Lady Hester Pulter
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2. The Invitation Into the Country, To My D.[ear] D.[aughters] M.[argaret] P.[ulter], P.[enelope] P.[ulter], 1647, When His Sacred Majesty Was At Unhappy [Holmby]
6. Universal Dissolution, Made When I Was With Child of My 15th Child, I Being, [as Eve]ryone Thought, in a Consumption, 1648
21. The Circle [2]
38. To My Dear J.[ane] P.[ulter], M.[argaret] P.[ulter], P.[enelope] P.[ulter], they Being at London, I at Broadfield
43. Of a Young Lady at Oxford, 1646
46. The Lark
57. “Why must I thus forever be confined”
60. To Sir William D.[avenant] Upon the Unspeakable Loss of the Most Conspicuous and Chief Ornament of his Frontispiece
Emblems
13. “The Porcupine went ruffling in his pride”
14. “In Africa, about the fountain’s brink”
25. “Behold this flying fish with shining wings”
26. “Those that employéd are the apes to catch”
33. “Could this fell catablepe lift up her head”
38. “The lion that of late so domineered”
48. “When royal Fergus’ line did rule this realm”
The Unfortunate Florinda
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Edition of Pulter’s Works: Publication
Book Launch: June 23rd, 2014
Rebekah King, Animals in the Poems of Hester Pulter
Elizabeth Clarke, ‘There is a great deal of research to be done on Hester Pulter’
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