Ireland
Clark MS 2019.001
Title | Untitled |
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Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | Clark Library |
Catherine Tuthill Massy, ca. 1795.
46 poems.
A young Irish lady's book, themes of anti-slavery, interest in captives in India, sufferings of Ireland.
Clark MS 2019.032
Title | Miscellaneous Articles, in Poetry and Prose |
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Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | Clark Library |
Anonymous Irish officer, ca. 1810–1830.
28 poems.
Many local interest pieces and political satire.
Folger MS M.a.163
Title | Untitled |
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Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | Folger Shakespeare Library |
Anonymous, 1786–1798.
120 poems.
A very feminocentric collection with many female-authored works.
Manuscript appears connected to the Cavendish-Ponsonby-Crewe network; the Tighe family; the Ladies of Llangollen
Folger MS M.a.170
Title | Untitled |
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Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | Folger Shakespeare Library |
Emma Puleston, ca. 1819–1822.
Decorated with watercolours.
147 items, 100 poems.
Many very short sayings, and items related to Waterloo and the Irish rebellion representing a patriotic British stance.
UChicago Library Codex Ms. 636
Title | Untitled |
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Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | University of Chicago Special Collections and Research Center |
William Tighe, ca. 1815.
25 poems.
Mainly light-hearted original poems on such subjects as love, theatre, and furniture.
Title | Regions | Description | Manuscripts |
---|---|---|---|
Shamrock |
Anthology. 1772. Samuel Whyte. |
1 |
Tighe family
Centred in Rosanna, County Wicklow, Ireland, around Mary (Blachford) Tighe and her first cousin and husband Henry Tighe; active 1801-1810. Other literary members of the family were Mary’s mother Theodosia (Tighe) Blachford, her maternal uncles Edward and William (the latter was her husband’s father), and her husband's siblings Catherine (Tighe) Hamilton and William Tighe (1766–1816). Mary and her family members had connections with the Ponsonby family, including Sarah Ponsonby and her companion Eleanor Butler (the Ladies of Llangollen), the Bowdlers, Elizabeth Hamilton, Thomas Moore, and other leading Irish, English, and Scottish literary figures.