Mary Anne Rawson's The Bow in the Cloud (1834): A Scholarly EditionMain MenuEditor's IntroductionEditor's IntroductionThe Published AnthologyContains all of the pieces published in the anthology, with an editor's noteSelected Unpublished PiecesTranscriptions of some unpublished pieces sent to RawsonText analysisResults of analysing the anthology and its manuscriptsNetwork AnalysisNetwork analysis prototypes, including a network graph of connections in the archiveMap of PlacenamesA map of all places associated with pieces in the anthologyPeople MentionedBow in the Cloud: PersonographyFurther ReadingsA Bibliography of sources relating to this projectThis project was supported by an NEH-Mellon Fellowship for Digital Publication in 2023/2024 (FEL-289788). Find project data on GitHub.
Copy of He being dead yet Speaketh (English MS 414/110a)
12023-10-11T18:53:54+00:00Christopher Ohge67a4fbaba4797c94aa865988788fca89b5c3761611Rawson's second fair copy of Edward Henry Abney's poem 'He being dead yet Speaketh', with some revisionsplain2023-10-11T18:53:54+00:00Ink
Rawson's second fair copy of Edward Henry Abney's poem 'He being dead yet Speaketh', with some revisions but still the published version.
Christopher Ohge67a4fbaba4797c94aa865988788fca89b5c37616
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12023-10-11T18:51:20+00:00Christopher Ohge67a4fbaba4797c94aa865988788fca89b5c37616"He Being Dead Yet Speaketh", by Edward Henry AbneyChristopher Ohge10Poem by Edward Henry Abney.plain2024-09-13T15:28:12+00:00Christopher Ohge67a4fbaba4797c94aa865988788fca89b5c37616
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12023-10-11T18:50:43+00:00Revision narrative: 'which dawns on Pity's sleep'4plain2024-09-11T10:52:16+00:00Rawson's second fair copy has two alternative versions of this phrase, one in pencil and pen, in two different hands: 'Tho' or Yet Pity seems to sleep' (pen); 'where Pity seems to sleep' (pencil). See 'Copy of He being dead yet Speaketh (English MS 414/110a)', below: