Thrale history
Works
Matches 51 to 100 of 111 » See Gallery
| # | Thumb | Description | Info | Linked to |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 51 | Verses: "Imitation of a Triolet" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. May 1777. |
Date: May 1777 |
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| 52 | Verses: "Invitation to the ladies" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 23 September 1804. |
Date: 23 Sep 1804 |
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| 53 | Verses: "Lady Gideon’s Ball" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. July 1779. |
Date: Jul 1779 |
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| 54 | Verses: "Lady with an English watch" Hester Lynch Thrale. Thraliana. 21 January 1782. | |||
| 55 | Verses: "Lambert's sickness" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. June 1777. Verses about the illness of George Lambert. |
Date: Jun 1777 |
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| 56 | Verses: "Looking glass" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 18 April 1782. |
Date: 18 Apr 1782 |
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| 57 | Verses: "Man of Dust & Pride" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. | |||
| 58 | Verses: "My Dear Flo" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 1 September 1797. |
Date: 1 Sep 1797 |
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| 59 | Verses: "New Years Eve 1794" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 2 January 1795. |
Date: 2 Jan 1795 |
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| 60 | Verses: "North American Death Song" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 18 April 1782. |
Date: 18 Apr 1782 |
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| 61 | Verses: "Nævia" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. Feb to Mar 1780. |
Date: BET Feb 1780 and Mar 1780 |
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| 62 | Verses: "Ode on the blessings of peace" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 21 March 1778, December 1762. |
Date: Dec 1762 |
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| 63 | Verses: "Ode to Thrale" Samuel Johnson. Thraliana. 6 September 1775. Written whilst on a tour of the Scottish Shetlands with the Thrale family. The verses are an expression of Johnson’s deep affection for Hester Thrale. He imagines himself wandering through remote and unfamiliar lands, but his thoughts are always with her. He asks himself what she is doing, and he pictures her as a devoted wife to Mr. Thrale, a loving mother, and a diligent learner. He ends the poem by expressing his hope that she will remember him and that her faith in him will remain steadfast. |
Owner of original: 6 September 1775 |
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| 64 | Verses: "Offley Park" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. June 1777 (written 1761). The verses lament being disinherited of Offley Place by her uncle Sir Thomas Salusbury and describes the beauty and tranquillity of Offley Park. |
Date: 1761 |
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| 65 | Verses: "Offley Park" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. June 1777, written New Year’s Day 1759. |
Date: 1 Jan 1759 |
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| 66 | Verses: "Old Denbigh Castle" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. October to November 1794. |
Date: BET Oct 1794 TO Nov 1794 |
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| 67 | Verses: "On the Loss of a Friend" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. From a letter to Fanny Burney. 12 November 1781. |
Owner of original: 12 Nov 1781 |
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| 68 | Verses: "Pacchierotti" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 2 January 1782. |
Date: 2 Jan 1782 |
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| 69 | Verses: "Pens" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 30 July 1805. In 1805, Sophia Thrale sent her mother a gift of pens, to which her mother wrote some verses in response. |
Date: 30 Jul 1805 |
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| 70 | Verses: "Piozzi's absence" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 8 June 1783, written December 1762. |
Date: Dec 1762 |
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| 71 | Verses: "Plant, Plant the Tree" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. Oct-Nov 1794. |
Date: BET Oct 1794 AND Nov 1794 |
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| 72 | Verses: "Political Alphabet" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Public Advertiser. 4 August 1769. |
Owner of original: 4 Aug 1769 |
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| 73 | Verses: "Quatrain de Pybrac" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. July 1779. |
Date: Jul 1779 |
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| 74 | Verses: "Religious verses" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 19 November 1783. |
Date: 19 Nov 1783 |
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| 75 | Verses: "Rickmansworth fishing" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. March - April 1778. |
Date: BET Mar 1778 AND Apr 1778 |
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| 76 | Verses: "Robin Redbreast" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. Streatham Park June 1777. |
Date: Jun 1777 |
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| 77 | Verses: "Rose Diamond Ring" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury in Bath. Thraliana. 6 February 1784. |
Date: 6 Feb 1784 |
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| 78 | Verses: "Sarah Siddon's illness" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 1 May 1778. In May 1778, Hester Thrale née Salusbury wrote these verses about the talented actress Sarah Siddons. |
Date: 1 May 1778 |
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| 79 | Verses: "Season of sweet-smiling Spring" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 14 August 1783. |
Date: 14 Aug 1783 |
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| 80 | Verses: "Sonetto dal Povoleri alla Sigra Thrale" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 1 February 1782. |
Date: 1 Feb 1782 |
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| 81 | Verses: "Song for Herbert Lawrence" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. August 1778. In August 1777, Herbert Lawrence wrote a song dedicated to Hester Thrale. A year later, Hester wrote verses for Lawrence to put to music. |
Date: 1778 |
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| 82 | Verses: "Song on his Majesty's Nuptials" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 7 March 1778. |
Date: 7 Mar 1778 |
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| 83 | Verses: "Spain" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 26 September 1781. |
Date: 26 Sep 1781 |
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| 84 | Verses: "Streatham" by Sophia Thrale aged 7. With added lines by her mother, Hester Lynch Thrale. |
Date: 30 May 1779 Place: Streatham Park, Streatham, Surrey, England |
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| 85 | Verses: "That Sting Has None" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. August 1777. |
Date: Aug 1777 |
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| 86 | Verses: "The Book of Genesis in verse" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. December 1787. |
Date: Dec 1787 |
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| 87 | Verses: "The Crown & Thistle" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana, July 1779. Public Advertiser 7 July 1779. |
Date: 7 Jul 1779 |
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| 88 | Verses: "The Dean of Derry" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. May 1806. |
Date: May 1806 |
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| 89 | Verses: "The French Count" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 1760. |
Date: 3 Jun 1798 |
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| 90 | Verses: "The French Revolution" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 26 August 1803. |
Date: 26 Aug 1803 |
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| 91 | Verses: "The French" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 19 January 1790. |
Date: 19 Jan 1790 |
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| 92 | Verses: "The Great Fear" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. February 1804. |
Date: Feb 1804 |
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| 93 | Verses: "The Streatham Flasher" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 24 March 1779. |
Date: 24 Mar 1779 |
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| 94 | Verses: "The sundial and weeping willow" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 23 August 1803. |
Date: 23 Aug 1803 |
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| 95 | Verses: "The third division of time" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 1 May 1789. |
Date: 1 May 1789 |
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| 96 | Verses: "The Two Signs" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Public Advertiser. 7 July 1779. |
Owner of original: 7 July 1779 |
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| 97 | Verses: "Thrali gentil" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 12 February 1771. In Thraliana she described it as a “little song” for her husband. Written when she was most infatuated with him. The poem expresses admiration and affection, reflecting the way Hester Thrale often wrote about him, praising his intelligence, wit and kindness. It was later also included in the 1781 collection Miscellanies in Prose and Verse. Although published anonymously, the poems in the volume are widely accepted as her work. |
Date: 12 Feb 1771 |
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| 98 | Verses: "Three warnings" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. 1798. Originally entitled 'Three Warnings to John Bull before he dies, by an old acquaintance of the Public’. Written by Hester Thrale while staying at Warrens Hotel in the winter of 1797 and published anonymously in the spring of 1798. It retells Sir Charles Wager’s story of the Three Warnings and applies the fable to John Bull.2 It first appeared in Anna Williams’ *Miscellanies in Prose and Verse*3 and was later published separately as *The Three Warnings*.4. The poem is a narrative about a man who is given three warnings by Death before his time is up. It was written in 1781, during the American Revolution. The poem opens with a prosperous, comfortable man, married with children and respected in his community, yet marked by arrogance and complacency. One night he is visited by Death, who warns him that his time is short. The man pleads for mercy, and Death grants him three warnings before returning. The first warning comes as a lame leg. Although angry and frustrated, he eventually accepts it. The second warning brings blindness; devastated, he nonetheless adapts again. The third warning is deafness, leaving him completely cut off from the world. Only then does he recognise how carelessly he has lived and beg Death for forgiveness. It is too late. Death returns and claims him. The poem is a cautionary tale about arrogance and self-satisfaction and a reminder to value the time we have with those we love. |
Date: 1798 |
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| 99 | Verses: "Time will make Love pass away" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. 11 May 1806. |
Date: 11 May 1806 |
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| 100 | Verses: "To Miss Wynne on April Fool’s Day 1758" Hester Lynch Thrale née Salusbury. Thraliana. June 1777, written 1 April 1758. Addressed to Fanny Wynne (later Mrs Henry Soame). |
Date: 1 Apr 1758 |
