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Henrietta Temple is the ninth novel written by Benjamin Disraeli, who would later become a Prime Minister of Britain. Background [ edit ] Disraeli wrote the first volume of Henrietta Temple in 1833 at the start of his affair with Henrietta Sykes, on whom the novel’s eponymous heroine is based, and completed it three years later ...
- Benjamin Disraeli
- 1837
- 1837
- Silver fork novel
Benjamin Disraeli based his eighth novel, Henrietta Temple. A Love Story (1837), on his secret affair with the married woman, lady Henrietta Sykes, with whom he broke the relationship in 1836, when he found out that she had taken another lover.
18 de ene. de 2019 · HENRIETTA TEMPLE. BOOK I. CHAPTER I. -- Some Account of the Family of Armine, and Especially of Sir Ferdinand and of Sir Ratcliffe. CHAPTER II. -- Armine Described. CHAPTER III. -- Arrival of Glastonbury. CHAPTER IV. -- Progress of Affairs at Armine. CHAPTER V. -- A Domestic Scene. CHAPTER VI. -- Containing Another Domestic Scene ...
Henrietta Temple es la novena novela escrita por Benjamin Disraeli , quien más tarde se convertiría en Primer Ministro de Gran Bretaña. Disraeli escribió el primer volumen de Henrietta Temple en 1833 al comienzo de su romance con Henrietta Sykes, en quien se basa la heroína epónima de la novela, y lo completó tres años después, poco ...
Henrietta Temple, by Benjamin Disraeli. BOOK III. CHAPTER V. _Which Contains Something Very Unexpected_. MISS TEMPLE had run up stairs to take off her bonnet; Ferdinand stood before the wood fire in the salon. Its clear, fragrant flame was agreeable after the cloudy sky of their somewhat chill drive.
9 de feb. de 2013 · Henrietta Temple is a semi-autobiographical novel and the author's first true success. Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield and later British Prime Minister, based this novel on his affair with the married Henrietta Sykes.
Henrietta Temple, by Benjamin Disraeli. BOOK V. CHAPTER I. _Containing the Appearance on Our Stage of a New and Important Character_. THE Marquis of Montfort was the grandson of that nobleman who had been Glastonbury's earliest patron.