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  1. Lady Gwendolen Georgiana Gascoyne-Cecil (28 July 1860 – 28 September 1945) was a British author who wrote a four-volume biography of her father, Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, entitled Life of Robert, Marquis of Salisbury (1921, 1932). She also wrote a short story called The Little Ray for the August 1894 edition of Pall Mall Magazine.

  2. 19. Juli 2019 · Life of Robert, marquis of Salisbury. by. Cecil, Gwendolen, Lady, 1860-. Publication date. 1921. Topics. Salisbury, Robert Cecil, marquess of, 1830-1903, Eastern question, Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1837-1901. Publisher. London, Hodder and Stoughton, limited.

  3. Cecil: Marquis of Salisbury 75 5 the principle of salmon fishing. The length of time during which you must play your fish depends on his choice, not yours." Lady Gwendolen maintains with much probability in her argument (vol. IV., ch. IV.) that the famous phrase "splendid isolation" had a limited, geographical, and

  4. Life of Robert Marquis of Salisbury. By his Daughter, Lady Gwendolen Cecil. Volume I., 1830–1868; Volume II., 1868–1880. (London: Hodder and Stoughton; New York: George H. Doran Company. 19211. Pp. viii, 353; vi, 390. 21s. for each volume) | The American Historical Review | Oxford Academic. Journal Article.

    • J. L. Morison
    • 1925
  5. 30. Jan. 2019 · Gwendolen Fairfax and Cecily Cardew are the two female leads in Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. Both women provide the main source of conflict in this romantic comedy; they are the objects of affection. During Acts One and Two, the women are deceived by the well-meaning male characters,

    • Wade Bradford
  6. Gwendolen escapes from her dominating mother, Lady Bracknell; Cecily outwits Jack by arranging for Algernon to stay, and she also manages to escape Miss Prism to carry on a tryst with her future fiancé. The first moment Cecily meets Algernon, she firmly explains her identity with a no-nonsense reaction to his patronizing comment.

  7. TN her Life of Salisbury, Lady Gwendolen Cecil confessed herself puzzled by her father's sudden change of policy in the early summer of i89o.1 In April Salisbury had been apparently still convinced that arbitration was the only satisfactory way of ending the many Anglo-German disputes in Africa.2 A month later he