Thanks again, Pat.
David Lee Miller
Professor of English & Comparative Literature
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
[log in to unmask]
803 777-4256 (office)
803 777-9064 (fax)
803 466-3947 (cell)
>>> [log in to unmask] 5/10/2005 9:43:29 AM >>>
David,
Those addresses are
[log in to unmask]
and
[log in to unmask]
Best, P.
-----Original Message-----
From: David L. Miller [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: 09 May 2005 21:02
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Mary Tighe
Thanks very much, Pat!
David Lee Miller
Professor of English & Comparative Literature University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
[log in to unmask]
803 777-4256 (office)
803 777-9064 (fax)
803 466-3947 (cell)
>>> [log in to unmask] 5/9/2005 3:41:09 PM >>>
Hello David,
Claire Connolly, who's at the Univesity of Wales in Cardiff (though
currently on leave in California) has written on Tighe, and would be the
person to consult.
I don't have her e-mail to hand at home (8.35 p.m. Cork time) but will send
it to you tomorrow. Andrew Carpenter, UCD, or my own colleague Clíona ó
Gallchoir might also know about this; I've copied them both, as you (and
she) see. Andrew's e-mail is [log in to unmask]
Best wishes
Pat Coughlan
Professor Patricia Coughlan
Dept. of English
University College, Cork
00-353-21-4902668
00-353-21-4902241 (Dept. Administrator)
-----Original Message-----
From: David L. Miller
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: 09/05/2005 20:22
Subject: Mary Tighe
I got an inquiry from colleagues that I'd like to pass along to listmembers.
It concerns "Mary Tighe, an Irish poet from the late 18th/early 19th C,
whose most famous work is _Cupid and Psyche_, which is written in over 300
Spenserian Stanzas.
Tighe's husband and brother-in-law were both Loyalists, and the latter ended
up in British Parliament after the Union. We are interested in a book,
article, or whatever type of publication you can recommend . . .
we are trying to sort out the political implications, especially for an
Irish woman in a very political family, of writing in Spenserian stanzas."
I thought of Richard C. Frushell's work on Spenser in the 18th century, but
haven't much else to offer. Can anyone out there add a suggestion?
Thanks,
David Lee Miller
Professor of English & Comparative Literature University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
[log in to unmask]
803 777-4256 (office)
803 777-9064 (fax)
803 466-3947 (cell)
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