Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. George Henry Lewes, consort of George Eliot biographer of Robespierre and Goethe, novelist, editor, and critic, was also a scientist and philosopher. An intellectual figure of great importance on the Victorian scene, he has never before received adequate modern scholarly appreciation.

  2. George Henry LEWES (naskiĝinta la 18-an de aprilo 1817 en Londono, mortinta la 28-an de novembro 1878) estis brita verkisto, literaturkritikisto kaj filozofo. Kun la verkistino Mary Ann Evans li kunvivis kun tolero de la vera edzino Agnes Lewes.

  3. 14 de mai. de 2018 · Lewes, George Henry (1817–78) English journalist and critic. He wrote dramatic criticism as well as philosophical works, including A Biographical History of Philosophy (1845) and the hugely successful The Life and Works of Goethe (1855). Separated from his wife, he lived with George Eliot, whose work he encouraged and influenced. World ...

  4. George Henry Lewes was a very different sort of person. In 1847 he was just thirty years old, a year younger than Charlotte Bronte. He was by no means the Lewes that most people know as the "husband" of the famous George Eliot, the biographer of Goethe and editor of the Fortnightly Review.

  5. William Baker. That sadly neglected repository of early Victorian journalism, the Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, published. between 1833 and 1846 in twenty-seven volumes and three supplementary volumes. by Charles Knightl, contains thirty-one articles by George Henry Lewes.

  6. George Henry Lewes. (1817-1878) George Henry Lewes was one of the "British Emergentists," so-named by Brian McLaughlin. Lewes was an English philosopher and literary critic who invented the term " emergent ." Other emergentists included John Stuart Mill, C. Lloyd Morgan, Samuel Alexander,

  7. WR, lxvi (1856), 442–461. George Eliot was as merciless in her satire of several ridiculous novels as Lewes in his criticism of worthless books. Cf. Lewes' remark in the Leader, 27 Sept. 1851, p. 925, where he notes that Lady Dormer in her novel Lady Selina Clifford “has nothing to say—and says it.”. page 997 note 28.