√ | Century of Experience | Evidence | Name of Reader / Listener / Reading Group | Author of Text | Title of Text | Form of Text | |
| 1700-1799 | Read the 2d volume of Mrs Inchbald's 'Nature & Art'. It is a pretty little thing, not in the same way as the 'Italian'. | Joseph Hunter | Elizabeth Inchbald | Nature and Art | Print: Book |
| 1700-1799 | I finished Mrs Inchbald's 'Nature and Art', the second volume is not so pleasing as the first, but yet it has a very p... | Joseph Hunter | Elizabeth Inchbald | Nature and Art | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | "I have just been reading, for the fourth time, I believe, The Simple Story, which I intended this time to read as a c... | Maria Edgeworth | Elizabeth Inchbald | A Simple Story | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Will you answer me one more question ?Is not the "Simple Story" more pathetic than "Persuasion"?' | Elizabeth Barrett | Elizabeth Inchbald | Simple Story, A | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | [Transcribed in Lady Caroline's hand]: ?From Nature & Art
There is a word in the vocabulary more bitter, more direful... | Lady Caroline Lamb | Elizabeth Inchbald | Nature and Art | Unknown |
| 1700-1799 | '[William] Godwin, no mean judge of a novel's excellence, could not help lamenting the fewness
of [Elizabeth Inchbal... | William Godwin | Elizabeth Inchbald | Nature and Art | Manuscript: Unknown |