Rome (Rome, Italy | City on the central Italian Peninsula on the River Tiber. One of the oldest citi) #S_city_OV ( | Town described in the Our Village story, Lucy as a beautiful, Roman-walled town,) #Saint_Amand (Saint-Amand-Montrond | Commune in France.) #Savona (Savona, Italy | Seaport in northern Italy. Pope Pius VII and his Cardinals were driven to exile ) #Scotland (Scotland | Country that occupies the northern third of the island of Great Britain. Part of) #Seine_river (Seine River, France | The 481-mile long river that flows from northeastern France through Paris, Le Ha) #Selborne_village (Selborne, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire in present-day South Downs National Oark. Gilbert White mad) #Serpentine (The Serpentine | Artificial body of water, created in 1730 that occupies 40 acres in .) #SeymourCt (Seymour Court, Buckinghamshire, England | Home of Mr. Johnsonand Miss Johnson, until Mr. Johnson’s death in 1821. Near Gre) #Sheffield_Castle (Sheffield Castle and Manor Lodge | Location where Mary Queen of Scots was held captive in 1568 by order of Queen El) #Shinfield (Shinfield, Berkshire, England | Village and parish south of Reading in Berkshire. Shinfield parish encompasses M) #Shinfield_parish (Shinfield parish | Shinfield parish is located in the county of Berkshire and contains Three Mile C) #Silchester (Silchester, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire, approximately nine miles from Reading, on the Berkshire co) #SilchesterAmphitheatre (Silchester Amphitheatre, Silchester, Hampshire, England | Part of the Roman ruins near the town of Silchester. Calleva Atrebatum began as ) #Sloane_St (Sloane Street, Kensington, London, England | Major London thoroughfare now in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Ru) #Soho_Sq (Soho Square, Soho, London, England | A square in the Soho district of London. It was originally called King Square af) #Somerset_House (Somerset House, Strand, London, England | Large neoclassical public building in central London on the Strand, overlooking ) #Somersetshire (Somersetshire, England | County in southwest England, now known as Somerset. County town is Taunton.) #Southhampton_city (Southhampton, Hampshire, England | Southampton is a major port city in the county of Hampshire on the south coast o) #Spain (Spain) #Spencers_Wood (Spencers Wood, Berkshire, England | Village south of Reading that adjoins Three Mile Cross to the north and lying ea) #Spice_Islands (Spice Islands, Indonesia | An archipelago in the east of Indonesia that, from the sixteenth to the nineteen) #St_Cyr (St. Cyr, France | Village five km west of Versailles in France, where Françoise d’ Aubigné died; s) #St_James_Church_Bram (Church of St. James, Bramley, Hampshire, England | Church located in Bramley, Hampshire that dates from the twelfth century, underg) #St_JohnsWood (St. John's Wood, Westminster, London, England | A district in the City of Westminster, London, historically part of Marylebone. ) #St_Lawrence_Church (St. Lawrence Church, Reading, Berkshire, England | Ancient church on Friar Street in Reading. During Mitford’s time, it was the par) #St_Marks_Place (St. Mark’s Place, Venice, Italy | The main public square in Venice, known as Piazza St. Marco. It is bounded on th) #St_Michaels_Church_St_Albans (St. Michael’s Church, St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England | A parish church in St. Albans, a city in Hertfordshire, England.) #St_QueenG (Great Queen Street | Mentioned in Mitford’s Journal during a visit to London on 27 June 1820, 28 June) #Staffordshire (Staffordshire | ) #StJamesSt (St. James’s Street, Westminster, London, England | The main thoroughfare in the district of St James’s in central London which runs) #StJohns_Place (St. John’s Place, Lisson Grove, Regent’s Park, London, England | Occasional residence from 1817 onward of Benjamin Robert Haydon in Lisson Grove,) #StPauls (St. Paul’s Cathedral, London, England | St Paul’s Cathedral, London, is a Church of England (Anglican) cathedral, the se) #StQuintin_School (St. Quintin School, 22 Hans Place, Chelsea, London, England | Public school for girls founded by French emigre M. St. Quintin (or Quentin), a ) #Strand (The Strand, London, England | A major street in central London that became a gathering place for writers and t) #Stratfield_Saye (Stratfield Saye, Hampshire, England | Village in Hampshire, England. Alternative spellings are: Strathfieldsaye, Strat) #Stratford_upon_Avon_city (Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England | A market town in Warwickshire, England, on the River Avon, best known as the bir) #Strawberry_Hill (Strawberry Hill House, Twickenham, England | Horace Walpole’s house at Strawberry Hill, near Twickenham.) #Swallowfield_Park (Swallowfield Park | Estate acquired through marriage by the second Earl of Clarendon. The estate sit) #Swallowfield_village (Swallowfield, Berkshire, England | Village in Berkshire, where Mary Russell Mitford moved to a cottage in 1851, thr) #Swan_Inn (Swan Inn, Three Mile Cross, Berkshire, England | A seventeenth-century public house and coaching inn next to which the Mitford fa) #Switzerland (Switzerland | A country located in western-Central Europe.) #Tadley (Tadley | Village that Mitford travels to with her father and the dogs while coursing on 1) #Temple (Temple, London, England | District in central London, traditional location for barristers’ chambers and ot) #Thames (River Thames, England | The longest river in England, the Thames has its source in Gloucestershire and f) #Theale (Theale, Berkshire, England | Village and parish near Reading on the River Kennet, later part of the Kennet an) #Theale_church (Holy Trinity Church, Theale, Berkshire, England | Anglican church built to replace a modest brick chapel built by clergyman Dr. Sh) #Thermopylae (Thermopylae, Greece | In the ancient world, the militarily strategic location of a narrow passage to t) #ThreeMileCross (Three Mile Cross, Berkshire, England | Village in the parish of Shinfield in Berkshire, where Mary Russell Mitford move) #Totnes_village (Totnes, Devonshire, England | Market town near the River Dart in Devonshire, and residence of Sir William Elfo) #Tours_France (Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France | City in France on the lower part of the River Loire.) #Tower_of_London (Tower of London, London, England | Dating from the Norman Conquest of England, this famous complex of fortified tow) #Tripoli (Tripoli | Ancient seaport in North Africa, now the capital and largest city in Libya. In t) #Twickenham (Twickenham, Richmond upon Thames, London, England | Twickenham, a town on the Thames, now part of Greater London. In the eighteenth ) #USA (United States of America) #Vaucluse (Vaucluse, France | A department in southeast France, named after the Fontaine-de-Vaucluse, a famous) #Vendee (Vendee | Department in western France, traditionally believed to be the birthplace of Eli) #Venice (Venice, Italy | An Italian city, consisting of 118 islands in the Venetian lagoon and located in) #Vict_Theatre (Royal Victoria Theatre, London, England | This minor theatre opened in 1818 on the south side of Waterloo bridge, in order) #Vienna (Vienna, Austria | Capital and the largest city in Austria. Historically, a center for music in Eur) #Vigo (Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain | Coastal city in northwest Spain near the Portuguese border.) #W_Hill_OV (W. Hill | A steep, corkscrew-like hill described in A Great Farmhouse on which the farmer') #Wales (Wales | Located in the United Kingdom; a country in southwest Great Britain.) #Ware (Ware, Hertfordshire, England) #Warwick_Gaol (Warwick Gaol, Warwick, Warwickshire, England | Warwick Gaol was a functioning county jail located next to a town building that ) #Waterloo_Belgium (Waterloo, Walloon Brabant, Belgium | Municipality in Belgium, south of Brussels. The battle of Waterloo, at which Nap) #Watlington (Watlington | Small market town on the edge of the Chiltern Hills. By the late eighteenth cent) #Westminster_Abbey (Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England | Gothic style church in Westminster, London, where English monarchs have traditio) #Westmnst_Palace (Palace of Westminster, Westminster, London, England | Located in Westminster, London, along the Thames River. This is the meeting plac) #Westmnstr (City of Westminster, London, England | In Mitford’s time, a district of Greater London and the location of St. James's ) #Whitby_Hill (Whitby Hill | To be developed with further research. Could be the same as Whitby Park. See not) #Whitby_Park (Whitby Park | Location of Mr. and Mrs. Newell's farm in St. Giles parish, Berkshire, likely th) #Whitehall (Whitehall, Westminster, London, England | The word Whitehall, used without specific reference to the palace, refers metony) #Whitehall_Palace (Whitehall Palace, Westminster, London, England | Main London residence of English monarchs from 1530 until 1698, when a major par) #Whiteknights (Whiteknights, Berkshire, England | Berkshire estate of George Spencer-Churchill, the sixth Duke of Marlborough. Pur) #WhitleyWood (Whitley Wood | Hamlet near Reading.) #Wiltshire_county (Wiltshire, England | A landlocked county that borders Berkshire, Gloucesteshire, Oxfordshire, Hampshi) #Winchester_city (Winchester, Hampshire, England | City and county town of Hampshire. Site of Winchester Cathedral and Winchester C) #Windermere (Windermere, Cumbria, England | One of two longest and deepest lakes in England, in the Lake District, located n) #Windsor_Castle (Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England | The largest and the oldest-occupied castle in the world, Windsor Castle was buil) #Windsor_city (Windsor, Berkshire, England | Market town in Berkshire, about twenty miles from Reading and twenty miles from ) #Wokefield_Park (Wokefield Park | Estate purchased by the Bernard Brocas shortly before his death in 1777, and ext) #Wokingham_city (Wokingham, Berkshire, England | A market town in south east England in Berkshire, near Reading. The Mitfords som) #Woodcock_Ln (Woodcock Lane | Could refer to Woodcock Lane in either Wokingham or Reading. This entry may chan) #Yorkshire_county (Yorkshire, England | Historic county in northern England and the largest county in the United Kingdom) #Arden (Forest of Arden | Fictional Forest of Arden, setting for As You Like It. Variously identified with) #Brobdingnag (Brobdingnag | Fictional country populated by giantsin Swift’s novel Gulliver’s Travels.) #FairyLand_Spenser (Faery land | Fictional setting of Spenser's Faerie Queen.) #Island_Barataria (Barataria | Fictional island of which Sancho Panza is awarded governorship in Don Quixote.) #Poyais (Poyais | A fictional nation in Central America that the Scottish soldier and con artist G) #ProsperosIsland (Prospero’s Island | Fictional island settled by the shipwrecked Prospero in The Tempest.) #Ridges_OV (Ridges | An elevated ridge where the Our Village narrator and her friends climb in donkey) #RobinsonCrusoesIsland (Robinson Crusoe’s Island | Fictional island in Robinson Crusoe.) #Rose_Inn_OV (Rose Inn | The Rose Inn is mentioned many times as the local inn in Our Village. It is base) #St_Johns_Church (St. John’s Church | Fictional name used in Our Village for St. Lawrence Church, an ancient church in) #Styx (River Styx | River in ancient Greek mythology that separates the realms of the living from th) #W_Park_OV (W. Park | Mentioned in the Our Village story, Bramley Maying, and probably refers to Wokef) indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (bloc) contains the name of a geo-political unit consisting of two or more nation states or countries. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (country) contains the name of a geo-political unit, such as a nation, country, colony, or commonwealth, larger than or administratively superior to a region and smaller than a bloc. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (region) contains the name of an administrative unit such as a state, province, or county, larger than a settlement, but smaller than a country. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (settlement) contains the name of a settlement such as a city, town, or village identified as a single geo-political or administrative unit. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (district) contains the name of any kind of subdivision of a settlement, such as a parish, ward, or other administrative or geographic unit. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (offset) marks that part of a relative temporal or spatial expression which indicates the direction of the offset between the two place names, dates, or times involved in the expression. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (geographical name) identifies a name associated with some geographical feature such as Windrush Valley or Mount Sinai. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (geographical feature name) contains a common noun identifying some geographical feature contained within a geographic name, such as valley, mount, etc. [13.2.3. Place Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (name of an event) contains a proper noun or noun phrase used to refer to an event. [13.2.4. Event Names] (affiliation) contains an informal description of a person's present or past affiliation with some organization, for example an employer or sponsor. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] sponsor; 2] recommend; 3] discredit; 4] pledged [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (age) specifies the age of a person. [13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] western; 2] sui; 3] subjective; 4] objective; 5] inWorld (in world); 6] chronological; 7] biological; 8] psychological; 9] functional [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. supplies a numeric code representing the age or age group (birth) contains information about a person's birth, such as its date and place. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] caesarean (caesarean section); 2] vaginal (vaginal delivery); 3] exNihilo (ex nihilo); 4] incorporated; 5] founded; 6] established [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (climate) contains information about the physical climate of a place. [13.3.4.3. States, Traits, and Events] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (death) contains information about a person's death, such as its date and place. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] proclaimed; 2] assumed; 3] verified; 4] clinical; 5] brain; 6] natural; 7] unnatural; 8] fragmentation; 9] dissolution [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (education) contains a description of the educational experience of a person. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] primary; 2] secondary; 3] undergraduate; 4] graduate; 5] residency; 6] apprenticeship [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (event) contains data relating to anything of significance that happens in time. [13.3.1. Basic Principles] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (faith) specifies the faith, religion, or belief set of a person. [13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] practicing; 2] clandestine; 3] patrilineal; 4] matrilineal; 5] convert [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (floruit) contains information about a person's period of activity. [13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (gender) specifies the gender identity of a person, persona, or character. [13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. supplies a coded value for gender identity [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (geographical coordinates) contains any expression of a set of geographic coordinates, representing a point, line, or area on the surface of the earth in some notation. [13.3.4.1. Varieties of Location] (language knowledge) summarizes the state of a person's linguistic knowledge, either as prose or by a list of <langKnown> elements. [13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] listening; 2] speaking; 3] reading; 4] writing [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. supplies one or more valid language tags for the languages specified (language known) summarizes the state of a person's linguistic competence, i.e., knowledge of a single language. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. supplies a valid language tag for the language concerned. a code indicating the person's level of knowledge for this language [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (list of organizations) contains a list of elements, each of which provides information about an identifiable organization. [13.2.2. Organizational Names] archives histOrgs fictOrgs archOrgs (list of events) contains a list of descriptions, each of which provides information about an identifiable event. [13.3.1. Basic Principles] histEvents (list of persons) contains a list of descriptions, each of which provides information about an identifiable person or a group of people, for example the participants in a language interaction, or the people referred to in a historical source. [13.3.2. The Person Element 15.2. Contextual Information 2.4. The Profile Description 15.3.2. Declarable Elements] Mitford_Team Past_Assistants Past_Editors histPersons archPersons fictPersons (list of places) contains a list of places, optionally followed by a list of relationships (other than containment) defined amongst them. [2.2.7. The Source Description 13.3.4. Places] histPlaces fictPlaces provides information about relationships identified amongst people, places, and organizations, either informally as prose or as formally expressed relation links. [13.3.2.3. Personal Relationships] (location) defines the location of a place as a set of geographical coordinates, in terms of other named geo-political entities, or as an address. [13.3.4. Places] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (nationality) contains an informal description of a person's present or past nationality or citizenship. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] birth; 2] naturalised; 3] self-assigned [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (occupation) describes a person's trade, profession or occupation. Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: . Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: Multiple subtypes are permitted, but these must be from the following list: artist Suggested values include: 1] painter (with type="artist": Designate type of painter as appropriate in the note element.); 2] printmaker (with type="artist": this includes printmaking for books.); 3] engraver (with type="artist": this includes engravings for books.); 4] sculptor (with type="artist".); 5] architect (with type="artist". for designers of buildings.); 6] landscape (with type="artist". for designers and planners of gardens. The occupation of gardener, for one who helps maintain a garden, goes with @type="service" ); 7] illustrator (with type="artist". This includes book illustrators.) painter (with type="artist": Designate type of painter as appropriate in the note element.) printmaker (with type="artist": this includes printmaking for books.) engraver (with type="artist": this includes engravings for books.) sculptor (with type="artist".) architect (with type="artist". for designers of buildings.) landscape (with type="artist". for designers and planners of gardens. The occupation of gardener, for one who helps maintain a garden, goes with @type="service" ) illustrator (with type="artist". This includes book illustrators.) bookProducer Suggested values include: 1] publisher (with type="bookProducer".); 2] printer (with type="bookProducer". Do not use for art printing. For that, use one of the subtypes associated with type="artist".); 3] binder (with type="bookProducer".); 4] bookseller (with type="bookProducer".) publisher (with type="bookProducer".) printer (with type="bookProducer". Do not use for art printing. For that, use one of the subtypes associated with type="artist".) binder (with type="bookProducer".) bookseller (with type="bookProducer".) religious Suggested values include: 1] clergy (with type="religious".); 2] prophet (with type="religious".); 3] vicar (with type="religious".); 4] curate (with type="religious".); 5] minister (with type="religious".); 6] rector (with type="religious".); 7] priest (with type="religious". Use for Catholic clergy as well as Greek/Roman clergy. Synonymous with priestess for the purposes of our encoding.); 8] composer (with type="religious". For composers of religious music.); 9] musician (with type="religious". For musical performers in church settings and religious contexts.); 10] churchAssist (with type="religious". For non-leadership roles serving the church (such as pew-opener, sexton, or verger).) clergy (with type="religious".) prophet (with type="religious".) vicar (with type="religious".) curate (with type="religious".) minister (with type="religious".) rector (with type="religious".) priest (with type="religious". Use for Catholic clergy as well as Greek/Roman clergy. Synonymous with priestess for the purposes of our encoding.) composer (with type="religious". For composers of religious music.) musician (with type="religious". For musical performers in church settings and religious contexts.) churchAssist (with type="religious". For non-leadership roles serving the church (such as pew-opener, sexton, or verger).) educator Suggested values include: 1] teacher (with type="educator".); 2] schoolHead (with type="educator". (for headmistress, schoolmaster, etc.)); 3] governess (with type="educator".); 4] tutor (with type="educator".); 5] lecturer (with type="educator". For public lecturers on educational topics.) teacher (with type="educator".) schoolHead (with type="educator". (for headmistress, schoolmaster, etc.)) governess (with type="educator".) tutor (with type="educator".) lecturer (with type="educator". For public lecturers on educational topics.) scholar Suggested values include: 1] philosopher (with type="scholar". Distinct from natural philosopher.); 2] naturalist (with type="scholar". Covers the natural sciences and earth sciences, and includes biologist, botanist, ornithologist, geologist, etc.); 3] astronomer (with type="scholar".); 4] curator (with type="scholar". for antiquarian collectors and those working in libraries and museums.); 5] antiquarian (with type="scholar". For those who research artifacts rather than collect them.); 6] historian (with type="scholar". ); 7] inventor (with type="scholar". ); 8] economist (with type="scholar". ); 9] agronomist (with type="scholar". For those who study agriculture.); 10] supernatural (For a powerful person who researches the supernatural or the spirit world, for example, Prospero or Dr. Faustus. With type="scholar".) philosopher (with type="scholar". Distinct from natural philosopher.) naturalist (with type="scholar". Covers the natural sciences and earth sciences, and includes biologist, botanist, ornithologist, geologist, etc.) astronomer (with type="scholar".) curator (with type="scholar". for antiquarian collectors and those working in libraries and museums.) antiquarian (with type="scholar". For those who research artifacts rather than collect them.) historian (with type="scholar". ) inventor (with type="scholar". ) economist (with type="scholar". ) agronomist (with type="scholar". For those who study agriculture.) supernatural (For a powerful person who researches the supernatural or the spirit world, for example, Prospero or Dr. Faustus. With type="scholar".) explorer Suggested values include: 1] traveller (with type="explorer".); 2] navigator (with type="explorer".); 3] cartographer (with type="explorer".); 4] seaCaptain (with type="explorer". Commands a ship, distinct from military post.) traveller (with type="explorer".) navigator (with type="explorer".) cartographer (with type="explorer".) seaCaptain (with type="explorer". Commands a ship, distinct from military post.) legal Suggested values include: 1] barrister (with type="legal". British lawyers who can plead in court.); 2] solicitor (with type="legal". British lawyers who do not plead in court.); 3] lawyer (with type="legal". ONLY appropriate if law practitioner from the United States.); 4] recorder (with type="legal". ); 5] judge (with type="legal". ex: Mr. Justice Talfourd); 6] magistrate (with type="legal". ex: George Mitford); 7] enforcement (with type="legal". For constable, police, or sheriff, those involved in law enforcement.) barrister (with type="legal". British lawyers who can plead in court.) solicitor (with type="legal". British lawyers who do not plead in court.) lawyer (with type="legal". ONLY appropriate if law practitioner from the United States.) recorder (with type="legal". ) judge (with type="legal". ex: Mr. Justice Talfourd) magistrate (with type="legal". ex: George Mitford) enforcement (with type="legal". For constable, police, or sheriff, those involved in law enforcement.) literary Suggested values include: 1] novelist (with type="literary". ); 2] poet (with type="literary". ); 3] playwright (with type="literary". ); 4] essayist (with type="literary". For essayists who are not primarily writing specific literary/art reviews, but more broad-ranging philosophical or aesthetic writings.); 5] critic (with type="literary". For literary, theatre / art critics and reviewers.); 6] journalist (with type="literary". ); 7] editor (with type="literary". ); 8] biographer (with type="literary". ); 9] autobiographer (with type="literary". ); 10] lexicographer (with type="literary". ); 11] linguist (with type="literary". For those who systemically study languages, not simply translators.); 12] translator (with type="literary". ) novelist (with type="literary". ) poet (with type="literary". ) playwright (with type="literary". ) essayist (with type="literary". For essayists who are not primarily writing specific literary/art reviews, but more broad-ranging philosophical or aesthetic writings.) critic (with type="literary". For literary, theatre / art critics and reviewers.) journalist (with type="literary". ) editor (with type="literary". ) biographer (with type="literary". ) autobiographer (with type="literary". ) lexicographer (with type="literary". ) linguist (with type="literary". For those who systemically study languages, not simply translators.) translator (with type="literary". ) theater Suggested values include: 1] actor (with type="theater". General term for all sexes; do not use "actress".); 2] singer (with type="theater". Includes opera singers in performing roles. ); 3] manager (with type="theater". For actor-managers and theater managers like William Macready.); 4] owner (with type="theater". ); 5] designer (with type="theater". For production designers, costume-makers, makers of stage sets and props.); 6] musician (with type="theater". For pit players of music supporting the stage.); 7] composer (with type="theater". For writers of instrumental and vocal music for the stage, including lyricists and librettists.) actor (with type="theater". General term for all sexes; do not use "actress".) singer (with type="theater". Includes opera singers in performing roles. ) manager (with type="theater". For actor-managers and theater managers like William Macready.) owner (with type="theater". ) designer (with type="theater". For production designers, costume-makers, makers of stage sets and props.) musician (with type="theater". For pit players of music supporting the stage.) composer (with type="theater". For writers of instrumental and vocal music for the stage, including lyricists and librettists.) medical Suggested values include: 1] physician (with type="medical".); 2] surgeon (with type="medical". Includes barbers and others who do surgery and bloodletting.); 3] apothecary (with type="medical". For pharmacy specialists.); 4] midwife (with type="medical". Includes, should we ever see one, a "man-midwife" or a male who assists with births and is not a physician or surgeon.); 5] oculist (with type="medical".); 6] dentist (with type="medical".) physician (with type="medical".) surgeon (with type="medical". Includes barbers and others who do surgery and bloodletting.) apothecary (with type="medical". For pharmacy specialists.) midwife (with type="medical". Includes, should we ever see one, a "man-midwife" or a male who assists with births and is not a physician or surgeon.) oculist (with type="medical".) dentist (with type="medical".) military Suggested values include: 1] army (with type="military".); 2] navy (with type="military".) army (with type="military".) navy (with type="military".) benefactor Suggested values include: 1] philanthropist (with type="benefactor". For doers of benevolent activities outside of the arts); 2] patron (with type="benefactor". For supporters of the arts, theatre, and writers); 3] volunteer (with type="benefactor". For individual benevolent activities involving labor rather than money) philanthropist (with type="benefactor". For doers of benevolent activities outside of the arts) patron (with type="benefactor". For supporters of the arts, theatre, and writers) volunteer (with type="benefactor". For individual benevolent activities involving labor rather than money) government Suggested values include: 1] monarch (with type="government". Titles like King, Queen, Princess are coded in <roleName>, not <occupation>.); 2] politician (with type="government". Use for elected officials and those running for election or who are in office by reason of political party or affiliation. Code their official title (such as "Member of Parliament for Westminster) with <roleName>.); 3] orator (with type="government". For political or reformist orators who are not clergy, actors, or prophets.); 4] reformer (with type="government". Any public advocate for political or social reform.); 5] courtier (with type="government". For aristocracy and others whose job is to serve at court in some capacity.); 6] diplomat (with type="government". Ambassadors and other diplomatists. Roles like “Ambassador to the Court of St. James” are coded in <roleName>.); 7] administrator (with type="government". For management positions, high-ranking civil service positions within the British empire, etc. Lower-ranking positions should be coded as subtype="clerk".); 8] clerk (with type="government".); 9] taxCollector (with type="government".); 10] post (with type="government". For postal service occupations.); 11] customs (with type="government".); 12] surveyor (Appointed by Parliament or employed, for example, by a local government committee to survey roads or parks. With type="government".); 13] alderman (with type="government".) monarch (with type="government". Titles like King, Queen, Princess are coded in <roleName>, not <occupation>.) politician (with type="government". Use for elected officials and those running for election or who are in office by reason of political party or affiliation. Code their official title (such as "Member of Parliament for Westminster) with <roleName>.) orator (with type="government". For political or reformist orators who are not clergy, actors, or prophets.) reformer (with type="government". Any public advocate for political or social reform.) courtier (with type="government". For aristocracy and others whose job is to serve at court in some capacity.) diplomat (with type="government". Ambassadors and other diplomatists. Roles like “Ambassador to the Court of St. James” are coded in <roleName>.) administrator (with type="government". For management positions, high-ranking civil service positions within the British empire, etc. Lower-ranking positions should be coded as subtype="clerk".) clerk (with type="government".) taxCollector (with type="government".) post (with type="government". For postal service occupations.) customs (with type="government".) surveyor (Appointed by Parliament or employed, for example, by a local government committee to survey roads or parks. With type="government".) alderman (with type="government".) service Suggested values include: 1] butler (with type="service".); 2] coachman (with type="service".); 3] maid (with type="service".); 4] manservant (with type="service".); 5] valet (with type="service".); 6] footman (For male servants involved in tending the house; includes page. with type="service".); 7] cook (with type="service".); 8] housekeeper (with type="service".); 9] gardener (with type="service": Use for one who tends a garden. If raising money from the garden, use instead type="trade" subtype="farmer".); 10] nurse (For a personal nurse attendant as member of a household. With type="service".); 11] gamekeeper (with type="service".); 12] groom (with type="service".); 13] majordomo (For the head servant who can speak and act on behalf of the household owners. With type="service".) butler (with type="service".) coachman (with type="service".) maid (with type="service".) manservant (with type="service".) valet (with type="service".) footman (For male servants involved in tending the house; includes page. with type="service".) cook (with type="service".) housekeeper (with type="service".) gardener (with type="service": Use for one who tends a garden. If raising money from the garden, use instead type="trade" subtype="farmer".) nurse (For a personal nurse attendant as member of a household. With type="service".) gamekeeper (with type="service".) groom (with type="service".) majordomo (For the head servant who can speak and act on behalf of the household owners. With type="service".) service Suggested values include: 1] butler (with type="service".); 2] coachman (with type="service".); 3] maid (with type="service".); 4] manservant (with type="service".); 5] valet (with type="service".); 6] footman (For male servants involved in tending the house; includes page. with type="service".); 7] cook (with type="service".); 8] housekeeper (with type="service".); 9] gardener (with type="service": Use for one who tends a garden. If raising money from the garden, use instead type="trade" subtype="farmer".); 10] nurse (For a personal nurse attendant as member of a household. With type="service".); 11] gamekeeper (with type="service".); 12] groom (with type="service".); 13] majordomo (For the head servant who can speak and act on behalf of the household owners. With type="service".) butler (with type="service".) coachman (with type="service".) maid (with type="service".) manservant (with type="service".) valet (with type="service".) footman (For male servants involved in tending the house; includes page. with type="service".) cook (with type="service".) housekeeper (with type="service".) gardener (with type="service": Use for one who tends a garden. If raising money from the garden, use instead type="trade" subtype="farmer".) nurse (For a personal nurse attendant as member of a household. With type="service".) gamekeeper (with type="service".) groom (with type="service".) majordomo (For the head servant who can speak and act on behalf of the household owners. With type="service".) trade Suggested values include: 1] baker (with type="trade".); 2] butcher (with type="trade".); 3] farmer (with type="trade".); 4] bricklayer (with type="trade".); 5] mason (with type="trade".); 6] chandler (with type="trade".); 7] wheelwright (with type="trade".); 8] carpenter (with type="trade".); 9] watchmaker (with type="trade".); 10] miller (with type="trade".); 11] blacksmith (with type="trade".); 12] goldsmith (with type="trade".); 13] jeweller (with type="trade".); 14] tanner (with type="trade".); 15] saddler (with type="trade".); 16] shoemaker (Includes specialist work related to footgear, including patten makers, clog makers, and bootmakers. With type="trade".); 17] innkeeper (with type="trade".); 18] liquor (with type="trade". For a retailer of beer/wine.); 19] merchant (with type="trade".); 20] clerk (with type="trade". For an employee in a shop.); 21] banker (with type="trade".); 22] stockbroker (with type="trade".); 23] auctioneer (with type="trade".); 24] gambler (with type="trade".); 25] ropemaker (with type="trade".); 26] fisherman (with type="trade".); 27] factoryOwner (with type="trade".); 28] shopAssist (with type="trade".); 29] tailor (Includes collar makers, those preparing garments for men. (For makers of women’s clothing use seamstress.) With type="trade".); 30] hatter (Includes milliners. With type="trade".); 31] seamstress (Includes dressmakers. With type="trade".); 32] laundry (with type="trade".); 33] char (with type="trade".); 34] thatcher (with type="trade".); 35] housePainter (with type="trade".); 36] glazier (Cuts, installs, and removes glass from windows and doors. With type="trade".); 37] construction (with type="trade".); 38] farmAssist (with type="trade".); 39] carter (with type="trade".); 40] driver (Broadly applicable to stage coach drivers, hired drivers, or those carrying chair lifts. With type="trade".); 41] hunt (For those employed in hunting activities (like trapping hares) as well as those trading in items involved with hunting. With type="trade".); 42] magic (For street magicians, illusionists, fortune tellers, those making a living in magic arts. With type="trade".); 43] poacher (with type="trade".); 44] broomMaker (with type="trade".); 45] sailor (with type="trade".) baker (with type="trade".) butcher (with type="trade".) farmer (with type="trade".) bricklayer (with type="trade".) mason (with type="trade".) chandler (with type="trade".) wheelwright (with type="trade".) carpenter (with type="trade".) watchmaker (with type="trade".) miller (with type="trade".) blacksmith (with type="trade".) goldsmith (with type="trade".) jeweller (with type="trade".) tanner (with type="trade".) saddler (with type="trade".) shoemaker (Includes specialist work related to footgear, including patten makers, clog makers, and bootmakers. With type="trade".) innkeeper (with type="trade".) liquor (with type="trade". For a retailer of beer/wine.) merchant (with type="trade".) clerk (with type="trade". For an employee in a shop.) banker (with type="trade".) stockbroker (with type="trade".) auctioneer (with type="trade".) gambler (with type="trade".) ropemaker (with type="trade".) fisherman (with type="trade".) factoryOwner (with type="trade".) shopAssist (with type="trade".) tailor (Includes collar makers, those preparing garments for men. (For makers of women’s clothing use seamstress.) With type="trade".) hatter (Includes milliners. With type="trade".) seamstress (Includes dressmakers. With type="trade".) laundry (with type="trade".) char (with type="trade".) thatcher (with type="trade".) housePainter (with type="trade".) glazier (Cuts, installs, and removes glass from windows and doors. With type="trade".) construction (with type="trade".) farmAssist (with type="trade".) carter (with type="trade".) driver (Broadly applicable to stage coach drivers, hired drivers, or those carrying chair lifts. With type="trade".) hunt (For those employed in hunting activities (like trapping hares) as well as those trading in items involved with hunting. With type="trade".) magic (For street magicians, illusionists, fortune tellers, those making a living in magic arts. With type="trade".) poacher (with type="trade".) broomMaker (with type="trade".) sailor (with type="trade".) (organization) provides information about an identifiable organization such as a business, a tribe, or any other grouping of people. [13.3.3. Organizational Data] specifies a primary role or classification for the organization. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (person) provides information about an identifiable individual, for example a participant in a language interaction, or a person referred to in a historical source. [13.3.2. The Person Element 15.2.2. The Participant Description] m (for persons identified as male.) f (for persons identified as female.) m f (for persons identified as of transitional or multiple sexual identities.) u (for persons with unidentified or unknown sexual identity.) specifies a primary role or classification for the person. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the gender of the person. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies an age group for the person. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ provides information about one of the personalities identified for a given individual, where an individual has multiple personalities. [13.3.2. The Person Element] specifies a primary role or classification for the persona. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the sex of the persona. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the gender of the persona. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies an age group for the persona. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (personal group) describes a group of individuals treated as a single person for analytic purposes. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] specifies the role of this group of participants in the interaction. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the sex of the participant group. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the gender of the participant group. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the age group of the participants. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ describes informally the size or approximate size of the group for example by means of a number and an indication of accuracy e.g. approx 200. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (personal pronouns) indicates the personal pronouns used, or assumed to be used, by the individual being described. [13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] (evidence) indicates support for the listed personal pronouns. Suggested values include: 1] conjecture (conjecture); 2] selfIdentification (self identification); 3] trustedThirdParty (trusted third party) conjecture (conjecture) The given value was selected based on assumptions by someone besides the person to whom this pronoun applies. As a result, the value may be erroneous. selfIdentification (self identification) The given value has been explicitly stated or confirmed by the person to whom this pronoun applies. trustedThirdParty (trusted third party) The given value has been supplied by another individual trusted by the encoder to know the preferences of the person to whom this pronoun applies. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (value) supplies a regularized value for personal pronouns. Sample values include: 1] e (e); 2] he (he); 3] she (she); 4] they (they) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (place) contains data about a geographic location [13.3.4. Places] (population) contains information about the population of a place. [13.3.4.3. States, Traits, and Events] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (relationship) describes any kind of relationship or linkage amongst a specified group of places, events, persons, objects or other items. [13.3.2.3. Personal Relationships] One of the attributes 'name', 'ref' or 'key' must be supplied Only one of the attributes @active and @mutual may be supplied the attribute 'passive' may be supplied only if the attribute 'active' is supplied indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. supplies a name for the kind of relationship of which this is an instance. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ identifies the active participants in a non-mutual relationship, or all the participants in a mutual one. \S+ supplies a list of participants amongst all of whom the relationship holds equally. \S+ identifies the passive participants in a non-mutual relationship. \S+ (residence) describes a person's present or past places of residence. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] primary; 2] secondary; 3] temporary; 4] permanent [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (sex) specifies the sex of an organism. [13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. supplies a coded value for sex [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (socio-economic status) contains an informal description of a person's perceived social or economic status. [15.2.2. The Participant Description] characterizes the element in some sense, using any convenient classification scheme or typology. Sample values include: 1] atBirth; 2] atDeath; 3] dependent; 4] inherited; 5] independent [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. identifies the classification system or taxonomy in use, for example by pointing to a locally-defined <taxonomy> element or by supplying a URI for an externally-defined system. \S+ identifies a status code defined within the classification system or taxonomy defined by the @scheme attribute. \S+ (state) contains a description of some status or quality attributed to a person, place, or organization often at some specific time or for a specific date range. [13.3.1. Basic Principles 13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (terrain) contains information about the physical terrain of a place. [13.3.4.3. States, Traits, and Events] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (trait) contains a description of some status or quality attributed to a person, place, or organization typically, but not necessarily, independent of the volition or action of the holder and usually not at some specific time or for a specific date range. [13.3.1. Basic Principles 13.3.2.1. Personal Characteristics] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. (name of an object) contains a proper noun or noun phrase used to refer to an object. [13.2.5. Object Names] indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs. \S+ @calendar indicates one or more systems or calendars to which the date represented by the content of this element belongs, but this element has no textual content. contains a description of a single identifiable physical object. [13.3.6. Objects] (list of objects) contains a list of descriptions, each of which provides information about an identifiable physical object. [13.3.6. Objects] (object identifier) groups one or more identifiers or pieces of locating information concerning a single object. [13.3.6. Objects] (canonical name) contains the definition for a canonical name or name component of any kind. [13.3.7. Names and Nyms] points to constituent nyms \S+ (list of canonical names) contains a list of nyms, that is, standardized names for any thing. [13.3.7. Names and Nyms] (normalized) provides the normalized/standardized form of information present in the source text in a non-normalized form (original) gives the original string or is the empty string when the element does not appear in the source text. provides a lemma (base form) for the word, typically uninflected and serving both as an identifier (e.g. in dictionary contexts, as a headword), and as a basis for potential inflections. provides a pointer to a definition of the lemma for the word, for example in an online lexicon. \S+ (part of speech) indicates the part of speech assigned to a token (i.e. information on whether it is a noun, adjective, or verb), usually according to some official reference vocabulary (e.g. for German: STTS, for English: CLAWS, for Polish: NKJP, etc.). (morphosyntactic description) supplies morphosyntactic information for a token, usually according to some official reference vocabulary (e.g. for German: STTS-large tagset; for a feature description system designed as (pragmatically) universal, see Universal Features). when present, provides information on whether the token in question is adjacent to another, and if so, on which side. no the token is not adjacent to another left there is no whitespace on the left side of the token right there is no whitespace on the right side of the token both there is no whitespace on either side of the token overlap the token overlaps with another; other devices (specifying the extent and the area of overlap) are needed to more precisely locate this token in the character stream (analysis) indicates one or more elements containing interpretations of the element on which the @ana attribute appears. \S+ (s-unit) contains a sentence-like division of a text. [17.1. Linguistic Segment Categories 8.4.1. Segmentation] You may not nest one s element within another: use seg instead (clause) represents a grammatical clause. [17.1. Linguistic Segment Categories] (phrase) represents a grammatical phrase. [17.1. Linguistic Segment Categories] (word) represents a grammatical (not necessarily orthographic) word. [17.1. Linguistic Segment Categories 17.4.2. Lightweight Linguistic Annotation] (morpheme) represents a grammatical morpheme. [17.1. Linguistic Segment Categories] supplies the morpheme's base form. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (character) represents a character. [17.1. Linguistic Segment Categories] (punctuation character) contains a character or string of characters regarded as constituting a single punctuation mark. [17.1.2. Below the Word Level 17.4.2. Lightweight Linguistic Annotation] indicates the extent to which this punctuation mark conventionally separates words or phrases strong the punctuation mark is a word separator weak the punctuation mark is not a word separator inter the punctuation mark may or may not be a word separator provides a name for the kind of unit delimited by this punctuation mark. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates whether this punctuation mark precedes or follows the unit it delimits. associates an interpretative annotation directly with a span of text. [17.3. Spans and Interpretations] Only one of the attributes @target and @from may be supplied on Only one of the attributes @target and @to may be supplied on If @to is supplied on , @from must be supplied as well The attributes @to and @from on may each contain only a single value gives the identifier of the node which is the starting point of the span of text being annotated; if not accompanied by a @to attribute, gives the identifier of the node of the entire span of text being annotated. \S+ gives the identifier of the node which is the end-point of the span of text being annotated. \S+ (span group) collects together span tags. [17.3. Spans and Interpretations] (interpretation) summarizes a specific interpretative annotation which can be linked to a span of text. [17.3. Spans and Interpretations] (interpretation group) collects together a set of related interpretations which share responsibility or type. [17.3. Spans and Interpretations] (TEI document) contains a single TEI-conformant document, combining a single TEI header with one or more members of the model.resource class. Multiple <TEI> elements may be combined within a <TEI> (or <teiCorpus>) element. [4. Default Text Structure 15.1. Varieties of Composite Text] specifies the version number of the TEI Guidelines against which this document is valid. [\d]+(\.[\d]+){0,2} (text) contains a single text of any kind, whether unitary or composite, for example a poem or drama, a collection of essays, a novel, a dictionary, or a corpus sample. [4. Default Text Structure 15.1. Varieties of Composite Text] (text body) contains the whole body of a single unitary text, excluding any front or back matter. [4. Default Text Structure] (group) contains the body of a composite text, grouping together a sequence of distinct texts (or groups of such texts) which are regarded as a unit for some purpose, for example the collected works of an author, a sequence of prose essays, etc. [4. Default Text Structure 4.3.1. Grouped Texts 15.1. Varieties of Composite Text] (floating text) contains a single text of any kind, whether unitary or composite, which interrupts the text containing it at any point and after which the surrounding text resumes. [4.3.2. Floating Texts] (text division) contains a subdivision of the front, body, or back of a text. [4.1. Divisions of the Body] Abstract model violation: Lines may not contain higher-level structural elements such as div, unless div is a descendant of floatingText. Abstract model violation: p and ab may not contain higher-level structural elements such as div, unless div is a descendant of floatingText. contains a closing title or footer appearing at the end of a division of a text. [4.2.4. Content of Textual Divisions 4.2. Elements Common to All Divisions] (byline) contains the primary statement of responsibility given for a work on its title page or at the head or end of the work. [4.2.2. Openers and Closers 4.5. Front Matter] (dateline) contains a brief description of the place, date, time, etc. of production of a letter, newspaper story, or other work, prefixed or suffixed to it as a kind of heading or trailer. [4.2.2. Openers and Closers] (argument) contains a formal list or prose description of the topics addressed by a subdivision of a text. [4.2. Elements Common to All Divisions 4.6. Title Pages] (epigraph) contains a quotation, anonymous or attributed, appearing at the start or end of a section or on a title page. [4.2.3. Arguments, Epigraphs, and Postscripts 4.2. Elements Common to All Divisions 4.6. Title Pages] (opener) groups together dateline, byline, salutation, and similar phrases appearing as a preliminary group at the start of a division, especially of a letter. [4.2. Elements Common to All Divisions] (closer) groups together salutations, datelines, and similar phrases appearing as a final group at the end of a division, especially of a letter. [4.2.2. Openers and Closers 4.2. Elements Common to All Divisions] (salutation) contains a salutation or greeting prefixed to a foreword, dedicatory epistle, or other division of a text, or the salutation in the closing of a letter, preface, etc. [4.2.2. Openers and Closers] (signature) contains the closing salutation, etc., appended to a foreword, dedicatory epistle, or other division of a text. [4.2.2. Openers and Closers] contains a postscript, e.g. to a letter. [4.2. Elements Common to All Divisions] (title page) contains the title page of a text, appearing within the front or back matter. [4.6. Title Pages] classifies the title page according to any convenient typology. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (document title) contains the title of a document, including all its constituents, as given on a title page. [4.6. Title Pages] (title part) contains a subsection or division of the title of a work, as indicated on a title page. [4.6. Title Pages] (type) specifies the role of this subdivision of the title. Suggested values include: 1] main (main); 2] sub (subordinate); 3] alt (alternate); 4] short (short); 5] desc (descriptive) main (main) main title of the work sub (subordinate) subtitle of the work alt (alternate) alternative title of the work short (short) abbreviated form of title desc (descriptive) descriptive paraphrase of the work [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (document author) contains the name of the author of the document, as given on the title page (often but not always contained in a byline). [4.6. Title Pages] (imprimatur) contains a formal statement authorizing the publication of a work, sometimes required to appear on a title page or its verso. [4.6. Title Pages] (document edition) contains an edition statement as presented on a title page of a document. [4.6. Title Pages] (document imprint) contains the imprint statement (place and date of publication, publisher name), as given (usually) at the foot of a title page. [4.6. Title Pages] (document date) contains the date of a document, as given on a title page or in a dateline. [4.6. Title Pages] (front matter) contains any prefatory matter (headers, abstracts, title page, prefaces, dedications, etc.) found at the start of a document, before the main body. [4.6. Title Pages 4. Default Text Structure] (back matter) contains any appendixes, etc. following the main part of a text. [4.7. Back Matter 4. Default Text Structure] (setting) contains a description of the setting, time, locale, appearance, etc., of the action of a play, typically found in the front matter of a printed performance text (not a stage direction). [7.1. Front and Back Matter ] (prologue) contains the prologue to a drama, typically spoken by an actor out of character, possibly in association with a particular performance or venue. [7.1.2. Prologues and Epilogues 7.1. Front and Back Matter ] (epilogue) contains the epilogue to a drama, typically spoken by an actor out of character, possibly in association with a particular performance or venue. [7.1.2. Prologues and Epilogues 7.1. Front and Back Matter ] (performance) contains a section of front or back matter describing how a dramatic piece is to be performed in general or how it was performed on some specific occasion. [7.1.3. Records of Performances 7.1. Front and Back Matter ] (cast list) contains a single cast list or dramatis personae. [7.1.4. Cast Lists 7.1. Front and Back Matter ] (cast list grouping) groups one or more individual <castItem> elements within a cast list. [7.1.4. Cast Lists] (cast list item) contains a single entry within a cast list, describing either a single role or a list of non-speaking roles. [7.1.4. Cast Lists] characterizes the cast item. role the item describes a single role. list the item describes a list of non-speaking roles. (role) contains the name of a dramatic role, as given in a cast list. [7.1.4. Cast Lists] specifies the gender of the role. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (role description) describes a character's role in a drama. [7.1.4. Cast Lists] contains the name of an actor appearing within a cast list. [7.1.4. Cast Lists] specifies the sex of the actor. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the gender of the actor. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (speech group) contains a group of speeches or songs in a performance text presented in a source as constituting a single unit or number. [7.2.3. Grouped Speeches] (movement) marks the actual movement of one or more characters. [7.2.4. Stage Directions] characterizes the movement, for example as an entrance or exit. Suggested values include: 1] entrance; 2] exit; 3] onStage entrance character is entering the stage. exit character is exiting the stage. onStage character moves on stage [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies the direction of a stage movement. Sample values include: 1] L (left); 2] R (right); 3] C (center) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ \S+ (performance) identifies the performance or performances in which this movement occurred as specified by pointing to one or more <performance> elements. \S+ (view) describes the visual context of some part of a screen play in terms of what the spectator sees, generally independent of any dialogue. [7.3.1. Technical Information 7.3. Other Types of Performance Text] (sound) describes a sound effect or musical sequence specified within a screen play or radio script. [7.3.1. Technical Information 7.3. Other Types of Performance Text] categorizes the sound in some respect, e.g. as music, special effect, etc. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates whether the sound overlaps the surrounding speeches or interrupts them. unknown inapplicable (caption) contains the text of a caption or other text displayed as part of a film script or screenplay. [7.3.1. Technical Information 7.3. Other Types of Performance Text] (technical stage direction) describes a special-purpose stage direction that is not meant for the actors. [7.3.1. Technical Information] categorizes the technical stage direction. Suggested values include: 1] light; 2] sound; 3] prop; 4] block light a lighting cue sound a sound cue prop a prop cue block a blocking instruction [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (performance) points to one or more <performance> elements documenting the performance or performances to which this technical direction applies. \S+ (corresponds) points to elements that correspond to the current element in some way. \S+ (synchronous) points to elements that are synchronous with the current element. \S+ points to an element that is the same as the current element. \S+ points to an element of which the current element is a copy. \S+ points to the next element of a virtual aggregate of which the current element is part. \S+ (previous) points to the previous element of a virtual aggregate of which the current element is part. \S+ points to elements that are in exclusive alternation with the current element. \S+ selects one or more alternants; if one alternant is selected, the ambiguity or uncertainty is marked as resolved. If more than one alternant is selected, the degree of ambiguity or uncertainty is marked as reduced by the number of alternants not selected. \S+ (link) defines an association or hypertextual link among elements or passages, of some type not more precisely specifiable by other elements. [16.1. Links] You must supply at least two values for @target or on (link group) defines a collection of associations or hypertextual links. [16.1. Links] (anonymous block) contains any component-level unit of text, acting as a container for phrase or inter level elements analogous to, but without the same constraints as, a paragraph. [16.3. Blocks, Segments, and Anchors] Abstract model violation: Lines may not contain higher-level divisions such as p or ab, unless ab is a child of figure or note, or is a descendant of floatingText. (anchor point) attaches an identifier to a point within a text, whether or not it corresponds with a textual element. [8.4.2. Synchronization and Overlap 16.5. Correspondence and Alignment] (arbitrary segment) represents any segmentation of text below the chunk level. [16.3. Blocks, Segments, and Anchors 6.2. Components of the Verse Line 7.2.5. Speech Contents] indicates a point in time either relative to other elements in the same timeline tag, or absolutely. [16.4.2. Placing Synchronous Events in Time] supplies an absolute value for the time. specifies the unit of time in which the @interval value is expressed, if this is not inherited from the parent <timeline>. Suggested values include: 1] d (days); 2] h (hours); 3] min (minutes); 4] s (seconds); 5] ms (milliseconds) d (days) h (hours) min (minutes) s (seconds) ms (milliseconds) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies a time interval either as a number or as one of the keywords defined by the datatype teidata.interval regular irregular unknown identifies the reference point for determining the time of the current <when> element, which is obtained by adding the interval to the time of the reference point. \S+ (timeline) provides a set of ordered points in time which can be linked to elements of a spoken text to create a temporal alignment of that text. [16.4.2. Placing Synchronous Events in Time] designates the origin of the timeline, i.e. the time at which it begins. \S+ specifies the unit of time corresponding to the @interval value of the timeline or of its constituent points in time. Suggested values include: 1] d (days); 2] h (hours); 3] min (minutes); 4] s (seconds); 5] ms (milliseconds) d (days) h (hours) min (minutes) s (seconds) ms (milliseconds) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ specifies a time interval either as a positive integral value or using one of a set of predefined codes. regular irregular unknown (join) identifies a possibly fragmented segment of text, by pointing at the possibly discontiguous elements which compose it. [16.7. Aggregation] You must supply at least two values for @target on specifies the name of an element which this aggregation may be understood to represent. indicates whether the targets to be joined include the entire element indicated (the entire subtree including its root), or just the children of the target (the branches of the subtree). root the rooted subtrees indicated by the @target attribute are joined, each subtree become a child of the virtual element created by the join branches the children of the subtrees indicated by the @target attribute become the children of the virtual element (i.e. the roots of the subtrees are discarded) (join group) groups a collection of <join> elements and possibly pointers. [16.7. Aggregation] supplies the default value for the @result on each <join> included within the group. (alternation) identifies an alternation or a set of choices among elements or passages. [16.8. Alternation] specifies the destination of the reference by supplying one or more URI References \S+ \S+ \S+ states whether the alternations gathered in this collection are exclusive or inclusive. excl (exclusive) indicates that the alternation is exclusive, i.e. that at most one of the alternatives occurs. incl (inclusive) indicates that the alternation is not exclusive, i.e. that one or more of the alternatives occur. If @mode is excl, each weight states the probability that the corresponding alternative occurs. If @mode is incl each weight states the probability that the corresponding alternative occurs given that at least one of the other alternatives occurs. (alternation group) groups a collection of <alt> elements and possibly pointers. [16.8. Alternation] states whether the alternations gathered in this collection are exclusive or inclusive. excl (exclusive) indicates that the alternation is exclusive, i.e. that at most one of the alternatives occurs. incl (inclusive) indicates that the alternation is not exclusive, i.e. that one or more of the alternatives occur. Functions as a container element for linked data, contextual information, and stand-off annotations embedded in a TEI document. [16.10. The standOff Container] This element must have a @type attribute, since it is nested inside a contains a list of annotations, typically encoded as <annotation>, <annotationBlock>, or <note>, possibly organized with nested <listAnnotation> elements. [16.10. The standOff Container] represents an annotation following the Web Annotation Data Model. [16.10. The standOff Container] (identifier) provides a unique identifier for the element bearing the attribute. specifies the destination of the reference by supplying one or more URI References \S+ assessing intent is to assess the target resource in some way, rather than simply make a comment about it bookmarking intent is to create a bookmark to the target or part thereof classifying intent is to classify the target in some way commenting intent is to comment about the target describing intent is to describe the target, rather than (for example) comment on it editing intent is to request an edit or a change to the target resource highlighting intent is to highlight the target resource or a segment thereof identifying intent is to assign an identity to the target linking intent is to link to a resource related to the target moderating intent is to assign some value or quality to the target questioning intent is to ask a question about the target replying intent is to reply to a previous statement, either an annotation or another resource tagging intent is to associate a tag with the target (witness or witnesses) contains a space-delimited list of one or more sigla indicating the witnesses to this reading beginning or ending at this point. \S+ (witness or witnesses) contains a space-delimited list of one or more pointers indicating the witnesses which attest to a given reading. \S+ classifies the reading according to some useful typology. Sample values include: 1] substantive (substantive); 2] orthographic (orthographic) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ classifies the cause for the variant reading, according to any appropriate typology of possible origins. Sample values include: 1] homeoteleuton; 2] homeoarchy; 3] paleographicConfusion; 4] haplography; 5] dittography; 6] falseEmendation [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (variant sequence) provides a number indicating the position of this reading in a sequence, when there is reason to presume a sequence to the variants. points to other readings that are required when adopting the current reading or lemma. \S+ (apparatus entry) contains one entry in a critical apparatus, with an optional lemma and usually one or more readings or notes on the relevant passage. [12.1.1. The Apparatus Entry] classifies the variation contained in this element according to some convenient typology. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ identifies the beginning of the lemma in the base text. \S+ identifies the endpoint of the lemma in the base text. \S+ (location) indicates the location of the variation, when the location-referenced method of apparatus markup is used. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (list of apparatus entries) contains a list of apparatus entries. [12.2. Linking the Apparatus to the Text] (reading) contains a single reading within a textual variation. [12.1. The Apparatus Entry, Readings, and Witnesses] (reading group) within a textual variation, groups two or more readings perceived to have a genetic relationship or other affinity. [12.1. The Apparatus Entry, Readings, and Witnesses] Only one <lem> element may appear within a <rdgGrp> (witness detail) gives further information about a particular witness, or witnesses, to a particular reading. [12.1. The Apparatus Entry, Readings, and Witnesses] describes the type of information given about the witness. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (witnesses) indicates the sigil or sigla identifying the witness or witnesses to which the detail refers. \S+ (wit) contains a list of one or more sigla of witnesses attesting a given reading, in a textual variation. [12.1.4. Witness Information] (witness list) lists definitions for all the witnesses referred to by a critical apparatus, optionally grouped hierarchically. [12.1. The Apparatus Entry, Readings, and Witnesses] (witness) contains either a description of a single witness referred to within the critical apparatus, or a list of witnesses which is to be referred to by a single sigil. [12.1. The Apparatus Entry, Readings, and Witnesses] (fragmented witness start) indicates the beginning, or resumption, of the text of a fragmentary witness. [12.1.5. Fragmentary Witnesses] (fragmented witness end) indicates the end, or suspension, of the text of a fragmentary witness. [12.1.5. Fragmentary Witnesses] (lacuna start) indicates the beginning of a lacuna in the text of a mostly complete textual witness. [12.1.5. Fragmentary Witnesses] (lacuna end) indicates the end of a lacuna in a mostly complete textual witness. [12.1.5. Fragmentary Witnesses] (variant encoding) declares the method used to encode text-critical variants. [12.1.1. The Apparatus Entry] indicates which method is used to encode the apparatus of variants. location-referenced apparatus uses line numbers or other canonical reference scheme referenced in a base text. double-end-point apparatus indicates the precise locations of the beginning and ending of each lemma relative to a base text. parallel-segmentation alternate readings of a passage are given in parallel in the text; no notion of a base text is necessary. indicates whether the apparatus appears within the running text or external to it. internal apparatus appears within the running text. external apparatus appears outside the base text. The @location value "external" is inconsistent with the parallel-segmentation method of apparatus markup. (facsimile) points to one or more images, portions of an image, or surfaces which correspond to the current element. \S+ points to one or more <change> elements documenting a state or revision campaign to which the element bearing this attribute and its children have been assigned by the encoder. \S+ indicates the element within a transcription of the text containing at least the start of the writing represented by this zone or surface. \S+ gives the x coordinate value for the upper left corner of a rectangular space. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) gives the y coordinate value for the upper left corner of a rectangular space. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) gives the x coordinate value for the lower right corner of a rectangular space. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) gives the y coordinate value for the lower right corner of a rectangular space. (\-?[\d]+/\-?[\d]+) identifies a two dimensional area by means of a series of pairs of numbers, each of which gives the x,y coordinates of a point on a line enclosing the area. (-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?,-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?) (-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?,-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?) (-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?,-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?) (-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?,-?[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?) contains a representation of some written source in the form of a set of images rather than as transcribed or encoded text. [11.1. Digital Facsimiles] A facsimile element represents a text with images, thus transcribed text should not be present within it. contains a transcription or other representation of a single source document potentially forming part of a dossier génétique or collection of sources. [11.1. Digital Facsimiles 11.2.2. Embedded Transcription] defines a written surface as a two-dimensional coordinate space, optionally grouping one or more graphic representations of that space, zones of interest within that space, and transcriptions of the writing within them. [11.1. Digital Facsimiles 11.2.2. Embedded Transcription] describes the method by which this surface is or was connected to the main surface Sample values include: 1] glued; 2] pinned; 3] sewn [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ indicates whether the surface is attached and folded in such a way as to provide two writing surfaces (surface group) defines any kind of useful grouping of written surfaces, for example the recto and verso of a single leaf, which the encoder wishes to treat as a single unit. [11.1. Digital Facsimiles] (added span of text) marks the beginning of a longer sequence of text added by an author, scribe, annotator or corrector (see also <add>). [11.3.1.4. Additions and Deletions] The @spanTo attribute of is required. L'attribut spanTo est requis. (damage) contains an area of damage to the text witness. [11.3.3.1. Damage, Illegibility, and Supplied Text] (damaged span of text) marks the beginning of a longer sequence of text which is damaged in some way but still legible. [11.3.3.1. Damage, Illegibility, and Supplied Text] The @spanTo attribute of is required. L'attribut spanTo est requis. (deleted span of text) marks the beginning of a longer sequence of text deleted, marked as deleted, or otherwise signaled as superfluous or spurious by an author, scribe, annotator, or corrector. [11.3.1.4. Additions and Deletions] The @spanTo attribute of is required. L'attribut spanTo est requis. (editorial expansion) contains a sequence of letters added by an editor or transcriber when expanding an abbreviation. [11.3.1.2. Abbreviation and Expansion] (forme work) contains a running head (e.g. a header, footer), catchword, or similar material appearing on the current page. [11.6. Headers, Footers, and Similar Matter] classifies the material encoded according to some useful typology. Sample values include: 1] header; 2] footer; 3] pageNum (page number); 4] lineNum (line number); 5] sig (signature); 6] catch (catchword) [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ contains one or more <handNote> elements documenting the different hands identified within the source texts. [11.3.2.1. Document Hands] (handwriting shift) marks the beginning of a sequence of text written in a new hand, or the beginning of a scribal stint. [11.3.2.1. Document Hands] indicates a <handNote> element describing the hand concerned. \S+ (abbreviation marker) contains a sequence of letters or signs present in an abbreviation which are omitted or replaced in the expanded form of the abbreviation. [11.3.1.2. Abbreviation and Expansion] (restore) indicates restoration of text to an earlier state by cancellation of an editorial or authorial marking or instruction. [11.3.1.6. Cancellation of Deletions and Other Markings] (space) indicates the location of a significant space in the text. [11.4.1. Space] (responsible party) (responsible party) indicates the individual responsible for identifying and measuring the space \S+ (dimension) indicates whether the space is horizontal or vertical. horizontal the space is horizontal. vertical the space is vertical. (substitution) groups one or more deletions (or surplus text) with one or more additions when the combination is to be regarded as a single intervention in the text. [11.3.1.5. Substitutions] must have at least one child add and at least one child del or surplus (substitution join) identifies a series of possibly fragmented additions, deletions, or other revisions on a manuscript that combine to make up a single intervention in the text [11.3.1.5. Substitutions] (supplied) signifies text supplied by the transcriber or editor for any reason; for example because the original cannot be read due to physical damage, or because of an obvious omission by the author or scribe. [11.3.3.1. Damage, Illegibility, and Supplied Text] one or more words indicating why the text has had to be supplied, e.g. overbinding, faded-ink, lost-folio, omitted-in-original. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (surplus) marks text present in the source which the editor believes to be superfluous or redundant. [11.3.3.1. Damage, Illegibility, and Supplied Text] one or more words indicating why this text is believed to be superfluous, e.g. repeated, interpolated etc. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (secluded text) Secluded. Marks text present in the source which the editor believes to be genuine but out of its original place (which is unknown). [11.3.1.7. Text Omitted from or Supplied in the Transcription] one or more words indicating why this text has been secluded, e.g. interpolated etc. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ supplies a list of transpositions, each of which is indicated at some point in a document typically by means of metamarks. [11.3.4.5. Transpositions] contains or describes any kind of graphic or written signal within a document the function of which is to determine how it should be read rather than forming part of the actual content of the document. [11.3.4.2. Metamarks] describes the function (for example status, insertion, deletion, transposition) of the metamark. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ identifies one or more elements to which the metamark applies. \S+ represents any kind of modification identified within a single document. [11.3.4.1. Generic Modification] indicates one or more cancelled interventions in a document which have subsequently been marked as reaffirmed or repeated. [11.3.4.4. Confirmation, Cancellation, and Reinstatement of Modifications] points to one or more elements representing the interventions which are being reasserted. \S+ contains a sequence of writing which has been retraced, for example by over-inking, to clarify or fix it. [11.3.4.3. Fixation and Clarification] describes a single textual transposition as an ordered list of at least two pointers specifying the order in which the elements indicated should be re-combined. [11.3.4.5. Transpositions] indicates one or more marked-up interventions in a document which have subsequently been marked for cancellation. [11.3.4.4. Confirmation, Cancellation, and Reinstatement of Modifications] points to one or more elements representing the interventions which are to be reverted or undone. \S+ (role) indicates the kind of information held in this cell or in each cell of this row. Suggested values include: 1] label; 2] data label labelling or descriptive information only. data data values. [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (rows) indicates the number of rows occupied by this cell or row. (columns) indicates the number of columns occupied by this cell or row. (table) contains text displayed in tabular form, in rows and columns. [14.1.1. TEI Tables] (rows) indicates the number of rows in the table. (columns) indicates the number of columns in each row of the table. (row) contains one row of a table. [14.1.1. TEI Tables] (cell) contains one cell of a table. [14.1.1. TEI Tables] (formula) contains a mathematical or other formula. [14.2. Formulæ and Mathematical Expressions] encodes the presence of music notation in a text [14.3. Notated Music in Written Text] (figure) groups elements representing or containing graphic information such as an illustration, formula, or figure. [14.4. Specific Elements for Graphic Images] (description of figure) contains a brief prose description of the appearance or content of a graphic figure, for use when documenting an image without displaying it. [14.4. Specific Elements for Graphic Images] provides the name of the character or glyph property being defined. provides the value of the character or glyph property being defined. specifies the version number of the Unicode Standard in which this property name is defined. Suggested values include: 1] 1.0.1; 2] 1.1; 3] 2.0; 4] 2.1; 5] 3.0; 6] 3.1; 7] 3.2; 8] 4.0; 9] 4.1; 10] 5.0; 11] 5.1; 12] 5.2; 13] 6.0; 14] 6.1; 15] 6.2; 16] 6.3; 17] 7.0; 18] 8.0; 19] 9.0; 20] 10.0; 21] 11.0; 22] 12.0; 23] 12.1; 24] 13.0; 25] 14.0; 26] 15.0; 27] unassigned 1.0.1 1.1 2.0 2.1 3.0 3.1 3.2 4.0 4.1 5.0 5.1 5.2 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 7.0 8.0 9.0 10.0 11.0 12.0 12.1 13.0 14.0 15.0 unassigned [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (character or glyph) represents a glyph, or a non-standard character. [5. Characters, Glyphs, and Writing Modes] points to a description of the character or glyph intended. \S+ (character declarations) provides information about nonstandard characters and glyphs. [5.2. Markup Constructs for Representation of Characters and Glyphs] (character) provides descriptive information about a character. [5.2. Markup Constructs for Representation of Characters and Glyphs] (character glyph) provides descriptive information about a character glyph. [5.2. Markup Constructs for Representation of Characters and Glyphs] (locally defined property) provides a locally defined character (or glyph) property. [5.2.1. Character Properties] (character mapping) contains one or more characters which are related to the parent character or glyph in some respect, as specified by the @type attribute. [5.2. Markup Constructs for Representation of Characters and Glyphs] (unihan property) holds the name and value of a normative or informative Unihan character (or glyph) property as part of its attributes. [5.2.1. Character Properties] specifies the normalized name of a unicode han database (Unihan) property kZVariant kAccountingNumeric kBigFive kCCCII kCNS1986 kCNS1992 kCangjie kCantonese kCheungBauer kCheungBauerIndex kCihaiT kCompatibilityVariant kCowles kDaeJaweon kDefinition kEACC kFenn kFennIndex kFourCornerCode kFrequency kGB0 kGB1 kGB3 kGB5 kGB7 kGB8 kGSR kGradeLevel kHDZRadBreak kHKGlyph kHKSCS kHanYu kHangul kHanyuPinlu kHanyuPinyin kIBMJapan kIICore kIRGDaeJaweon kIRGDaiKanwaZiten kIRGHanyuDaZidian kIRGKangXi kIRG_GSource kIRG_HSource kIRG_JSource kIRG_KPSource kIRG_KSource kIRG_MSource kIRG_TSource kIRG_USource kIRG_VSource kJIS0213 kJa kJapaneseKun kJapaneseOn kJinmeiyoKanji kJis0 kJis1 kJoyoKanji kKPS0 kKPS1 kKSC0 kKSC1 kKangXi kKarlgren kKorean kKoreanEducationHanja kKoreanName kLau kMainlandTelegraph kMandarin kMatthews kMeyerWempe kMorohashi kNelson kOtherNumeric kPhonetic kPrimaryNumeric kPseudoGB1 kRSAdobe_Japan1_6 kRSJapanese kRSKanWa kRSKangXi kRSKorean kRSUnicode kSBGY kSemanticVariant kSimplifiedVariant kSpecializedSemanticVariant kTGH kTaiwanTelegraph kTang kTotalStrokes kTraditionalVariant kVietnamese kXHC1983 kXerox specifies the value of a named Unihan property [^\p{C}\p{Z}]+ (unicode property) provides a Unicode property for a character (or glyph). [5.2.1. Character Properties] specifies the normalized name of a Unicode property. Age AHex Alpha Alphabetic ASCII_Hex_Digit bc Bidi_C Bidi_Class Bidi_Control Bidi_M Bidi_Mirrored Bidi_Mirroring_Glyph Bidi_Paired_Bracket Bidi_Paired_Bracket_Type blk Block bmg bpb bpt Canonical_Combining_Class Case_Folding Case_Ignorable Cased ccc CE cf Changes_When_Casefolded Changes_When_Casemapped Changes_When_Lowercased Changes_When_NFKC_Casefolded Changes_When_Titlecased Changes_When_Uppercased CI Comp_Ex Composition_Exclusion CWCF CWCM CWKCF CWL CWT CWU Dash Decomposition_Mapping Decomposition_Type Default_Ignorable_Code_Point Dep Deprecated DI Dia Diacritic dm dt ea East_Asian_Width EqUIdeo Equivalent_Unified_Ideograph Expands_On_NFC Expands_On_NFD Expands_On_NFKC Expands_On_NFKD Ext Extender FC_NFKC FC_NFKC_Closure Full_Composition_Exclusion gc GCB General_Category Gr_Base Gr_Ext Gr_Link Grapheme_Base Grapheme_Cluster_Break Grapheme_Extend Grapheme_Link Hangul_Syllable_Type Hex Hex_Digit hst Hyphen ID_Continue ID_Start IDC Ideo Ideographic IDS IDS_Binary_Operator IDS_Trinary_Operator IDSB IDST Indic_Positional_Category Indic_Syllabic_Category InPC InSC isc ISO_Comment Jamo_Short_Name jg Join_C Join_Control Joining_Group Joining_Type JSN jt kAccountingNumeric kCompatibilityVariant kIICore kIRG_GSource kIRG_HSource kIRG_JSource kIRG_KPSource kIRG_KSource kIRG_MSource kIRG_TSource kIRG_USource kIRG_VSource kOtherNumeric kPrimaryNumeric kRSUnicode lb lc Line_Break LOE Logical_Order_Exception Lower Lowercase Lowercase_Mapping Math na na1 Name Name_Alias NChar NFC_QC NFC_Quick_Check NFD_QC NFD_Quick_Check NFKC_Casefold NFKC_CF NFKC_QC NFKC_Quick_Check NFKD_QC NFKD_Quick_Check Noncharacter_Code_Point nt Numeric_Type Numeric_Value nv OAlpha ODI OGr_Ext OIDC OIDS OLower OMath Other_Alphabetic Other_Default_Ignorable_Code_Point Other_Grapheme_Extend Other_ID_Continue Other_ID_Start Other_Lowercase Other_Math Other_Uppercase OUpper Pat_Syn Pat_WS Pattern_Syntax Pattern_White_Space PCM Prepended_Concatenation_Mark QMark Quotation_Mark Radical Regional_Indicator RI SB sc scf Script Script_Extensions scx SD Sentence_Break Sentence_Terminal Simple_Case_Folding Simple_Lowercase_Mapping Simple_Titlecase_Mapping Simple_Uppercase_Mapping slc Soft_Dotted stc STerm suc tc Term Terminal_Punctuation Titlecase_Mapping uc UIdeo Unicode_1_Name Unified_Ideograph Upper Uppercase Uppercase_Mapping Variation_Selector Vertical_Orientation vo VS WB White_Space Word_Break WSpace XID_Continue XID_Start XIDC XIDS XO_NFC XO_NFD XO_NFKC XO_NFKD specifies the value of a named Unicode property. @xml:id values must not contain white spaces! We see you’re typing in quotation marks. Please use a meaningful TEI element for these, instead, and do not duplicate quotation marks with a TEI element, because this may result in multiple sets of quotation marks on the website. If this is a cited quotation, use the cit and quote elements together (or just the quote element for an uncited quotation). If it is a spoken aloud passage, use the said element. If it is a title of a poem or other short work, use <title level="a">. If it is a string of words in quotation marks and you are not sure what it is, use the q element. If you're using this element, , in the main text of a Digital Mitford file, you'll need to apply an @ref attribute pointing to an xml:id of a named entity. This rule applies to persName, placeName, orgName, title, name, and rs elements. Named entity information and xml:ids are stored either in the main Site Index, or a proposed entry in the back of this document, or in a temporary si-Add file. If you're using a bibl element in the main text of a Digital Mitford file, you'll need to apply an @corresp attribute pointing to an xml:id of a named entity for a written work. Named entity information and xml:ids are stored either in the main Site Index, or a proposed entry in the back of this document, or in a temporary si-Add file. Attributes @ref, @who, @corresp, and @wit must begin with a hashtag. Every reading witness (@wit) after the hashtag must match an xml:id defined in the list of witnesses in this file! Many elements from the TEI names and places module are only permitted in back lists for proposed entries to the Digital Mitford site index. This element, is not permitted in the main text of a Digital Mitford edition. The full informational encoding on people, places, and other named entities is available only in the "backlists" or the back element containing proposed new entries for our site index, and it's permitted in the Site Index itself. Ensure that the @resp values on note and other elements point to members of the Mitford Team or to Past Editors A resp attribute must refer to a member of the Mitford team, past assistants, or past editors of MRM in the site index entries. Ensure that there are @ref values on rs The rs element should have an @ref attribute. Fill it in when ready. Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type event point to event site index entries across the project. An rs with type="event" must refer to an xml:id on an event element. Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type title point to bibl site index entries across the project. An rs with type="title" must refer to an xml:id on a bibl element. Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type place point to place site index entries across the project. An rs with type="place" must refer to an xml:id on a place element. Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type org (organization) point to org site index entries across the project. An rs with type="org" must refer to an xml:id on an org element. Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type person point to person site index entries across the project. An rs with type="person" must refer to an xml:id on a person element. Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type plant point to plant site index entries across the project. An rs with type="plant" must refer to an @xml:id on an item element in a list with sortKey="plants". Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type animal point to animal site index entries across the project. An rs with type="animal" must refer to an @xml:id on an item element in a list with sortKey="animals". Ensure that the @ref values on rs of type art point to art site index entries across the project. An rs with type="art" must refer to an @xml:id on a figure element in a list with sortKey="art". Check whether ids point to <back> or to one of the temporary siAdd files. This referencing value, , points to <back> or to one of the temporary siAdd files. All is well, but the Digital Mitford prosopography team needs to review the proposed new entries. NOTE: This back or temporary siAdd reference is new and not currently listed in the official Digital Mitford Site Index. WARNING! This id value is not listed in the Site Index AND is not listed in the back or a temporary siAdd file. Check and see if this named entity already has an assigned id, and if not, please propose a new Site Index entry following our project rules. List elements holding sortKey attributes for proposed entries to the Site Index may only appear in the back portion of a Digital Mitford project TEI file. List elements containing proposed new site index entries belong in the back element of the TEI file. They are not allowed in the body or the TEI header of a Digital Mitford project file.