OSB MSS FILE Taylor, Tom, 18171880. Taylor, WILLIAM, D.1750 http://webtext.library.yale.edu/xml2html/beinecke.osbflt.nav.html
Project Gutenberg Author Record Project Gutenberg Author record. Taylor, Tom, 18171880. Titles. Our AmericanCousin. To the main listings page. Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online). http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/taylor__tom__1817-1880.html
Biography Of Tom Taylor Biographical Notes on Tom Taylor Tom Taylor (18171880) was a major contributing writer to Punch. http://artsci.washington.edu/drama-phd/smtaybio.html
Extractions: Punch and the 19th Century London Stage Tom Taylor (1817-1880) was a major contributing writer to Punch . An active member of the staff until 1874, after which he served as Editor-in-Chief until his death. Born in a suburb of Sunderland, his father was a brewer and his mother was a native of Frankfurt, Germany. Taylor had the opportunity to attend the University of Glasgow and graduate with a Bachelor's from Trinity College, Cambridge in 1840. Two years later he was elected as a fellow of Trinity and from there pursued a Master's degree. A man of generous spirit, "in the interest of his younger brothers he declined the ample annual allowance hitherto placed at his command by his father, and resolved thenceforth to support himself to support himself on his fees as a tutor and upon the income of his fellowship." While he went on to pursue a career at the bar and later as assistant secretary of the Board of Health, Taylor made a name for himself as a man of letters. Not only did he help to foster the success of Punch , he was also a lead-writer for both the Morning Chronicle , and the Daily News . He was also a well known art critic for two other dailies. Not limiting himself to criticism, Taylor was also a maker of art. According to the
Untitled hou00024 Taylor, Tom, 18171880, transcriber. Letters in Benjamin Robert Haydon's autobiography (bMS Eng 1331.8) Guide. 3/8/1999Bonnie B. Salt bMS Eng 1331.8 Taylor, Tom, 1817-1880, transcriber. http://oasis.harvard.edu/dfap/sgml/hou00024.sgm
Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > T Torquato, 15441595; Taylor, Bayard, 1825-1878; Taylor, Tom, 1817-1880;Teasdale, Sara, 1884-1933; Tegner, Esaias; Tench, Watkin, 1759 http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au
Biography Of Tom Taylor Punch and the 19th Century London Stage Biographical Notes on Tom Taylor.Tom Taylor (18171880) was a major contributing writer to Punch. http://www.artsci.washington.edu/drama-phd/smtaybio.html
Extractions: Punch and the 19th Century London Stage Tom Taylor (1817-1880) was a major contributing writer to Punch . An active member of the staff until 1874, after which he served as Editor-in-Chief until his death. Born in a suburb of Sunderland, his father was a brewer and his mother was a native of Frankfurt, Germany. Taylor had the opportunity to attend the University of Glasgow and graduate with a Bachelor's from Trinity College, Cambridge in 1840. Two years later he was elected as a fellow of Trinity and from there pursued a Master's degree. A man of generous spirit, "in the interest of his younger brothers he declined the ample annual allowance hitherto placed at his command by his father, and resolved thenceforth to support himself to support himself on his fees as a tutor and upon the income of his fellowship." While he went on to pursue a career at the bar and later as assistant secretary of the Board of Health, Taylor made a name for himself as a man of letters. Not only did he help to foster the success of Punch , he was also a lead-writer for both the Morning Chronicle , and the Daily News . He was also a well known art critic for two other dailies. Not limiting himself to criticism, Taylor was also a maker of art. According to the
Base Page Portrait, from McGrawHill Encyclopedia. Tom Taylor (1817-1880). http://www.theatre.msu.edu/web/archives/Taylor, Tom/taylort.html
Theatre Collections-Playbills-Royal Olympic Theatre, London author Taylor, Tom, Mr, 18171880. actor Vincent, G., Mr Montague, HJ, Mr Terry, Kate, Miss Terry, Florence, Miss. author Taylor, Tom, Mr, 1817-1880. http://library.ukc.ac.uk/library/special/icons/playbills/londonolympic.htm
Extractions: Back to Playbills Index UKC/POS/LDN OLY : 0595535 Playbill advertising JEANETTE'S WEDDING and LITTLE EM'LY (featuring G.F. Rowe) and THE GOOSEBERRY, with music by the band, at the Olympic Theatre, 22 November 1869. MENTIONED ON THE PLAYBILL:- arrangements : Liston, -, Mrs (wife of William Henry Liston) scene painter : Johnson, John, Mr composer : Winterbottom, John, Mr properties designer : Lightfoot, -, Mr machinery : Staines, T., Mr gas effects : Peppall, -, Mr prompter : Sanger, A., Mr author : Williams, Thomas John, Mr, 1824-1874 conductor : Winterbottom, John, Mr UKC/POS/LDN OLY : 0595536 Playbill advertising THE BOOT ON THE RIGHT LEG and THE WOMAN IN WHITE, at the Olympic Theatre, [1871?] MENTIONED ON THE PLAYBILL:- author : unknown author : Collins, Wilkie, Mr scene painter : Hann, Walter, Mr costume designer : Lewis, -, Mrs properties designer : Lightfoot, -, Mr machinery : Huby, -, Mr
LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Taylor, Tom (18171880) Works by this author Our American Cousin. Copyright2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. Admin Control Panel. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Taylor, Tom
LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Keyword Search Motif Search CusTom Search Browse Authors Browse Titles.Our American Cousin by Taylor, Tom (18171880). Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeWork?work=3733
Index Beast Taylor, Frederick W. (18561915) The Principles of ScientificManagement Taylor, Tom (1817-1880) Our American Cousin Tcikwell http://www.changanyouth.xahu.edu.cn/pages/novel/T/
KING ARTHUR: TEXTS, IMAGES, BASIC INFORMATION Trial (written 185758); Taylor, Tom (1817-1880), translator, TheMarch of Arthur ( Bale Arzur ) (1865); Tennyson, Alfred, Lord http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/arthmenu.htm
Extractions: Return to the Main Menu of The Camelot Project at the University of Rochester King Arthur is the figure at the heart of the Arthurian legends. He is said to be the son of Uther Pendragon and Ygraine of Cornwall. Arthur is a near mythic figure in Celtic stories such as Culhwch and Olwen . In early Latin chronicles he is presented as a military leader, the dux bellorum Mordred . In the romance tradition that treachery is made possible because of the love of Lancelot and Guinevere Introduction Text Culwch and Olwen (translated by Lady Charlotte Guest as Kilhwch and Olwen Geoffrey of Monmouth (c. 1100-1155), Arthurian Passages from The History of the Kings of Britain (completed c. 1138) Gerald of Wales (1146-1223), Gerald of Wales on the Finding of King Arthur's Tomb , translated by John William Sutton King Arthur and King Cornwall
THE CAMELOT PROJECT: MENU OF AUTHORS Lyonesse (1882). Taylor, Tom (18171880), translator The March ofArthur ( Bale Arzur ) (1865). Teasdale, Sara (1884-1933) Guenevere http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/authmenu.htm
T Regarding poems and Macready's performance. Taylor, Tom, 18171880 ALS to TurnerJan 8, Whitehall. 5p. Regarding order for the new analysis of Persian History. http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/manuscript/MsLetter/T.htm
Genealogy Index For Surnames Beginning With L 18491942) Lewis, Taylor (Jr.) (-) Lewis, Taylor (Sr.) (1886 Lewis, Timothy Tim (-) Lewis, Tom (-) Lewis, Tom (-1912) Lewis 1817-1880) Lyons, Mary (1841-WFT Est http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~sekr/idxl.html
Letters And Documents Collection - T and Queen's Ware, by L. Taylor Taylor, Tom, 18171880 ALS, 1871 May 15, to AlexanderMacmillan Removed from A Night with the Yankees, by A. Macmillan Teasdale http://www.brynmawr.edu/Library/SpecColl/Guides/letterboxT.html
Extractions: Last Updated: June 10, 2002 A B C D ... Z TLS, 1919 Nov. 5, to Helen Taft, Acting President of Bryn Mawr College "My dear Miss Taft: I shall be glad to be on the national advisory committee of Bryn Mawr in its campaign for an endowment..." Adds in his own hand, "Helen, is this formal enough, Papa." From the papers of the Undergraduate Dean's office HBD Helen Taft Manning ALS, 1923 March 14, to Ruth P. McAneny '23 In response to McAneny's request as editor of the BMC class yearbook that he write an appreciation of his daughter, then a popular history teacher at the College. In the letter he wittily expounds on the reasons he should be excused from the task. McAneny published the response in any case, under the title "My Daughter, Oh My daughter."
Rare Book Exhibition - Magazines Punch. (London Punch Publications Ltd., 1841 ) Edited by Lemon, Mark, 1809-1870.;Mayhew, Henry, 1812-1887.; Taylor, Tom, 1817-1880.; Brooks, Shirley, 1815 http://www.lib.monash.edu.au/exhibitions/magazines/xmagazines2.html
Extractions: The Englishwoman's domestic magazine: an illustrated journal, combining practical information, instruction, and amusement . (London: S.O. Beeton, 1852-1879) Like the Ladies Monthly Museum , the Englishwoman and domestic magazine presented its readers with fiction, recipes, domestic advice and coloured fashion plates. One innovation was the quiz. This was a section entitled, "The Sybilline interpreter". The readers were encouraged to write in with their own answers to such questions as "During my absence, will my lover prove true?" Go Back Item 31. Punch is the most successful of the many humorous magazines produced in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It was founded by Mark Lemon and Henry Mayhew. Originally it had a strong reforming intention and specialised in cartoons and articles which as well as being political and social in their subject matter, revealed the plight of the poor of London.
Extractions: Click here to view Exhibition area Introduction Books are of course what we expect and what we mainly find in libraries. Indeed, in libraries it has commonly been the practice to turn non-book publications - pamphlets, magazines, paperbacks - into books, by binding them between hard covers. All those journals on the second floor of the Matheson Library stack, whose topicality lasted for only a day, un jour, are now effectively journals no longer. They have become books, in which form, rather than their less durable originals, they 'speak volumes.' I want to use only two terms in referring to the materials in this exhibition: magazine and periodical. 'Magazine' signifies the type of content - a miscellany. On the face of it, there is no reason why a book may not be a miscellany. We call such books of short-self-contained pieces 'anthologies', and mostly they have a consistency, of author, or theme, or genre: as an anthology or poems, or stories, or the Oxford or Penguin or Faber Book of Death, or Marriage or Essays or Aphorisms, or whatever.
Mark Lemon And His Circle ny, 21 Feb. Taylor, Tom, 18171880, London, England. To Lemon, Mark, 1809-1870.Mentions Thackeray and Dickens. Autograph Letter Signed. 4p., 19.1cm. http://speccoll.library.kent.edu/literature/prose/dickens.html
Extractions: Envelope signed in full by Charles Dickens Prepared by Dean Keller Revised by Athena Salaba, 21 February 1996 11th Floor, .33 cubic ft. This collection consists of autograph letters and envelopes. The majority are letters to Mark Lemon from writers such as William Makepeace Thackeray, Douglas Jerrold, Richard Doyle, John Forster, Shirley Brooks, and several others. A very valuable part of this collection are the six autograph and signed letters of Charles Dickens to his friend Mark Lemon, inviting him to dinner and discussing his writing. Also, this collection includes letters from and to a variety of correspondents, Mark Lemon's Circle, including John Forster, Alfred B. Garrod, Sir Stratford Canning, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Emma C. Roberts, and others; and autograph envelopes from W. Harrison Ainsworth and others. Finally, five original pencil drawings attributed to "Phiz" (Hablot K. Browne?) are present. The collection is arranged chronologically. This collection was purchased from book dealer David Holmes by Kent State University Libraries and the Department of English on December 1995.