Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. George Meredith (Portsmouth , 12 de febrero de 1828 - Box Hill (Inglaterra), 18 de mayo de 1909) fue un novelista y poeta inglés durante la época victoriana. Biografía [ editar ] Meredith nació en Portsmouth , en el seno de una adinerada familia de Hampshire .

  2. 乔治·梅瑞狄斯George Meredith(1828年2月12日---1909年)英国作家。他父亲是个裁缝,而他母亲在他5岁的时候就去世了,自从丧母之后,他的童年过的并不快乐.他的父亲(Augustus Meredith)从自己的父亲手中继承到了一份摇摇欲坠的生意和沉重的赋税.1837年,Augustus Meredith被迫宣布破产,他到伦敦去设法谋生,而他的 ...

  3. About this book. George Meredith: The Life and Writing of an Alteregoist is not only a critical biography of the Victorian novelist and poet George Meredith but also a portrait of the novel in the later nineteenth century. Interweaving analysis of Meredith’s novels and poems with discussion of his life, Richard Cronin focuses primarily on the ...

  4. 23 de ago. de 2013 · A perfect case in point is George Meredith (1828-1909), the Victorian poet and novelist. Although he was popular in his own lifetime, his achievements have been overlooked: as a poet he is overshadowed by Tennyson and Browning, and as a novelist he has been half-forgotten, while George Eliot, Anthony Trollope, and many of his other contemporaries are still widely read.

  5. GEORGE MEREDITH (1828-1909) George Meredith nació en Portsmouth, Hampshire (Gran Bretaña), el 12 de febrero del año 1828. Era hijo de Jane Macnamara Meredith y Augustus Meredith. Estudió en Moravia, Alemania. En el año 1849 se casó con Mary Ellen Nicolls, quien abandonó a su esposo por el célebre pintor y escritor Henry Wallis. En

  6. George Meredith of Britain wrote novels, such as The Ordeal of Richard Feverel (1859), and poetic works, including Modern Love (1862). During the Victorian era, Meredith read law, and people articled him as a solicitor, but shortly after marrying Mary Ellen Nicolls, a 30-year-old widowed daughter of Thomas Love Peacock, in 1849 at 21 years of age, he abandoned that profession for journalism.

  7. George Meredith came to be seen as the last of the Victorian sages, something that did his reputation more harm than good in the long run. 1 Yet his stance was anything but sage-like. He was an ebullient figure, hugely inventive and brimming with humour: "chaff you he would," remembered one young family friend, "in prose, in verse, in parables, in grotesque images, the whole wafted along by ...