Entry for 'Joanna Baillie' - 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica - One of 8 Bible encyclopedias freely available, this resource contained over 40 million words in nearly 40,000 articles written by 1,500 respected authors

Joanna Baillie died in 1851 in Hampstead at the age of 89. Comments about London by Joanna Baillie. () VERSES WRITTEN IN FEBRUARY, 1827. Literary history has commonly recognized Wordsworth’s preface of 1800 as the first text of English Romantic criticism, but Wordsworth was hardly alone, in the last years of the eighteenth century, in making the attempt to confront the political and cultural crisis of Europe in the 1790s with claims for new, transformative kinds of cultural production. () A WINTER'S DAY.
London: Murray, 1930. () VERSES TO OUR OWN FLOWERY KIRTLED SPRING. This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.

She was buried in Hampstead parish churchyard beside her mother. By Joanna Baillie, author of “Dramas on the Passions,“ etc. The following entry presents criticism of Baillie from 1947 through 2003. Her play, De Monfort, was produced at Drury Lane in London and Constantine Paleologus at the Surrey Theatre. Joanna Baillie (11 September 1762 – 23 February 1851) was a Scottish poet and dramatist. National Supernaturalism: Joanna Baillie, Germany, and the Gothic Drama - Volume 38 Issue 2 - Michael Gamer Although Baillie was well recognized and respected among the literati during her life-time, her works fell into neglect soon after her death and have only resurfaced in literary scholarship within the last several decades.
Joanna Baillie had received an excellent education, and began very early to write poetry. () VERSES TO OUR OWN FLOWERY KIRTLED SPRING. () A WINTER'S DAY. 1762-1851. This turn of events was no doubt gratifying to Baillie not only because of her friendship with Siddons, but because Siddons was the foremost actress of the turn-of-the-century English stage, the source of a veritable "Siddonsmania." The Joanna Baillie Project Monday, September 19, 2011. At an early period she moved with her sister Agnes to London, where their brother, Dr Matthew Baillie, was settled. The Tryal: A Comedy ... Discourse that the atypical structure is intentional, and meant as a reaction against much of the comedy on London stages at the time. IN 1800, SARAH SIDDONS PLAYED THE FEMALE LEAD, LADY JANE, IN JOANNA Baillie's new play, DeMonfort. Fugitive Verses. () Baillie, Joanna, 1762-1851. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. Joanna Baillie. There is no comment submitted by members.. London Score Card User Rating: 5 / 5 (1 votes) 0. Though Joanna Baillie is primarily recognized for the dramas she represents in the book, major parts of the book “London” consisted of poems which majorly appeared in the numerous collections forming the different parts of her work. Sir Walter: A Four Part Study in Biography (Scott, Hogg, Lockhart, Joanna Baillie). She published anonymously in 1790 a volume called Fugitive Verses; but it was not till 1798 that she produced the first volume of her Plays on the Passions, under the title of A Series of Plays. The Dramatic and Poetical Works of Joanna Baillie. Baillie was born on 11 September 1762 in Bothwell, Lanarkshire, Scotland (her twin sister died just after birth). A variety of the poems such as De Monfort were printed in Fugitive Verses. BAILLIE, JOANNA (1762-1851), British poet and dramatist, was born at the manse of Bothwell, on the banks of the Clyde, on the 11th of September 1762.

Details William Sotheby's introduction of Baillie to Sir Walter Scott and the subsequent friendship between the latter two. Provides a chapter on Baillie's life. () VOLUNTEER'S SONG, WRITTEN IN 1803. VERSES SENT TO MRS. BAILLIE ON HER BIRTHDAY, 1813.