Sir Edmund William Gosse CB (21 September 1849 – 16 May 1928) was
an English
poet, author and critic; the son of
Philip Henry Gosse and
Emily Bowes.
Career
Gosse
worked as assistant librarian at the British Museum
from 1867 alongside the songwriter Theo Marzials, and in 1875 became a translator
at the Board of Trade, a post which
he held until 1904. From 1904 to 1914 he was chief Librarian of
the House of Lords
Library
. In the meantime, he published his first
volume of poetry,
On Viol and Flute (1873) and a work of
criticism,
Studies in the Literature of Northern Europe
(1879). Gosse and
Robert Louis
Stevenson first met while teenagers, and after 1879, when
Stevenson came to London on occasion, he would stay with Gosse and
his family. He became acquainted with the
pre-Raphaelites, and with
Thomas Hardy,
Alfred Lord Tennyson and
Algernon Swinburne.
He became, in the 1880s, one of the most important art critics
dealing with sculpture (writing mainly for the
Saturday
Review) with an interest spurred on by his intimate friendship
with the sculptor
Hamo Thornycroft.
Gosse would eventually write the first history of the renaissance
of late-Victorian sculpture in 1894 in a four-part series for the
Art Journal, dubbing the movement the
New Sculpture.
From 1884
to 1890 Gosse lectured in English literature at Trinity College,
Cambridge
, despite his own lack of academic
qualifications. Cambridge University
gave him an honorary MA in 1886, and Trinity
College formally admitted him as a member, 'by order of the
Council', in 1889. From 1904, he was librarian of the House of Lords
, where he exercised considerable influence.
He wrote for the
Sunday Times,
and was an expert on
Thomas Gray,
William Congreve,
John Donne,
Jeremy Taylor, and
Coventry Patmore. He can also take credit
for introducing
Ibsen's work to the
British public. Gosse and
William Archer collaborated in
translating
Hedda Gabler and
The Master Builder;
those two translations were performed throughout the 20th century.
Gosse and Archer, along with
Shaw, were perhaps the literary critics
most responsible for popularising Ibsen's plays among
English-speaking audiences.
His most famous book is the
autobiographical Father and Son, about his
troubled relationship with his
Plymouth Brethren father, Philip, which
was dramatised for
television by
Dennis Potter. Historians caution, though,
that notwithstanding its literary excellence, Gosse's narrative is
often at odds with the verifiable facts of his own and his parents'
lives. In later life, he became a formative influence on
Siegfried Sassoon, the nephew of his
lifelong friend, Hamo Thornycroft. Sassoon's mother was a friend of
Gosse's wife, Ellen. Gosse was also closely tied to figures such as
Algernon Charles
Swinburne,
John Addington
Symonds, and
André Gide.
After Gosse's mother died of breast cancer, his father married in
1860 the deeply religious Quaker spinster Eliza Brightwen
(1813-1900), whose brother Thomas tried to encourage Edmund to
become a banker and whose brother George was the husband of Eliza
Elder Brightwen (1830- 1906), a naturalist and author, whose first
book was published in 1871. After Eliza Elder Brightwen's death,
Edmund Gosse arranged fot the publication of her two posthumous
works
Last Hours with Nature (1908) and
Eliza
Brightwen, the Life and Thoughts of a Naturalist (1909), both
edited by W. H. Chesson, and the latter book with an introduction
and epilogue by Gosse.
Works
Published verse
- Madrigals, Songs, and Sonnets (1870), co-author
John Arthur Blaikie
- On Viol and Flute (1873)
- King Erik (1876)
- New Poems (1879)
- Firdausi in Exile (1885)
- In Russet and Silver (1894)
- Collected Poems (1896)
- Hypolympia, or the Gods on the Island (1901), an
"ironic phantasy," the scene of which is laid in the 20th century,
though the personages are Greek gods, is written in prose, with
some blank verse.
Critical works
- English Odes (1881)
- Seventeenth Century Studies (1883)
- Life of William
Congreve (1888)
- The Jacobean Poets (1894)
- Life and Letters of Dr John
Donne, Dean of St Paul's (1899)
- Jeremy Taylor (1904, "English Men of Letters")
- Life of Sir Thomas Browne (1905)
- Life of Thomas Gray, whose works he edited (4 vols.,
1884)
- A History of Eighteenth Century Literature (1889)
- History of Modern English Literature (1897)
- Vols. iii. and iv. of an Illustrated Record of English
Literature (1903-1904) undertaken in connection with Dr
Richard Garnett.
- French Profiles (1905)
Autobiography
Popular culture
External links
References