Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 1 de ene. de 2013 · Motter, who had edited the seminal edition of Hallam's Writings in 1943, had not worked on Hallam for many years. But he now wanted to return to his initial interest in Tennyson's friend, and had in mind a three-volume undertaking: a new expanded edition of the writings, an edition of Hallam's collected letters, and a full-length biography.

  2. Arthur Henry Hallam died, of a cerebral haemorrhage, in a hotel room in Vienna on 15 September 1833, aged 22. He was at the time on a European tour with his father, Henry. Arthur’s body was returned to England and was interred in the vaults of his mother’s family, the Eltons, in Clevedon church in Somerset, in January 1834.

  3. Arthur Henry Hallam died of a ruptured aneurysm on September 15, 1833. Arthur Henry Hallam was twenty-two years old. His death was one of the most significant events of Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s life. Tennyson spent the next seventeen years writing In Memoriam A.H.H., sustained lyric verse which would eventually be the reason Tennyson was ...

  4. Arthur Hallam. December 1860 Issue. WE were standing in the old English church at Clevedon on a summer afternoon. And here, said my companion, pausing in the chancel, sleeps Arthur Hallam, the ...

  5. Analysis. Arthur Henry Hallam’s chief contribution to English poetry lies in his influence upon Tennyson, including their rivalry and friendship, their mutual literary and intellectual ...

  6. 19 de sept. de 2014 · By the time the “shadowy figure of a man” appears beside Arthur Hallam's erstwhile fiancé, Mrs. Jesse, Tennyson's sister, the practice had been subject to public intrigue and scandal as a part of broader and contentious Victorian debates about the status of photography as art or document.

  7. EN) Arthur Henry Hallam, su Enciclopedia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. (EN) Opere di Arthur Hallam, su Open Library, Internet Archive. (EN) Audiolibri di Arthur Hallam, su LibriVox. (EN) In Memoriam, di Alfred Tennyson, seconda edizione, Londra, Edward Moxon, Dover Street, 1850 (Google Libri).