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Aubrey Thomas de Vere : ウィキペディア英語版 | Aubrey Thomas de Vere
Aubrey Thomas de Vere (10 January 1814 – 20 January 1902) was an Irish poet and critic.〔Gosse, Edmund (1913). ("Aubrey de Vere." ) In: ''Portraits and Sketches.'' London: William Heinemann, pp. 117–125.〕 ==Life== He was born at Curraghchase House now in ruins at Curraghchase Forest Park, Kilcornan, County Limerick,〔Ward, Wilfrid (1904). (''Aubrey de Vere: A Memoir.'' ) London: Longmans, Green and Co., p. 1.〕 the third son of Sir Aubrey de Vere, 2nd Baronet (1788–1846) and his wife Mary Spring Rice, daughter of Stephen Edward Rice (d.1831) and Catherine Spring,〔Ward (1904), p. 4.〕 of Mount Trenchard, Co. Limerick. He was a nephew of Lord Monteagle and a younger brother of Sir Stephen de Vere, 4th Baronet. In 1832, his father dropped the original surname 'Hunt' by royal licence, assuming the surname 'de Vere'. Sir Aubrey was himself a poet. Wordsworth called his sonnets the most perfect of the age. These and his drama, ''Mary Tudor'', were published by his son in 1875 and 1884. Aubrey Thomas was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and in his twenty-eighth year published ''The Waldenses'', which he followed up in the next year by ''The Search after Proserpine''. Thenceforward he was continually engaged, till his death in 1902, in the production of poetry and criticism, being described as 'a man of literary fashion'.〔Schmidt, Michael (1998). ''Lives of the Poets.'' London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson ISBN 9780297840145〕
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