User:Levana Taylor/notes

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To look up[edit]

Sarah Ellen Blackwell, Alexander charles fraser, Alfred Marks

== smartening macros==— trim trailing space replace double spaces —" —” " '" "'



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  • Day with the Christchurch Drag

DOUBLE QUOTES 1-31 1-35 1-82 1-84 1-85 1-104 1-120 2-99 2-100 2-101 2-102 2-103 2-104 2-105 2-122 2-133 2-135 2-183 2-198 2-203 2-253 2-281 2-286 2-288 2-294 2-310 2-314 2-317 2-319 2-377 2-436 2-437 2-464 2-490 2-493 2-518 2-573 2-574 2-604 2-344 2-345 2-346 2-350 2-351 2-356 2-357 2-358 2-359 2-360 2-361


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INSET SPECIAL FORMATTING Chapter headings for "Swanka" 1-54 2-43 2-63 2-65 2-68 2-75 2-169 2-211

Image sizes[edit]

Volume 1[edit]

Everything from page 218 onward

Volume 2[edit]

  • 277 The Cotton Tops
  • 495 My First Ca Sa
  • 598 Musa

Volume 3[edit]

Volume 4[edit]

Everything from page 238 onward

Volume 5[edit]

Everything from page 83 onward except "Secret Drawer," pp 306, 309, 323

Volume 6[edit]

Volume 7[edit]

Volume 8[edit]

Volume 9[edit]

Volume 10[edit]

Volume 11[edit]

illinfo[edit]

Volume 6, Page 724. 1862-06-21. Illustration for the poem "Wife and I" by Robert Buchanan. Edward Poynter/Swain. Depicts a married couple suffering a mutual outburst of bad temper one morning. "We quarrell'd this morning, my wife and I, / We were out of temper, and scarce knew why, / Though the cause was trivial and common; / But to look in our eyes, you'd have sworn that we both / Were a couple of enemies spiteful and wroth,—/ Not a wedded man and woman." Caption: To look in our eyes, you'd have sworn that we both / Were a couple of enemies spiteful and wroth ... Volume 6, Page 699. 1862-06-14. by George Henry Haydon (1822–1891) Caption: How a pair of canvas trousers preserved our stores from rats "Out of the World" by George Henry Haydon, an account of some months spent on French Island (off the coast of Australia) attempting to make alkali out of mangrove ashes. "[Our supplies included] a pair of canvas trousers, which we were eventually compelled to apply to a novel purpose, for the rats became so bold, as our stores diminished, that we had the greatest difficulty to preserve them from their attacks." Volume 4, page 585, 1861-05-18. Illustration for the story "Romance of the Cab-Rank" by Frank Percival. Caption: I was just hanging the nose-hag round Barty's neck, when up comes a gentleman asking if my horse is fresh. Walker/Swain. The cabman who narrates this story is here depicted, having decided against going into the drinking establishment in favor of feeding his horse, which occasions an encounter with a sinister gentleman. Volume 4, page 248. 1861-02-23. Walker/Swain. Caption: Illustration for the story "The Parish Clerk's Story" by George Meredith. Volume 4, page 263. 1861-03-02 Walker/Swain Caption: Illustration for the story "The Magnolia, for London, with Cotton" by A. Stewart Harrison. Volume 4, page 267. 1861-03-02 Walker/Swain. Caption: Illustration for the story "The Magnolia, for London, with Cotton" by A. Stewart Harrison. Volume 4, page 416. 1861-04-06 Walker/Swain Caption: Illustration for "Dangerous!" by Albany Fonblanque Jr. Volume 4, page 499. 1861-04-27 Walker/Swain Caption: Illustration for the story "An Old Boy's Tale." Volume 4, page 631. 1861-06-01 Walker. Caption: Lady Janet's farewell to Lord Archdale. Illustration for the story "The Jewel-Case" by Emma Jane Cave. Lady Janet, having been forced into marriage, arranges to meet the man she loves in order to bid him farewell. The woman at right in the cap is a servant who's very fond of her. "They met on the open muir, the sun shining bright abuve their heads, and my ain mither stood by her side, and grat, puir thing! as if 'twer her heart wer breaking!—grat sae, that she heard but little of a' they said. But for a' sae braw and lustie as Lord Archdale wer, when he cam to meet the Lady Janet, stanning before her wi' his bonnet in his hand, and the fresh breeze blowing his golden hair like a glory frae his brow; for a' sae brave a men as he wer, when 'twas ere a foe or the oppressor of his clan as stood before him, he quailed and sank before the doom o' parting frae his true love, the Lady Janet Johnstoun." Volume 10, page 272. 1864-02-27. Bewcastle - John Wykeham Archer. (1840–1895) Depicts Bewcastle in the mid-1800s, when the artist visited it; the picture was engraved later, for a magazine article. Volume 10, page 267. 1862-02-27. Robert Barnes (1840–1895) The Moon's wanderings. Illustration for the poem "Die Monduhr" by Robert Reinick. A poacher has gone out at night, and the scene depicts his wife and child. The child cannot sleep bercause of worrying about her father; when the moon shines on her father's portrait she says apprehensively, "Why is his face so white?" The omen is true, the poacher has been killed.


Colin Mackenzie DISAMBIG

Mackenzie, Colin (male) 03/25/1806 - 10/22/1881 Scottish

Indian Army Officer; was in Egypt in 1858. See Boase II: 625, ODNB.

James Smail

Smail, James (male) 11/01/1828 - 01/22/1905 Scottish


Edgar Sheppard

Sheppard, Edgar (male) 1819 - 10/29/1897 English

Doctor; member of the Royal College of Physicians; medical superintendant in asylum; professor of psychological medicine at King's College, London; wrote A Fuller Faith: Being a Historical, Religious, and Socio-Political Sketch of the Society of Friends (1859), Bathing, How to Do It (1865). See Boase III: 543.

do also anne isabella robertson

Authors in vol. 1: Cholmeley Austen Leigh (Cholmeley A. Leigh), Thomas Edwin Southee (T. E. Southee), Sir Edward James Reed (E. J. Reed), Joseph Truman (Joseph Truman ), James Smart Linwood (Jas. Smart Linwood)



From the Author of "The Ladye Shakerley" is Mary Eyles Gubbins, nee Egerton. https://www.geni.com/people/Mary-Eyles-Gubbins/6000000026532281363 died. December 02, 1893 Wife of John Panton Gubbins daughter born 1849 in Delhi india www.angelfire.com/realm/gotha/gotha/egerton.html Mary Eyles, d.1887; m.1839 J P Gubbins (d.5 Apr 1879). Troy J. Bassett, 30-31 August 2016([Bassett is Associate Professor of English at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne]; "Author of The Ladye Shakerley" has been wrongly identified by some as Frances Maria Wilbraham; Author of The Ladye Shakerley is Mary Eyles Gubbins, née Egerton)

http://www.stirnet.com/genie/data/british/ee/egerton02.php (ii) Philip Egerton of Oulton (b c1732, bur 15.05.1786)

	m. Mary Eyles (sister of Sir John Haskin-Eyles-Styles, Bart)
	(a)	Sir John Egerton, later Grey-Egerton of Oulton, Sheriff of Cheshire, 8th Bart (dsp 24.05.1825)
	m. (09.04.1795) Maria Jackson (bur 23.08.1830, dau of Thomas Scott Jackson)
	(b)	Sir Philip Egerton, later Grey-Egerton of Egerton and Oulton, 9th Bart (b 06.07.1767, d 13.12.1829, rector of Tarporley) had issue
	m. (14.09.1804) Rebecca Du Pre (b c1780, d 11.06.1870, dau of Josias Du Pre of Wilton Park)
	(c)	William Egerton of Gresford Lodge (b 02.02.1770, d 13.12.1827)
	m. (23.11.1807) Sibella Boswell (d 1883, dau of Robert Boswell)
	((1))	William Egerton (b 26.06.1815, d 07.06.1841)
	m. (01.10.1837) Mary Anne Tronson (dau of Lawford Tronson)
	((A))	Sibella Egerton (d 12.05.1922)
	((2))	Philip Henry Egerton (b 09.08.1824, d 17.01.1893) had issue
	m1. (15.07.1857) Mary Marjoribanks (dau of Sir William Marjoribanks, 2nd Bart)
	m2. (20.10.1886, sp) Mary Louisa Campbell (d 12.04.1889, dau of Col. Alexander Campbell)
	m3. (03.09.1890) Maud Mary Wedderburn Clarke-Jervoise (d 01.12.1924, dau of Samuel Clarke-Jervoise)
	((3))	Sibella Egerton (dsp 04.09.1871)
	m. (12.11.1833) Randle Wilbraham of Rode
	((4))	Mary Eyles Egerton (d 1887)
	m. (1839) J.P. Gubbins (d 05.04.1879)
	((5))	Anne Egerton (d 18.03.1911)

m. (26.04.1855) Rev. Philip Mules (dsp 1892)

	((6))	Elizabeth Frances Egerton (d 23.05.1849)


11 April, 1839, Mary Eyles, 2nd dau. of William Egerton, of Gresford Lodge,

Burke's - 2ndly, 11 April, 1839, Mary Eyles, 2nd dau. of William Egerton, of Gresford Lodge


ATCL Mary Eyles Gubbins was born in 1818 in Backford, Cheshire

In 1839, she married John Panton Gubbins, a judge in the Indian Civil Service (she was his second wife). The couple had four sons and one daughter. After his retirement, they lived at The Oaks, Milverton, near Leamington. While here, Gubbins wrote two historical novels, The Ladye Shakerley (1871) and The Exiles at St. Germains (1874), in addition to two stories in The Argosy. Her husband died in 1879 and she followed in 1887.
Mrs. M. E. Gubbins, author of "Blind" (6/6/1863) is Mary Eyles Gubbins (c. 1818-1887) see ATCL. Note: Mary's husband John Panton Gubbins retired from the Indian civil service and left for England in 1852, afterwards settling in Leamington, Warwickshire, where the couple were living when Mary sent "Blind" to OAW. In January of that year (1863), John's brother Martin had committed suicide at John and Mary's house, Somerset House, Leamington.

https://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Gubbins-Descendants-161 . Mary Eyles Egerton (abt 1818 - abt May 1887) https://www.myheritage.com/names/phillip_gubbins Mary was born circa 1818, in Backford, Cheshire, England


Delhi, 1845-1852