News

The phrase has been used allusively to describe intensely competitive or clashing situations ever since Alfred, Lord Tennyson included the line in his 1850 poem, “In Memoriam A.H.H.”: ...
Jane Austen and Julia Margaret Cameron are distinguished women in their fields of artistic expression, and I admire them ...
A Surrey landscape which is home to lizards and an area known as the Devil’s Punch bowl has been designated a national nature reserve. Natural England, which advises the Government on the ...
The area inspired literary giants such as Arthur Conan Doyle and Alfred Lord Tennyson, who wrote Flower In The Crannied Wall in Waggoners Well.
THE Paper Chase was an art journal produced by Elizabeth Forbes (1859-1912) and Fryn Tennyson Jesse (1888-1958), a great-niece of Alfred, Lord… ...
The theme for the choral showcase is Untraveled Worlds, inspired by the 1833 poem "Ulysses" by Alfred Lord Tennyson that expresses a longing for constant exploration and experience. The central ...
A hotel located in an East Midlands holiday destination that dates back to 1770 and is known for its connection to legendary poet Alfred Lord Tennyson has been placed on the market. Dating back to ...
Submitted photo The Alfred Leslie painting “Americans: Youngstown, Ohio,” which had been on loan to the Butler Institute of American Art, was donated to the museum by the artist’s estate.
Breakthrough Scientific Study Reveals Alfred Tennyson’s Hidden Writings The high-tech analysis of the poet's manuscripts have turned up text and marks that cannot be seen by the human eye.
But there is quite a history of public memorial poetry. Keelan cites a couple of classics as her models: “In Memoriam A.H.H.,” written by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, as well as Walt Whitman’s soaring elegy ...
6 Aug 1809 – 6 Oct 1892 Torre Abbey Alfred was the Poet Laureate during much of Queen Victoria’s reign and remains one of the most popular British poets. Alfred excelled at writing short lyrics, as in ...
Timothy Dudley-Smith, author of “Tell Out, My Soul,” “Lord, for the Years,” “Sing a New Song,” and more than 400 other hymns, died in Cambridge, England, on August 12. He was 97.