Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  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. 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.

  3. (AVA x) The Yeats who had his first experience of sexual love with Olivia Shakespear was waiting for revelation to find him. In the summer following Yeats's sexual initiation, Shakespear and magic coalesced around a series of events that placed the White Goddess at the heart of his search for poetic inspiration.

  4. Olivia Shakespear and W. B. Yeats. John Harwood. Chapter. 23 Accesses. Part of the book series: Yeats Annual ( (YA)) Abstract. Olivia Shakespear was born on 17 March 1863, at Southlands, Chale, on the Isle of Wight.

    • John Harwood
    • 1989
  5. 18 de feb. de 2019 · Pictured is one of the newly acquired letters between WB Yeats and his first lover and close friend, the English writer Olivia Shakespear (1863-1938) at the National Library of Ireland (NLI). The letters date from 1895 to 1936 and most are from Yeats to Shakespear. PHOTO: Mark Stedman.

    • Olivia Shakespear1
    • Olivia Shakespear2
    • Olivia Shakespear3
    • Olivia Shakespear4
    • Olivia Shakespear5
  6. Olivia Shakespear: Letters to W. B. Yeats. John Harwood. Chapter. 57 Accesses. Abstract. The thirty-seven letters printed below seem to be all that survive from Olivia Shakespears side of a correspondence spanning the years 1894 to 1938.

  7. 1896. It was Olivia Shakespear’s sole contribution to this journal which also published many of the poems which Yeats wrote to her during their affair of 1896. ‘Beauty’s Hour’ is, as Anne Margaret Daniel points out in her introduction, a strange work to come from the pen of a very beautiful woman.