Brooke, Frances, 1724?-1789

Brooke began her literary career with The Old Maid (1755-6), a witty essay periodical that she operated under the pseudonym "Mary Singleton, Spinster," and that was reprinted as a single volume in 1764. This periodical staging interactions between a vivid central voice, the perspectives of other contributors (probably fictional), and reader correspondence (much of which may also have been fictional), it is no surprise that her first full-length literary effort was a drama, Virginia: A Tragedy (1756), which she was unable to get staged.

Brooke, Arthur, -1563

English poet best remembered for his The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet, a narrative poem which became the key source for Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. The poem is a translation and adaptation of the French translation of a story in Matteo Bandello's Novelle.

Briareus

Also called Aegaeon, in Greek mythology, Briareus was one of three 50-headed, 100-armed brothers, the Hecatoncheires ("hundred" and "hands" in Greek), who aided Zeus in his defense against the Titans.

Breval, John, 1680?-1738

A miscellaneous writer descended from a protestant French refugee family, John Durant Breval dabbled in poetry, history, playwrighting, and travel writing. Breval was also engaged in a long-standing quarrel with Alexander Pope, both writers mercilessly ridiculing one another in multiple publications.