Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Villanelle" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Gosse and Austin
In the 1870s there was a revival of interest in French forms, led by Andrew Lang, Austin Dobson, Edmund Gosse, W. E. Henley, John Payne, and others.
William Allingham – Henry C. Beeching – Oliver Madox Brown – Olive Custance – John Davidson – Austin Dobson – Lord Alfred Douglas – Evelyn Douglas – Edward Dowden – Ernest Dowson – Michael Field – Norman Gale – Edmund Gosse – John Gray – William Ernest Henley – Gerard Manley Hopkins – Herbert P. Horne – Lionel Johnson – Andrew Lang – Eugene Lee-Hamilton – Maurice Hewlett – Edward Cracroft Lefroy – Arran and Isla Leigh – Amy Levy – John William Mackail – Digby Mackworth Dolben – Fiona MacLeod – Frank T. Marzials – Théophile Julius Henry Marzials – George Meredith – Alice Meynell – Cosmo Monkhouse – George Moore – William Morris – Frederick W. H. Myers – Roden Noël – John Payne – Victor Plarr – A. Mary F. Robinson – William Caldwell Roscoe – Christina Rossetti – Dante Gabriel Rossetti – Algernon Charles Swinburne – John Addington Symonds – Arthur Symons – Rachel Annand Taylor – Francis Thompson – John Todhunter – Herbert Trench – John Leicester Warren, Lord de Tabley – Rosamund Marriott Watson – Theodore Watts-Dunton – Oscar Wilde – Margaret L. Woods – Theodore Wratislaw – W. B. Yeats

Gosse and were
Gosse penned a succession of books and articles on natural history, some of which were ( in his own words ) " pot-boilers " for religious publications.
The book was financially profitable for Gosse, and " the reviews were full of praise " even though Gosse used natural science to point to the necessity of salvation through the blood of Christ.
Some articles were written by the best-known scholars of the time, such as Edmund Gosse, J.
In separate expeditions, William Ernest Powell Giles and William Christie Gosse were the first European explorers to this area.
In separate expeditions, Ernest Giles and William Gosse were the first European explorers to this area.
Gosse and William Archer collaborated in translating Hedda Gabler and The Master Builder ; those two translations were performed throughout the 20th century.
Gosse and Archer, along with Shaw, were perhaps the literary critics most responsible for popularising Ibsen's plays among English-speaking audiences.
In 1963 another species of Pterophyllum were discovered, P. leopoldi, this species was described by Gosse.
The Gosse had very high swashbuckling, and as a result they were very good at boardings, and to some extent, damage absorption.
Several of Stagnelius poems were translated into English by Edmund Gosse ( 1886 ).
Edmund Gosse, in his introduction to Rowlands's complete works, edited ( 1872 – 80 ) for the Hunterian Club in Glasgow by Sidney John Hervon Herrtage, sums him up as a kind of small non-political Daniel Defoe, a pamphleteer in verse whose talents were never put into exercise except when their possessor was pressed for means, and a poet of considerable talent without one spark or glimmer of genius.
In the U. K., Philip Gosse and Sarah Bowdich Lee were two of the most popular nature writers in the early part of the Victorian era.
For a long time, the only oblique references to the book were to be found in Father and Son, the psychological portrait of Philip Gosse by his son Edmund Gosse published in 1907.

Gosse and among
In 1886 he published a novel of life among the Breton fisherfolk, called Pêcheur d ' Islande ( An Iceland Fisherman ), which Edmund Gosse characterized as " the most popular and finest of all his writings.
Yet The Yellow Book's first list of contributors bespoke a non-radical, typically conservative collection of authors: Edmund Gosse, Walter Crane, Sir Frederick Leighton, and Henry James among others.

Gosse and first
" Omphalos " is Greek for " navel ", and Gosse argued that the first man, Adam, did not require a navel because he was never born ; nevertheless he must have had one, as do all complete human beings, just as God must have created trees with rings that they never grew.
Nevertheless, after reading the latter, the writer George Moore suggested to Edmund that it contained " the germ of a great book ," which Edmund Gosse first published anonymously as Father and Son in 1907.
Edmund Gosse, influenced by Théodore de Banville, was the first English writer to praise the villanelle and bring it into fashion with his 1877 essay " A Plea for Certain Exotic Forms of Verse ".
Gosse and Robert Louis Stevenson first met while teenagers, and after 1879, when Stevenson came to London on occasion, he would stay with Gosse and his family.
Gosse would eventually write the first history of the renaissance of late-Victorian sculpture in 1894 in a four-part series for the Art Journal, dubbing the movement the New Sculpture.
Mount Woodroffe was named by William Christie Gosse, who first sighted it on 20 July 1873 and is named after George Woodroffe Goyder, Surveyor-General of South Australia and an early explorer of South Australia and the Northern Territory himself.
That Ibsen was offering a parable was noted in a review of the first London staging, when the translator, Edmund Gosse, was asked to explain the meaning of the work.

Gosse and English
* 1810 – Philip Henry Gosse, English naturalist ( d. 1888 )
Philip Henry Gosse ( 6 April 1810 – 23 August 1888 ) was an English naturalist and popularizer of natural science, virtually the inventor of the seawater aquarium, and a painstaking innovator in the study of marine biology.
Sir Edmund William Gosse CB ( 21 September 1849 – 16 May 1928 ) was an English poet, author and critic ; the son of Philip Henry Gosse and Emily Bowes.
From 1884 to 1890, Gosse lectured in English literature at Trinity College, Cambridge, despite his own lack of academic qualifications.
* May 16-Edmund Gosse, English poet & critic ( born 1849 )
The novel partly takes its inspiration from Father and Son, the autobiography of the English poet Edmund Gosse, which describes his relationship with his father, Philip Henry Gosse.
Edmund Gosse called the play " perhaps the best existing English comedy of intrigue ", while Charles Lamb wrote that " This comedy grew out of Congreve and Wycherley ," but criticized " sentimental incompatibilities " even while admitting that " the gaiety upon the whole is buoyant.
Downer is related via the Gosse family to Sir Edmund Gosse, a famed English literary critic.
biographies of Thomas Carlyle, John Milton, William Blake, and others ; The Age of Dryden ( 1895 ); a History of Italian Literature ; English Literature: An Illustrated Record ( with Edmund Gosse ); and many articles for encyclopaedias and the Dictionary of National Biography.

Gosse and .
Eight graduates from Dalhousie have also served as Lieutenant Governors across Canada, including John Crosbie, Myra Freeman, Clarence Gosse, John Keiller MacKay, Henry Poole MacKeen, John Robert Nicholson, Fabian O ' Dea, and Albert Walsh.
* Gosse, Van.
The Omphalos hypothesis was named after the title of an 1857 book, Omphalos by Philip Henry Gosse, in which Gosse argued that in order for the world to be " functional ", God must have created the Earth with mountains and canyons, trees with growth rings, Adam and Eve with hair, fingernails, and navels ( omphalos is Greek for " navel "), and that therefore no evidence that we can see of the presumed age of the earth and universe can be taken as reliable.
Gosse was also the author of Omphalos, an attempt to reconcile the geological ages presupposed by Charles Lyell with the biblical account of creation.
After his death, Gosse was portrayed as a despotic father of uncompromising religious views in Father and Son ( 1907 ), the literary masterpiece of his son, poet and critic Edmund Gosse.
Gosse was born in Worcester in 1810 of an itinerant painter of miniature portraits and a lady's maid.
In 1832 Gosse experienced a religious conversion — as he said, " solemnly, deliberately and uprightly, took God for my God.
In 1838 Gosse taught eight months for Reuben Saffold, the owner of Belvoir plantation, near Pleasant Hill, Alabama.
Gosse studied and drew the local flora and fauna, assembling an unpublished volume, Entomologia Alabamensis, on insect life in the state.
The book, set as a conversation between a father and his son ( a son Gosse did not yet have ), was widely praised and demonstrated that Gosse " had a practical grasp of the importance of conservation, far ahead of his time.
Gosse opened a " Classical and Commercial School for Young Gentlemen " while keeping detailed records of his microscopic investigations of pond life, especially cyclopidae and rotifera.
In 1843, Gosse gave up the school to write a An Introduction to Zoology for the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge ( SPCK ) and to draw some of the illustrations.
From Philip Henry Gosse, British Sea-Anemones and Corals, 1860.
In October 1844 Gosse sailed to Jamaica, where he served as a professional collector for the churlish dealer Hugh Cuming.
Although Gosse worked hard during his eighteen months on the island, he later called this period his " holiday in Jamaica.
" Gosse's study specialized in birds, and Gosse has been called " the father of Jamaican ornithology.
Back in England, Gosse wrote books in his field and out.
) As his financial situation stabilized, Gosse courted Emily Bowes, a forty-one-year-old member of the Brethren, who was both a strong personality and a gifted writer of evangelical tracts.
As D. J. Taylor has written, " the word ' uxorious ' seems to have minted to define " Gosse.

0.190 seconds.