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  1. Olivia Shakespear (née Tucker; 17 March 1863 – 3 October 1938) was a British novelist, playwright, and patron of the arts. She wrote six books that are described as "marriage problem" novels. Her works sold poorly, sometimes only a few hundred copies.

  2. Created by. William Shakespeare. Olivia is a fictional character from William Shakespeare 's play Twelfth Night, believed to have been written around 1600 or 1601. She is at the centre of the various plots, both the comedic and the romantic. She has various suitors.

  3. 2 de ago. de 2021 · Olivia Shakespear: Espejito, espejito - Revista Mercurio. Horas críticas. Espejito, espejito. En torno a «La hora de la belleza», de Olivia Shakespear. Escrito por Mario Guerrero el 2 agosto, 2021. «¿Quién es la más bella del reino?», se preguntaba la bruja de Blancanieves.

  4. Abstract. Olivia Shakespear was born on 17 March 1863, at Southlands, Chale, on the Isle of Wight. Her father, Major-General Henry Tod Tucker, C.B. (1808–1896), was commissioned into the Bengal Infantry in 1824 and served on Headquarters staff in both Sikh Wars.

    • John Harwood
    • 1989
  5. An Interesting Character Study: Olivia from Twelfth Night. The character of Olivia in Shakespeares classic comedy Twelfth Night; or, What You Will is one of his more complex comic heroines, because of the inner conflict raging within the character after she falls in love with what she thinks is a young servant named Cesario (but is in fact a ...

  6. Olivia Character Analysis in Twelfth Night | LitCharts. Ask LitCharts AI. Get instant answers from the only tool that combines LitCharts literary analysis with the power of AI. Twelfth Night. by. William Shakespeare. Upgrade to A +. Intro. Plot. Summary & Analysis. Themes. Quotes. Characters. Symbols. Lit Devices. Quizzes. Theme Viz.

  7. In 1896, as Yeats turned thirty-one, and a bit more than mid‐way between his first proposal to Maud Gonne in 1891 and their ‘spiritual marriage’ of 1898, Olivia Shakespear introduced him to the real experience of what fascinated him so much as metaphor: the sexual union of man and woman.