Blount, Martha Marie, 1690-1763

Blount, Martha Marie, 1690-1763 (Library of Congress Name Authority)—Martha Marie Blount was a close friend to author Alexander Pope, so much so that some contemporaries speculated that she was his lover or even secret wife. Because her family estate was concentrated on her younger brother, the shy, quiet-tempered Martha spent many of her adult years living with her more difficult sister Teresa (b. 1688), addressee of Pope's poems "Epistle to Miss Blount, with the Works of Voiture" (1710) and "Epistle to Miss Blount, on her Leaving the Town after the Coronation" (1714).

Blackstone, William, 1723-1780

An English jurist and Tory politician, William Blackstone is best remembered for his Commentaries on the Laws of England, an expansive and accessible treatise on English common law which influenced the development of the United States legal system after the Revolutionary War. Blackstone also studied poetry during his time at Oxford, and his notes on Shakespeare were published in George Steevens' 1793 edition of Shakespeare's plays.

Bickerstaff, Isaac, 1735-1812

Not to be confused with Isaac Bickerstaff, the alias used by Richard Steele and Jonathan Swift, this Isaac Bickerstaff (or Bickerstaffe) was an Irish playwright and librettist. He had varying success in his works throughout his life, but his play The Maid of the Mill (1765) was one of his successful ones. He also wrote Lionel and Clarissa (1768), a comic opera.