Elizabeth Thomas (poet, born 1675)
Elizabeth Thomas was a British poet and letter writer. She was part of an important artistic group in London and John Dryden named her "Corinna". However, she suffered from lifelong financial precarity, romantic disappointment, and latterly, health problems. Her reputation was damaged by Alexander Pope and she spent three years in a debtor's prison near the end of her life.
Engraved portrait of Elizabeth Thomas by Giles King, circa 1730s. National Portrait Gallery, London.
"Pray remember the poor debters": Old Fleet Prison, 18thc, artist unknown
Mary Astell was an English protofeminist writer, philosopher, and rhetorician who advocated for equal educational opportunities for women. Astell is primarily remembered as one of England's inaugural advocates for women's rights and some commentators consider her to have been "the first English feminist."
Title page from the third edition of A Serious Proposal
No portrait of Astell remains but Joshua Reynolds' study for the portrait of a young woman (c. 1760–65) in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, was used as the cover illustration of The Eloquence of Mary Astell (2005) by Christine Mason Sutherland
Cover page from 1706 edition of Reflections upon Marriage