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  1. He published a massive body of work (Carter being the most prolific of the first generation of Bluestockings), much of it from manuscript: two quarto volumes of correspondence between Carter and Catherine Talbot and Elizabeth Vesey; three octavo volumes of letters from Carter to Montagu; and a two-volume memoir, the second volume comprising her ...

  2. 22 de mai. de 2024 · Elizabeth Carter, 1788–89. National Portrait Gallery, London. The Brooklyn Museum is an art museum located in the New York City borough of Brooklyn. At 560,000 square feet, the museum is New York City's second largest in physical size and holds an art collection with roughly 1.5 million works.

  3. Criticism. Bigold, Melanie. Women of letters, manuscript circulation, and print afterlives in the eighteenth century: Elizabeth Rowe, Catharine Cockburn, and Elizabeth Carter. Palgrave studies in the Enlightenment, Romanticism and the cultures of print. Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. 169-238.

  4. 27 de mai. de 2020 · ELIZABETH CARTER. “Thoughts at Midnight. 1739”. To thee! all-conscious presence! I devote 5. This peaceful interval of sober thought. And be this hour of sacred silence thine. And my best hopes are center’d in thy love. Its utmost boast a vain unmeaning word.

  5. Elizabeth Carter ( Deal, Kent, 16 de diciembre de 1717-19 de febrero de 1806) fue una poetisa inglesa, clasicista, escritora, traductora, y un miembro de la Sociedad de Medias Azules. Datos rápidos Información personal, Nacimiento ... Elizabeth Carter. Información personal.

  6. Elizabeth Carter translated All the Works, consisting of the four books of Discourses, the Enchiridion, and Fragments.She worked with texts borrowed from Seeker and James ‘Hermes’ Harris, a well-known classical scholar, who also helped her with scholarly queries about the text.

  7. Elizabeth Carter (1717-1806), Scholar and writer. Mid-Georgian Portraits Catalogue Entry. Sitter associated with 9 portraits Encouraged by her father, a clergyman, to study, Carter applied herself with such perseverance that she became one of the most learned Englishwoman of her time, being mistress of Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic, besides several modern European languages.