Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Frances Sargent Osgood (de soltera Locke) (18 de junio de 1811 – 12 de mayo de 1850) fue una poeta estadounidense y una de las más famosas escritoras de su tiempo. [1] Apodada "Fanny", también fue famosa por sus intercambios poéticos con Edgar Allan Poe.

  2. Frances Sargent Osgood (née Locke; June 18, 1811 – May 12, 1850) was an American poet and one of the most popular women writers during her time. Nicknamed "Fanny", she was also famous for her exchange of romantic poems with Edgar Allan Poe.

  3. Frances Sargent Osgood (de soltera Locke) (18 de junio de 1811 – 12 de mayo de 1850) fue una poeta estadounidense y una de las más famosas escritoras de su tiempo. Apodada "Fanny", también fue famosa por sus intercambios poéticos con Edgar Allan Poe.

  4. 19 de nov. de 2020 · Frances Sargent Osgood (1811 – 1850) was one of the most influential American women poets of her time. She was born in Boston to a family of poets together with her brother, sister, and step-sister. Early on, her parents recognized her talent and encouraged her pursuits. Her first poem was published when she was a young teenager.

  5. 14 de oct. de 2020 · Frances Sargent Locke Osgood was an American poet, essayist, and children’s author who contributed voluminously to America’s major literary magazines and published books on both sides of the Atlantic. She was the sixth of seven children born to Joseph Locke and his second wife, Mary Ingersoll Foster Locke (m. 1800).

  6. Osgood, Frances (1811–1850) American writer rumored to have had an affair with Edgar Allan Poe. Name variations: Fanny Osgood; (pseudonyms) Florence, Ellen, Kate Carol. Born Frances Sargent Locke on June 18, 1811, in Boston, Massachusetts; died on May 12, 1850, in New York City; daughter of Joseph Locke (a merchant) and Mary (Ingersoll ...

  7. sion of womanliness; twentieth-century scholars analyze what Osgood's male associates-especially Poe-saw in her. For critics from the 1840s to the 1980s, however, the central fact about Frances Osgood has been her sex. She has always been noteworthy as a woman poet, and, as we shall see, changes