How old was william ernest henley when he wrote invictus
Universal Dictionary of Violin & Bow Makers
Reference Book on Luthiers
The Universal Dictionary of Violin & Bow Makers is a widely cited reference work providing information on approximately 9, violin makers.
Biography william ernest henley meaning This accident caused his latent tuberculosis to flare up, and he died of it on 11 July , at the age of 53, at his home in Woking , Surrey. During this period, he also wrote a number of poems and many of them got anonymously published in various magazines. In those days, Thomas Edward Brown was the headmaster of the school. Personal life [ edit ].The work is based on the extensive notes of violinist and composer William Henley (). Henley had in his youth studied with August Wilhelmj, and later became a professor of composition and principal of the violin at the Royal Academy in London. Having played violins from many manufacturers, Henley sought to compile a comprehensive list evaluating violin and bow makers.
After Henley's death in , dealer Cyril Woodcock (–)[1] completed and published the work based on Henley's unfinished notes.
Biography william ernest henley Henley, Elizabeth Becker —. Health problems forced Henley to leave London in , after which he underwent a sea-water treatment for his badly infected foot. He was creatively imaginative but physically he had a crumbled personality due to his health issues. This disease resulted in cutting down his left leg below the knee inThe work was first published in five volumes in and , and republished in a single volume in [2]
Background
The book was the first to include a significant number of American craftsmen. Henley traveled extensively as a performer, primarily with his quartet. It was during his trips, including a supposed trip to America during the s, that Henley gathered information for his book.[3] Australian violin maker Alan Coggins and regular contributor to The Strad wrote an article in challenging the objectivity of Woodcock's editing, given, among other things, unsourced and possibly inflated descriptions of luthiers in the United States.[2]
Nonetheless, the dictionary, at the time of publishing, was among several during the decade that complemented a seminal earlier lexicon, The Violin and Lute Makers From the Middle Ages to the Present, by Willibald Leo von Lütgendorff (–), published in [4] Others included one by a Belgian musicologist René Vannes (–), compiled two editions of a Dictionary ( & ).
Also, Chicago violinist Joseph Roda (–) compiled a seminal book with detailed illustrations by Gladys Mickel Bell (–) about bows and bow makers ().
German luthier Fridolin Hamma (–) from Stuttgart compiled a book about German-made violins (; ) and a similar book about Italian-made violins (). Czech author Karel Jalovec (born ) compiled a books about Italian violin makers (), Bohemian (including Moravian and Slovakian) violin makers (), German and Austrian violin makers (), and an Encyclopedia of violin makers (2 volumes; ).
Dutch luthier Max Möller (–) from Amsterdam published a lexical work about the violin factories (North and South) ().[5]
John Dilworth, a Twickenham-based luthier, wrote a comprehensive reference, published in , The Brompton's Book of Violin & Bow Makers, John Milnes, editor.
Selected editions
- Universal Dictionary of Violin and Bow Makers (5 Vols.) (1st ed.), by William Henley; managing editor, Cyril Woodcock (managing ed.), (4to), Brighton, Sussex: Amati Publishing Ltd.
() (paperback)
- Vol.Biography william ernest henley poems He was a bookseller while his mother descended from a family of poets. In ways they predictably found alienating, he liked to exhort them to ever-greater effort, reiterating that ambition and drive were the only means of escaping an 'inferior position' in life. Moreover, I am quite out of sympathy with Henley's deification of brute strength and courage, things I wholly despise. What is there I would not do, England my own?
1: "Aaben to Coq." ()
- Vol. 2: "Corani to Guarnerius, Joseph" ()
- Vol. 3: "Guarnerius, Joseph to Maucotel, Charles Adolphe" ()
- Vol. 4 ()
- Vol. 5 ()
- Vol.Biography william ernest henley invictus Then, copy and paste the text into your bibliography or works cited list. After a period of acute suffering, Henley died at the age of 53 at his home in Woking. Knopf, , p. British poet, essayist, and dramatist William Ernest Henley was most influential in his role as literary critic and editor.
6 ()
- Vol. 7: "Price Guide and Appendix" () pages, 16 plates, research by Julia Grey
- "Supplement"(–)
- Vol.Biography william ernest henley poems He was a bookseller while his mother descended from a family of poets. In ways they predictably found alienating, he liked to exhort them to ever-greater effort, reiterating that ambition and drive were the only means of escaping an 'inferior position' in life. Moreover, I am quite out of sympathy with Henley's deification of brute strength and courage, things I wholly despise. What is there I would not do, England my own?
- Universal Dictionary of Violin and Bow Makers (new ed.), by William Henley, Amati Publishing Ltd. (), 1, pages
References
- ^Who's Who in Music and Musicians' International Directory, Sixth edition, New York: Hafner Publishing Co.
() ISSNOCLC
- ^ abFreaks of Disordered Thought, by Alan Coggins, The Strad (October ) ISSN
- ^Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society, , Vol. 28, pg. 7 OCLC
- ^Die Geigen und Lautenmacher vom Mittelalter bis zur Gegenwart (The Violin and Lute Makers From the Middle Ages to the Present), by Willibald Leo von Lütgendorff () OCLC
- ^Ältere und neuere Literatur zur Musikinstrumentenkunde, by John Henry van der Meer, Acta Musicologica, Vol.
51, Fasc. 1 (Jan. – Jun., ), pgs. 34–35, published by the de:International Musicological Society (accessed: 18/10/), OCLC, ISSN