See also:FITZGERALD, See also:EDWARD (1809–1883) , See also:English writer, the poet of See also:Omar Khayyam, was See also:born as EDWARD See also:PURCELL., at Bredfield See also:House, in See also:Suffolk, on the 31st of See also:March 1809. His See also:father, See also:John Purcell, who had married a See also:Miss FitzGerald, assumed in 1818 the name and arms of his wife's See also:family. From 1816 to 1821 the FitzGeralds lived at St Germain and at See also:Paris, but in the latter See also:year Edward was sent to school at See also:Bury St See also:Edmunds. In 1826 he proceeded to Trinity See also:College, See also:Cambridge, where, some two years later, he became acquainted with See also:Thackeray and W. H. See also:Thompson. With See also:Tennyson, " a sort of See also:Hyperion," his intimacy began about 1835. In 183o he went to live in Paris, but in 1831 was in a See also:farm-house on the battlefield of See also:Naseby. He adopted no profession, and lived a perfectly stationary and rustic See also:life, presently moving into his native See also:county of Suffolk, and never again leaving it for more than a See also:week or two. Until 1835 the FitzGeralds lived at Wherstead; from that year until 1853 the poet resided at Boulge, near See also:Woodbridge; until 186o at Farlingay See also:- HALL
- HALL (generally known as SCHWABISCH-HALL, tc distinguish it from the small town of Hall in Tirol and Bad-Hall, a health resort in Upper Austria)
- HALL (O.E. heall, a common Teutonic word, cf. Ger. Halle)
- HALL, BASIL (1788-1844)
- HALL, CARL CHRISTIAN (1812–1888)
- HALL, CHARLES FRANCIS (1821-1871)
- HALL, CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN (1816—19oz)
- HALL, EDWARD (c. 1498-1547)
- HALL, FITZEDWARD (1825-1901)
- HALL, ISAAC HOLLISTER (1837-1896)
- HALL, JAMES (1793–1868)
- HALL, JAMES (1811–1898)
- HALL, JOSEPH (1574-1656)
- HALL, MARSHALL (1790-1857)
- HALL, ROBERT (1764-1831)
- HALL, SAMUEL CARTER (5800-5889)
- HALL, SIR JAMES (1761-1832)
- HALL, WILLIAM EDWARD (1835-1894)
Hall; until 1873 in the See also:town of Woodbridge; and then until his See also:death at his own house hard by, called Little See also:Grange.
During most of this See also:- TIME (0. Eng. Lima, cf. Icel. timi, Swed. timme, hour, Dan. time; from the root also seen in " tide," properly the time of between the flow and ebb of the sea, cf. O. Eng. getidan, to happen, " even-tide," &c.; it is not directly related to Lat. tempus)
- TIME, MEASUREMENT OF
- TIME, STANDARD
time FitzGerald gave his thoughts almost without interruption to his See also:flowers, to See also:music and to literature. He allowed See also:friends like Tennyson and Thackeray, however, to push on far before him, and See also:long showed no disposition to emulate their activity. In 1851 he published his first See also:book, See also:Euphranor, a Platonic See also:dialogue, born of memories of the old happy life at Cambridge. In 1852 appeared Polonius, a collection of " saws and See also:modern instances," some of them his own, the See also:rest borrowed from the less See also:familiar English See also:classics. FitzGerald began the study of See also:Spanish See also:poetry in 1850, when he was with See also:Professor E. B. See also:Cowell at Elmsett and that of See also:Persian in See also:- OXFORD
- OXFORD, EARLS OF
- OXFORD, EDWARD DE VERE, 17TH EARL
- OXFORD, JOHN DE VERE, 13TH EARL OF (1443-1513)
- OXFORD, PROVISIONS OF
- OXFORD, ROBERT DE VERE, 9TH EARL OF (1362-1392)
- OXFORD, ROBERT HARLEY, 1ST
Oxford in 1853. In the latter year he issued Six Dramas of See also:Calderon, freely translated. He now turned to See also:Oriental studies, and in 1856 he anonymously published a version of the.Salaman and Absdl of Jami in Miltonic See also:verse. In March 1857 the name with which he has been so closely identified first occurs in FitzGerald's correspondence—" See also:Hafiz and Omar Khayyam See also:ring like true See also:- METAL
- METAL (through Fr. from Lat. metallum, mine, quarry, adapted from Gr. µATaXAov, in the same sense, probably connected with ,ueraAAdv, to search after, explore, µeTa, after, aAAos, other)
metal.", On the 15th of See also:January 1859 a little See also:anonymous pamphlet was published as The Rubdiydt of Omar Khayyam. In the See also:world at large, and in the circle of FitzGerald's particular friends, the poem seems at first to have attracted no See also:attention.
End of Article: FITZGERALD, EDWARD (1809–1883)
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