William Tell: Difference between revisions
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* {{:Crone, John S 1904a}}; author of English poem on William Tell (c. 1850) is a W. B. Bayne [''recte'' W.W. Bayne?], assistant master of Belfast Academy; response to F., S.J.A,; see below. | * {{:Crone, John S 1904a}}; author of English poem on William Tell (c. 1850) is a W. B. Bayne [''recte'' W.W. Bayne?], assistant master of Belfast Academy; response to F., S.J.A,; see below. | ||
* {{:F, S J A 1904a}}, asks for author information for an English poem on William Tell. Reply by John S. Crone, above, | * {{:F, S J A 1904a}}, asks for author information for an English poem on William Tell. Reply by John S. Crone, above, | ||
* {{:Gibson, Geoffrey 1975a}} | |||
* {{:Hic et Ubique 1912a}}; seeks information about a book which includes ''William Tell'', an English language comic play for children. Apparently this query was never answered. | * {{:Hic et Ubique 1912a}}; seeks information about a book which includes ''William Tell'', an English language comic play for children. Apparently this query was never answered. | ||
* {{:P-G, H 1950a}}; in answer to query from T., A., below: William Tell's weapon was a cross-bow. | * {{:P-G, H 1950a}}; in answer to query from T., A., below: William Tell's weapon was a cross-bow. |
Revision as of 01:27, 1 June 2020
By Henrik Thiil Nielsen., 2015-07-20. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-06-01.
Primary Sources
- B., W. W. Poetry of Incident: being Versions, After the Humour of the Moment, of Incidents which Struck the Author, in His Readings and Ramblings (Belfast, 1851), includes a poem on William Tell.[1]
Studies and criticism
- Clouston, W. A. 'William Tell and the Apple', Notes & Queries, Series 7, vol. IV (1887), pp. 241-42; lists analogues of William Tell's apple shooting feat, including Adam Bell; cites at length a Persian analogue to this incident.
- Crone, John S. 'William Tell', Notes & Queries, Series 10, vol. II (1904), pp. 412-13; author of English poem on William Tell (c. 1850) is a W. B. Bayne [recte W.W. Bayne?], assistant master of Belfast Academy; response to F., S.J.A,; see below.
- F., S.J.A. 'William Tell', Notes & Queries, Series 10, vol. II (1904), p. 327, asks for author information for an English poem on William Tell. Reply by John S. Crone, above,
- Gibson, Geoffrey. 'The Origins of William Tell', Journal of the Society of Archer-Antiquaries, vol. 18 (1975), pp. 6-8
- Hic et Ubique. 'William Tell', Notes & Queries, Series 11, vol. V (1912), p. 469; seeks information about a book which includes William Tell, an English language comic play for children. Apparently this query was never answered.
- P.-G., H. 'William Tell', Notes & Queries, vol. CXCV (1950), p. 415; in answer to query from T., A., below: William Tell's weapon was a cross-bow.
- R., G.H. 'William Tell Legend', Notes & Queries, Series 1, vol. III (1851), p. 187; query concerning "the true origin of the William Tell apple story", lists several analogues, including Adam Bell.
- Russell, Claud. 'William Tell', Notes & Queries, vol. CXCV (1950), p. 415; in answer to query from T., A., below: William Tell's weapon was a cross-bow.
- T., A. 'William Tell', Notes & Queries, vol. CXCV (1950), p. 348; query: did William Tell use a cross-bow according to tradition?
- Wikipedia: William Tell. A good place to start for the Tell novice.
Brief mention
- Hungerford, Roy C. 'Archery and Magic', Journal of the Society of Archer-Antiquaries. vol. 10 (1967), pp. 6-11; see pp. 9, 10.
Notes
- ↑ See notes by Crone, John S.; F., S.J.A., under 'Studies and criticism'.