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  1. 21 de feb. de 2017 · William Ernest Henley, like his most famous non-famous poem, is somebody whom we both know and don’t know. Even those who don’t know his name are aware of his influence. Henley (1849-1903) was friends with Robert Louis Stevenson , and when Stevenson wrote his first novel, Treasure Island (1883), he was inspired by Henley’s distinctive appearance to create the famous fictional pirate.

  2. William Ernest Henley (August 23, 1849 – July 11, 1903) was a British poet, critic and editor. Henley was born at Gloucester and educated at the Crypt Grammar School. The school was a poor relation of the Cathedral School, and Henley indicated its shortcomings in his article ( Pall Mall Magazine , Nov. 1900) on T. E. Brown the poet, who was headmaster there for a brief period.

  3. William Ernest Henley’s poetic works are mostly written in iambic tetrameter. For example “Invictus” is written in versifying tetrameter, implying that it has four bits or worries in each line with a rhyming calculation in all the four refrains of the poem. Incidental spondees hone up the consistent beat in this work.

  4. William Ernest Henley (1849-1903), an influential editor, critic and poet, had a role in the late-Victorian period similar to that of Dr Samuel Johnson in the late eighteenth century. He was born in Gloucester as the eldest of a family of six (five sons and a daughter). His father, William Henley (1826-1868), a bookseller and stationer, died in ...

  5. William Ernest Henley (23 August 1849 – 11 July 1903) was an English poet, critic and editor, best remembered for his 1875 poem “Invictus”. Henley was born in Gloucester and was the oldest of a family of six children, five sons and a daughter. His father, William, a bookseller and stationer, died in 1868 and was survived by young children ...

  6. 12 de abr. de 2010 · Por: William Ernest Henley. En medio de la noche que me cubre, Negra como el abismo de polo a polo, Agradezco a cualquier dios que pudiera existir Por mi alma inconquistable. En las feroces garras de las circunstancias No me he lamentado ni he llorado. Bajo los golpes del azar Mi cabeza sangra, pero no se doblega. Más allá de este lugar de ...

  7. William Ernest Henley. William Ernest Henley (ur. 23 sierpnia 1849 w Gloucester, zm. 11 lipca 1903 w Woking) − angielski krytyk i poeta. Henley urodził się w Gloucester jako najstarszy z szóstki rodzeństwa. Jego ojciec, William, był księgarzem, umarł w 1868. Jego matka, Mary Morgan, była potomkiem poety i krytyka Josepha Whartona.

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