William Barnes
William Barnes

William Barnes, (born Feb. 22, 1801, Bagber, near Sturminster Newton, Dorsetshire, Eng.—died Oct. 7, 1886, Winterbourne Came, Dorsetshire), English dialect poet whose work gives a vivid picture of the life and labour of rural southwestern England and includes some moving expressions of loss and grief, such as “The Wife A-Lost” and “Woak Hill.” He was also a gifted philologist, and his linguistic theories as well as his poetry influenced two major writers, Thomas Hardy and Gerard Manley Hopkins.

1801 - 1886


Unlock the Power of Language & AI

Benefit from dictionaries, spell checkers, and character recognizers. A revolutionary step for students, teachers, researchers, and professionals from various fields and industries.

Lughaat

Empower the academic and research process through various Pakistani and international dictionaries.

Explore

Spell Checker

Detect and correct spelling mistakes across multiple languages.

Try Now

OCR

Convert images to editable text using advanced OCR technology.

Use OCR