Gosse, Sir Edmund William, 1849-1928 (Knight, writer)
Dates
- Existence: 1849 - 1928
Biography
Sir Edmund William Gosse (1849-1928), poet and man of letters, was born at Hackney, Middlesex, on 21 September 1849, the only child of the zoologist Philip Henry Gosse (1810-1888). He worked in the catalogue section of the British Museum, 1865-1875, before becoming translator at the commercial department of the Board of Trade in 1875. He was Clark Lecturer in English literature at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1885-1890, and librarian of the House of Lords, 1904-1914. Gosse developed a reputation as a critic by writing reviews, which included weekly articles for the Sunday Times on literary matters, 1918-1928. His published works include Seventeenth-century studies (1883), Father and son (1907) and Collected poems (1911). He was knighted in 1925, and died in London on 16 May 1928.
Found in 38 Collections and/or Records:
Correspondence from Sir Edmund Gosse, 17 May 1898-28 Feb. 1916
Letters to Owen Seaman, many accepting or declining invitations to a dinner of the Royal Literary Fund in 1912.
Cutting on a centenary tribute to Edmund Gosse, 18 Sep. 1949
Cuttings of reviews and press articles, chiefly from Durrant's Press Agency. Many list Sassoon or Faber and Faber as clients but some were clearly collated by Egremont during his own research.
From Sir Edmund Gosse to Marquess of Lansdowne, 1918 (Circa, undated)
Lansdowne to keep a copy
Gosse family papers
Anecdotes, reminiscences, letters, photographs and family history
Gosse papers, 1835-1939
Anecdotes, reminiscences, letters, photographs and family history
Grangerized Life of Philip Henry Gosse
Jessie, Lady Anderson: Letters of her Family and Friends
Miscellaneous letters from distinguished persons, preserved as part of an autograph collection by Lady Anderson, wife of Sir Hugh Anderson. About half are to the Anderson family, the rest were acquired from friends. They are arranged alphabetically within each group by writer.
Journal, 20 July 1922-20 Nov. 1922 (with later annotations, including one dated 1930)
Journal, 9 Dec. 1925-9 June 1926 (with some later annotations and scoring out in Siegfried Sassoon's hand)
Journal, 13 Dec. 1926-11 Mar. 1927 (with some later annotations and scoring out in Siegfried Sassoon's hand)
Journal, 12 Mar. 1927-28 Sep. 1927
Journal, 11 Jan. 1928-28 June 1928
Letter, 23 Aug. 1927 (year inferred)
Giving news (on the health of Edmund Gosse, renovations at Weirleigh, music, and books). Also thanking Sassoon for a letter and postcard, and referring to his trip to Germany with [Frankie] Schuster.
Letter, 12 Sep. 1927 (circa; marked 'Monday')
Concerning the poor health of Edmund [Gosse], improvements to the dining room at Weirleigh, and other news.
Letter, May 1928-June 1928 (date inferred; undated)
On her sadness at the death of Edmund Gosse.
Letter, 18 Nov. 1908-18 Nov. 1927 (circa; year inferred)
Concerning bills and news, mentioning a note Sassoon had received from Sir Edmund [Gosse]. Includes a sketch [self-portrait at the races?].
Letter, 19 June 1913-19 June 1927 (circa; year inferred)
Arranging lunch with Sassoon in London and mentioning the Gosses.
Letter, 7 Nov. 1913-7 Nov. 1927 (circa; year inferred)
Asking how presentations went, giving news, and asking after the Gosses.
Letter, 1913-1927 (circa; marked 'Wednesday')
Concerning Edmund Gosse's illness, a trip to Winchester, books and other news.
Letter, 23 May 1928 (year in pencil, inferred)
Re a visit from Lady Cromer, the death of E.G. [Edmund Gosse], and Meiklejohn & Son including Sassoon's name in a book on English Literature. Reverse of the letter has crossed out accounts.
Letter addressed from [Frankie] Schuster's house, Bray, 18 June 1927 (circa; year inferred from context)
On reading book catalogues, descriptive accounts of his stay and of the other guests, giving news of Glen Byam Shaw, [Edmund] Gosse and other subjects, criticising [John] Drinkwater as 'a (second-rate) fraud'.
Letter from Edmund Gosse, 1926
Letter from Edmund Gosse, 8 May 1927
Concerning the death of Rachel Beer: stating that he would be most anxious to learn how it affected Sassoon.
Letter from Edmund Gosse (17 Hanover Terrace, London), 27 Jan. 1927
Giving editorial comments on Sassoon's manuscript ['Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man']; advising Sassoon to rewrite and expand the 'Cambridge' section, which was written 'without conviction', and to make Dixon a central character.
Letter from Nellie Gosse, 5 May 1926
Thanking her for flowers; concerning Edmund Gosse's strained nerves; and sending regards to Siegfried.
Additional filters:
- Type
- Archival Object 32
- Collection 6
- Subject
- Literary criticism 1