Steele, Richard, Sir, 1672-1729

Poet, dramatist, and satirist, Irish writer Sir Richard Steele is best remembered for his collaboration with Joseph Addison and Jonathan Swift in essay periodicals such as the Spectator, the Tatler, and the Guardian, many of which he penned, as did Addison and especially Swift, under the pseudonym "Isaac Bickerstaff."

Staël, Madame de (Anne-Louise-Germaine), 1766-1817

Staël's Delphine (1803) was popular among British women, but her Corinne, ou l'Italie (1807) exerted a crucial influence on Romantic women's conceptions of the female artist. Her career as a critic, literary philosopher, and analyst of national character began with Lettres sur les ouvrages et le caractère de J.-J. Rousseau (1788), translated as Letters on the Works and Character of Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1789).

Spenser, Edmund, 1552?-1599

One of the most revered of English poets, Spenser is best known for his allegorical epic The Faerie Queene (1590-1596), which features among its subjects the adventures of the Redcrosse Knight as he attempts to save the virgin Una from the machinations of the villainous Archimago and Duessa. Another of his long poems, The Shepheardes Calender (1579) combines the form of pastoral eclogue with political satire. Spenser's important shorter poems include a series of love sonnets that follow a unique rhyme pattern of Spenser's origination.

Souza-Botelho, Adélaïde-Marie-Emilie Filleul, marquise de, 1761-1836

Born Adélaïde-Marie-Emilie Filleul in Paris, Souza-Botelho married the comte de Flahaut de La Billarderie and became a noted late eighteenth-century Parisian salonnière. In 1792, events of the revolution forced her to emigrate, first to England, then other locations in continental Europe, before returning to Paris in 1798. She met and married the Portuguese nobleman Dom José Maria de Souza Botelho in 1802. She authored several novels, including Adéle de Senange, ou lettres de Lord Sydenham (1794); Charles et Marie (1802); and Eugène de Rothelin (1808), among others.