Letter, [ca.1867-1903?], [London], to [William Ernest] Henley.

ArchivalResource

Letter, [ca.1867-1903?], [London], to [William Ernest] Henley.

"Oliver Wendell Holmes is not dead, is he? I should much like to do him as a Modern Man,...as I think you have not had him."

1 item (2 p.)

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SNAC Resource ID: 6807615

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

Meynell, Alice Christiana Gertrude, 1847-1922

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6rs2r81 (person)

Alice Christiana Gertrude Thompson was born in England on October 11, 1847 to Thomas James and Christiana (Weller) Thompson. Alice and her sister Elizabeth received their education from their father and were brought up primarily in the English countryside and Italy. Alice was encouraged to write poetry by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, to whom she was introduced by family friend Aubrey de Vere. Alice became a poet, and Elizabeth became a painter. In 1868, Alice was received into the Catholic Church a...

Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 1809-1894

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6qp6xrj (person)

Holmes (Harvard, M.D. 1836) was Parkman Professor of Anatomy at Harvard Medical School from 1847 to 1882, dean of the Medical School from 1847 to 1853, and a noted essayist and poet. A paper on the contagiousness of puerperal fever, presented at an 1843 meeting of the Boston Society for Medical Improvement, was his most famous contribution to medicine. His indictment of physicians for their role in causing and spreading the fever was one of the most controversial treatises of the time...

Henley, William Ernest, 1849-1903

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w60865nf (person)

William Ernest Henley was born in Gloucester, and sufferred from a painful condition in his joints; his left leg was amputated when he was eighteen, and the right leg was saved only through experimental treatments of carbolic acid. He was accepted to Oxford, but couldn't afford to attend, and he tried to earn a living as an author, writing poetry and drama with some success. As a poet, he is remembered for his experiments with blank verse; he also wrote countless magazine articles and essays. Hi...