A Guide to the Papers of Louise Imogen Guiney, 1885-1918 Guiney, Louise Imogen, Papers 7088-a

A Guide to the Papers of Louise Imogen Guiney, 1885-1918

A Collection in the
Clifton Waller Barrett Library of American Literature
Special Collections
The University of Virginia Library
Accession Number 7088-a


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Processed by: Special Collections Staff

Repository
Special Collections, University of Virginia Library
Accession number
7088-a
Title
A Guide to the Papers of Louise Imogen Guiney 1885-1918
Physical Characteristics
73 items.
Language
English

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

There are no restrictions.

Use Restrictions

See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.

Preferred Citation

A Guide to the Papers of Louise Imogen Guiney, Accession #7088-a, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.

Acquisition Information

This collection was deposited by Clifton Waller Barrett on December 17, 1963, and accessioned on September 3, 1964.

Biographical/Historical Information

Louise Imogen Guiney was born January 7, 1861 in Roxbury, Mass., the daughter of Patrick Robert Guiney (January 15,1835-March 21,1877) and Jeannette Margaret Doyle Guiney. Guiney died November 2, 1920 in Chipping Campden, England.

Her father served in the Union army during the Civil War, was brevetted brigadier-general of volunteers in 1864, and died from the effects of a wound that he received in the Battle of the Wilderness. Louise was graduated from Elmhurst Academy, Providence, Rhode Island, in 1879. Her earliest literary work appeared in the Boston Post and the Boston Courier; in 1887 she was a contributor to Harper's, Scribner's, and the Atlantic Monthly.

Her works include: Songs at the Start (1884, poetry); Goose-Quill Papers (1885, essays); The White Sail and Other Poems (1887, poetry); Brownies and Bogles (1888, poetry); Monsieur Henri: A Foot-Note to French History (1892, essays); A Roadside Harp (1893, poetry); A Little English Gallery (1895, essays); Robert Louis Stevenson (1895, biography, with Alice Brown); Lovers' Saint Ruth's and Three Other Tales (1895, short stories); Nine Sonnets Written at Oxford (1895, poetry); Patrins (1897, essays); England and Yesterday (1898, poetry); The Martyrs' Idyl and Shorter Poems (1899, poetry); Robert Emmet (1904); The Princess of the Tower (1906, poetry); Blessed Edmund Campion (1908); Happy Ending (1909, poetry, her collected verse); Letters (1926, letters); Recusant Poets (1939, ed., with Geoffrey Bliss)

Scope and Content

The collection contains the manuscripts of several poems including "The recruit," "A talisman," "Davy," "For a grave in Glasnevin," and "Gloucester Harbor."

Correspondents include William S. Braithwaite, Beverly Chew, Percy J. Dobell, Helen Fish, Richard Watson Gilder, Harper & Brothers, Houghton, Mifflin Co., Robert Underwood Johnson, Arthur W. Kelly, John Lane, Herbert Newman Mozley, Ella Farman Pratt, Edmund C. Richards, Clinton Scollard, Edmund Clarence Stedman, Herbert Pelham Williams, and James C. Young.

The collection also contains a photograph of Guiney, and a clipping of photographs of her mother and of her father Patrick R. Guiney in his Civil War uniform, and a newspaper portrait of her.

Arrangement

The collection is arranged into three series: Manuscripts, Letters, and Photographs and Drawings. Items are arranged chronologically within each series.

Contents List

Series I: Manuscripts
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Series II: Letters
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Series III: Photographs and Drawings
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