Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. My journalist gene made me order a used specimin of David Cecil's biography about his relative, the real Lord Melbourne. It is so very well written, in beautiful English (of course) - so well told. Very sad actually, since Lord M for the rest of his life missed the queen every single day - and died only 7 years (I think) after his resignation.

  2. Lord Edward Christian David Gascoyne-Cecil was born on April 9, 1902 in Hatfield House, Hertforshire, England. "David Cecil" was educated at Eton College and he went on to Christ Church, Oxford, as an undergraduate. Upon his graduation in 1924 he became a Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, until 1930. During this time he published his study of ...

  3. Lord David Cecil’s Philosophy of History. A deep and sympathetic biography of the troubled eighteenth-century proto-Romantic poet and classicist, William Cowper, The Stricken Deer (1929) reveals the genius of its author, a young and determined Lord David Cecil, one of the most important, if forgotten, members of the Inklings.

  4. Lord Edward Christian David Gascoyne-Cecil was born on April 9, 1902 in Hatfield House, Hertforshire, England. "David Cecil" was educated at Eton College and he went on to Christ Church, Oxford, as an undergraduate. Upon his graduation in 1924 he became a Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, until 1930.

  5. Lord Edward Christian David Gascoyne-Cecil, CH, born 9 April 1902, was a British biographer, historian, and scholar. David Cecil was the youngest of the four children of James Gascoyne-Cecil, 4th Marquess of Salisbury, and the former Lady Cicely Gore. His siblings were Lady Beatrice Edith Mildred Cecil (later Baroness Harlech), Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 5th Marquess of Salisbury and Lady Mary ...

  6. Lord Edward Christian David Gascoyne-Cecil was born on April 9, 1902 in Hatfield House, Hertforshire, England. "David Cecil" was educated at Eton College and he went on to Christ Church, Oxford, as an undergraduate. Upon his graduation in 1924 he became a Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, until 1930.

  7. Lord David Cecil (1902-86) Hardy the novelist : an essay in criticism / by David Cecil. (The Clark lectures, given at Cambridge in 1942) 1943. 19.0 x 1.5 cm (book measurement (inventory)) | RCIN 1082549.