In the introduction In the introduction, Scott mentions four writers who had "started up since the writing of this little piece":
Hester Chapone (1727–1801),
Hannah More,
Phillis Wheatley, and the unnamed author of "poems by a lady" "lately published" by G. Robinson in Paternoster Row. She implies that there is no shortage of subjects: "Authors have appeared with honour, in almost every walk of literature."
In the poem •
Catherine Parr (1512–1548): queen consort and author of three works •
Jane Grey (1537–1554): reputation for excellent
humanist education •
Elizabeth Tudor (1533–1603): monarch and sometime poet •
Margaret Roper (née More; 1505–1544) •
Elizabeth Dauncey (née More; 1506–1564) poet and playwright •
Catharine Macaulay (née Sawbridge; 1731–1791): historian •
Anna Williams (1706–1783): poet •
Sarah Pennington (née Moore; – 1783): author of
conduct literature •
Elizabeth Montagu (née Robinson; 1718–1800): patron of the arts,
salonnière, literary critic, writer,
Blue Stocking •
Dorothea Celesia (bap. 1738, died 1790): poet, playwright, translator •
Catherine Talbot (1721–1770): essayist and
Blue Stocking •
Rose Roberts (1730–1788): not openly named in the poem •
Jael Pye (née Mendez; – 1782): author of four works; not openly named in the poem •
Anna Laetitia Barbauld (née Aikin; 1743–1825): poet, essayist, literary critic, editor, author of children's literature •
John Duncombe (writer) (1729–1786): author of
The Feminead (1754) •
Thomas Seward (1708–1790): author of
The Female Right to Literature, in a Letter to a Young Lady from Florence (1766) •
Anna Seward / "Athenia" (1742–1809): poet; mentioned by Scott as the beneficiary of Thomas Seward's progressive ideas about female education • William Steele IV / "Philander" (1715–1785): Mary Steele's father
In the footnotes •
Katherine Grey (1540–1568) •
Mary Sidney (later Herbert; 1561–1621): poet •
Laetitia Pilkington ( – 1750): poet; included in Duncombe's
The Feminead ==See also==