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  1. Emily Sarah Tennyson, Baroness Tennyson (née Sellwood; 9 July 1813 – 10 August 1896), known as Emily, Lady Tennyson, was the wife of the poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson, and an author and composer in her own right. Emily was the oldest of three daughters, raised by a single father, after her mother Sarah died when she was three years old.

  2. Emily, Lady Tennyson Joanna Richardson portrays the marriage of Alfred Tennyson and Emily Sellwood, which set the world a ‘radiant example of domestic happiness’. Joanna Richardson | Published in History Today Volume 29 Issue 3 March 1979

  3. Name variations: Lady Tennyson; Baroness Tennyson; Emily Sellwood. Born Emily Sarah Sellwood in 1813 in England; died on August 10, 1896; the eldest daughter of Henry Sellwood (a solicitor); married Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809–1892, the writer), on June 13, 1850; children: two sons, Hallam and Lionel.

  4. 11 de abr. de 2024 · RA Collection: Art. Emily Tennyson was forty-nine when George Frederic Watts painted this portrait in 1862. She had married Tennyson in 1850, having known the Tennyson family for many years. Alfred's courtship of her took place over a long period and was often from a distance.

  5. 1 de jul. de 2019 · Lady Tennyson's journal. by. Tennyson, Emily Sellwood Tennyson, Baroness, 1813-1896. Publication date. 1981. Topics. Tennyson, Alfred Tennyson, Baron, 1809-1892 -- Biography, Tennyson, Emily Sellwood Tennyson, Baroness, 1813-1896, Tennyson family, Poets, English -- 19th century -- Biography, Wives -- Great Britain -- Biography ...

  6. Tennyson's father, Dr. George Clayton Tennyson. Lady Tennyson wrote part of Version Two in the third person, evidently thinking that she would thus expedite Hallam Tennyson's writing of the Memoir; but she subsequently changed most of her pronouns back to the first person. I have changed the person where she has neglected to do so.

  7. ters of Emily Lady Tennyson is an important, if not invaluable, contribution to the first full portrait of perhaps the greatest Vic-torian poet, now only gradually emerging: as Hoge remarks, "Hitherto we have seen [Tennyson] steadily, but never before have we seen him whole." Moreover, Emily herself has considerable claim on the reader's interest.