Kathryn R. King,
Kathryn R. King, with Jeslyn Medoff,
Kathryn R. King,
Jane Barker,
Jane Barker,
1688
[i.e. late 1687]).
Jane Barker is now generally acknowledged as one of the most significant figures to emerge in the feminist recovery of early modern women writers
(K. King). She is perhaps best known for her partly autobiographical novels, which were published between 1713 and 1725. These are supplemented, however, by a substantial body of verse. A number of early poems were published, together with a miscellany of verses largely by a coterie of Cambridge students to which she had access, in 1688
: i.e. 1687). Even more substantial and distinctive, especially reflecting her character as a devout Catholic and ardent Jacobite, are two extant autograph, or partly autograph, manuscript collections of poems written by her when a voluntary exile in St-Germain-en-Laye between 1689 and 1704. They are now
Barker's handwriting can be identified from a single remarkable autograph letter, written in her later years, in which she claims to have drawn a cancer from her breast through the healing power of James II's blood (*
For other documentation relating to her life, in record offices and elsewhere, see King,