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Edmund Gosse

Sir Edmund William Gosse CB (/ɡɒs/; 21 September 1849 – 16 May 1928) was an English poet, author and critic. He was strictly brought up in a small Protestant sect, the Plymouth Brethren, but broke away sharply from that faith. His account of his childhood in the book Father and Son has been described as the first psychological biography.

Edmund Gosse, by John Singer Sargent, 1886

His friendship with the sculptor Hamo Thornycroft inspired a successful career as a historian of late-Victorian sculpture. His translations of Henrik Ibsen helped to promote that playwright in England, and he encouraged the careers of Sarojini Naidu, W. B. Yeats and James Joyce. He also lectured in English literature at Cambridge University.

Early life edit

Gosse was the son of Philip Henry Gosse and Emily Bowes.[1] His father was a naturalist and his mother an illustrator who published a number of books of poetry. Both were deeply committed to a small Protestant sect, the Plymouth Brethren.[citation needed] His childhood was initially happy as they spent their summers in Devon, where his father was developing the ideas that gave rise to the craze for the marine aquarium. After his mother died of breast cancer when he was eight and they moved to Devon, his life with his father became increasingly strained by his father's expectations that he should follow in his religious tradition. Gosse was sent to a boarding school where he began to develop his own interests in literature. In 1860, his father remarried the deeply religious Quaker spinster Eliza Brightwen (1813–1900), whose brother Thomas tried to encourage Edmund to become a banker. He later gave an account of his childhood in the book Father and Son, which has been described as the first psychological biography. At the age of 18 and working in the British Museum in London, he broke away from his father's influence in a dramatic coming of age. Nearly a century after Gosse's death, a study based on his published remarks and writings about his father concluded that, in varying degrees, they are "riddled with error, distortion, contradictions, unwarranted claims, misrepresentation, abuse of the written record, and unfamiliarity with the subject."[2]

Eliza Gosse's brother George Brightwen was the husband of Eliza Brightwen née Elder (1830–1906), a naturalist and author, whose first book was published in 1890.[3] After Eliza Brightwen's death, Edmund Gosse arranged for 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.

Gosse was second cousin of Annie Morgan, also of strict Plymouth Brethren upbringing, who married physician Alexander Waugh (1840–1906) and was mother of Arthur Waugh and grandmother to the writers Alec Waugh and Evelyn Waugh.[4]

Career edit

 
Edmund Gosse in 1857, with father Philip Henry Gosse

Gosse started his career as assistant librarian at the British Museum from 1867 alongside the songwriter Theo Marzials,[5] a post which Charles Kingsley helped his father obtain for him. An early book of poetry published with a friend John Arthur Blaikie gave him an introduction to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Trips to Denmark and Norway in 1872–74, where he visited Hans Christian Andersen and Frederik Paludan-Müller, led to publishing success with reviews of Henrik Ibsen and Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson in the Cornhill Magazine.[6] He was soon reviewing Scandinavian literature in a variety of publications. He became acquainted with Alfred, Lord Tennyson and friends with Robert Browning, Algernon Charles Swinburne, Thomas Hardy and Henry James.

In the meantime, he published his first solo 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. In 1875 Gosse became a translator at the Board of Trade, a post which he held until 1904 and gave him time for his writing[7] and enabled him to marry and start a family.

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.[8] He made a successful American lecture tour in 1884 and was much in demand as a speaker and on committees as well as publishing a string of critical works as well as poetry and histories.

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.

In 1904, he became the librarian of the House of Lords Library, where he exercised considerable influence till he retired in 1914. 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 Henrik 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 George Bernard Shaw, were perhaps the literary critics most responsible for popularising Ibsen's plays among English-speaking audiences. Gosse was instrumental in getting official financial support for two struggling Irish writers, W.B. Yeats in 1910 and James Joyce in 1915. This enabled both writers to continue their chosen careers.[9]

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. Published anonymously in 1907, this followed a biography he had written of his father as naturalist, when he was urged by George Moore among others to write more about his own past. Historians caution, though, that notwithstanding its psychological insight and literary excellence, Gosse's narrative is often at odds with the verifiable facts of his own and his parents' lives.[10] 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.

Another work of his is The Autumn Garden, which was published in 1908 by the London publisher William Heinemann. This book includes: Proem, Lyrics in the Mood of Reflection, Sonnets, Songs of Roses, Commemorations and Inscriptions, Verses of Occasion, Paraphrases and a final Epilogue in the Autumn Garden. It contains more than 50 individual pieces within it.[11]

He was the literary editor for the 1911 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica.[12]

Personal life edit

Gosse married Ellen Epps (23 March 1850 – 29 August 1929), a young painter in the Pre-Raphaelite circle, who was the daughter of George Napoleon Epps. Though she was initially determined to pursue her art, she succumbed to his determined courting and they married in August 1875, with a reception at the house of Lawrence Alma-Tadema (her brother-in-law) and visiting Gosse's father and step-mother (who did not attend the registry office wedding) at the end of their honeymoon in Devon and Cornwall. She continued to paint and wrote stories and reviews for various publications. In 1907, she inherited a sizeable fortune from her uncle, James Epps (the brother of John Epps and who had made his fortune in cocoa).[6]

They were married more than 53 years and they had three children: Emily Teresa ("Tessa") (1877-1951),[13] Philip Henry George (1879–1959) who became a physician (but is probably best known as the author of The Pirates' Who's Who (1924)[14][15]) and Laura Sylvia (1881-1968), who became a well-known painter.

Despite a reportedly happy marriage Gosse had consistent, if deeply closeted, homosexual desires. Although initially reluctant to acknowledge these desires, in 1890 Gosse did acknowledge to John Addington Symonds, around the time the latter was working on A Problem in Modern Ethics, that indeed he (Gosse) was attracted to men, thus confirming suspicions Symonds had voiced earlier. "Either way, I entirely deeply sympathize with you. Years ago I wanted to write to you about all this," Gosse wrote to Symonds, "and withdrew through cowardice. I have had a very fortunate life, but there has been this obstinate twist in it! I have reached a quieter time—some beginnings of that Sophoclean period when the wild beast dies. He is not dead, but tamer; I understand him & the trick of his claws."[16][17]

Honours edit

Gosse was named a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in 1912.[18] He was knighted in 1925.[19]

In popular culture edit

Works edit

Published verse edit

  • 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.
  • The Autumn Garden (1908)

Critical works edit

  • English Odes (1881)
  • Seventeenth Century Studies (1883)
  • Life of Thomas Gray, whose works he edited (4 vols., 1884)
  • Life of William Congreve (1888)
  • A History of Eighteenth Century Literature (1889)
  • Gossip in a Library (essays about books, 1892)
  • Questions at issue (1893)
  • The Jacobean Poets (1894)
  • Critical Kit-kats (1896)
  • A Short History of Modern English Literature (1897)[21]
  • Life and Letters of Dr John Donne, Dean of St Paul's (1899)
  • Illustrated Record of English Literature, with Richard Garnett (vols. iii and iv, 1903–1904)
  • Jeremy Taylor (1903, "English Men of Letters")
  • Life of Sir Thomas Browne (1905)
  • French Profiles (1905)
  • Portraits and Studies (1912)
  • Collected Essays (1912)
  • Three French Moralists (1918)
  • Malherbe and the Classical Reaction in the Seventeenth Century (1920)
  • More Books on the Table (1923)

Biography edit

Other edit

  • The Secret of Narcisse. A Romance (1892)
  • Two Visits to Denmark, 1872, 1874 (1911)
  • Inter Arma (1916)
  • Some Diversions of a Man of Letters (1919)

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Sir Edmund Gosse". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  2. ^ D. Wertheimer, "A Son and His Father: Edmund Gosse's Comments and Portraits, 1875–1910", Nineteenth-Century Prose 48 (Spring/Fall 2021), 45–92.
  3. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLee, Sidney, ed. (1912). "Brightwen, Eliza". Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 255–256.
  4. ^ Brennan, Michael G., Evelyn Waugh: Fictions, Faith and Family, Bloomsbury, 2013, p. xvi.
  5. ^ Betjeman, John (2007). Trains and Buttered Toast. John Murray. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-7195-6127-6.
  6. ^ a b Thwaite, Ann (1984). Edmund Gosse: A Literary Landscape. London, Secker & Warburg.
  7. ^ Addison, Henry Robert; Oakes, Charles Henry; Lawson, William John; Sladen, Douglas Brooke Wheelton (1907). "Gosse, Edmund". Who's Who. 59: 706.
  8. ^ "Gosse, Edmund William (GS886EW)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  9. ^ Arthur Griffith with James Joyce and W.B. Yeats - Liberating Ireland Anthony J. Jordan, Westport books 2013, p, 106.ISBN 978-0957622906
  10. ^ Thwaite, Ann (2002). Glimpses of the Wonderful: The Life of Philip Henry Gosse, 1810–1888. London: Faber & Faber. pp. xvi–xvii.
  11. ^ Gosse, Edmund (1908). The Autumn Garden. London: William Heinemann. p. 113.
  12. ^ Thomas, Gillian (1992). A Position to Command Respect: Women and the Eleventh Britannica. Scarecrow Press. p. 3.
  13. ^ R. B. Freeman and D. Wertheimer, Philip Henry Gosse: A Bibliography (Folkestone, Kent: Dawson, 1980), p. 130.
  14. ^ "Obituary: Philip Gosse". Br. Med. J. 2 (5154): 761–764. 1959. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.5154.761-c. S2CID 220163089.
  15. ^ "Capt. Philip Henry George Gosse, M.D., Doctor, Naturalist, Author". Australian Postal History & Social Philately.
  16. ^ Toward Stonewall: Homosexuality and Society in the Modern Western World. Nicholas C. Edsal, page 106
  17. ^ Essays on Gay Literature. Stuart Kellogg, page 87
  18. ^ Leeds University Library, The Gosse Collection; Retrieved 4 August 2013
  19. ^ "The New Year Honours. Three Peerages., Rewards For Public Service., Two O.M.'S". The Times. No. 43848. London. 1 January 1925. p 13; col G.
  20. ^ Barnes, Julian. (1984). Flaubert's Parrot. London: Picador. p. 38. ISBN 0-330-28976-4. OCLC 13426315.
  21. ^ Buckingham, James Silk; Sterling, John; Maurice, Frederick Denison; Stebbing, Henry; Dilke, Charles Wentworth; Hervey, Thomas Kibble; Dixon, William Hepworth; MacColl, Norman; Rendall, Vernon Horace; Murry, John Middleton (27 November 1897). "Review of A Short History of English Literature by Edmund Gosse and Victorian Literature by Clement Shorter". The Athenæum (3657): 742–743.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Benson, A.C. (1896). "The Poetry of Edmund Gosse." In: Essays. London: William Heinemann, pp. 292–309.

External links edit

  • Works by Edmund Gosse at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Edmund Gosse at Internet Archive
  • Works by Edmund Gosse at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Archival material at
  • Edmund Gosse Collection. General Collection. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
  • House of Lords Library by Benjamin Stone - Living Heritage UK Parliament
Government offices
Preceded by House of Lords Librarian
1904–1914
Succeeded by

edmund, gosse, edmund, william, gosse, september, 1849, 1928, english, poet, author, critic, strictly, brought, small, protestant, sect, plymouth, brethren, broke, away, sharply, from, that, faith, account, childhood, book, father, been, described, first, psyc. Sir Edmund William Gosse CB ɡ ɒ s 21 September 1849 16 May 1928 was an English poet author and critic He was strictly brought up in a small Protestant sect the Plymouth Brethren but broke away sharply from that faith His account of his childhood in the book Father and Son has been described as the first psychological biography Edmund Gosse by John Singer Sargent 1886 His friendship with the sculptor Hamo Thornycroft inspired a successful career as a historian of late Victorian sculpture His translations of Henrik Ibsen helped to promote that playwright in England and he encouraged the careers of Sarojini Naidu W B Yeats and James Joyce He also lectured in English literature at Cambridge University Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Honours 5 In popular culture 6 Works 6 1 Published verse 6 2 Critical works 6 3 Biography 6 4 Other 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life editGosse was the son of Philip Henry Gosse and Emily Bowes 1 His father was a naturalist and his mother an illustrator who published a number of books of poetry Both were deeply committed to a small Protestant sect the Plymouth Brethren citation needed His childhood was initially happy as they spent their summers in Devon where his father was developing the ideas that gave rise to the craze for the marine aquarium After his mother died of breast cancer when he was eight and they moved to Devon his life with his father became increasingly strained by his father s expectations that he should follow in his religious tradition Gosse was sent to a boarding school where he began to develop his own interests in literature In 1860 his father remarried the deeply religious Quaker spinster Eliza Brightwen 1813 1900 whose brother Thomas tried to encourage Edmund to become a banker He later gave an account of his childhood in the book Father and Son which has been described as the first psychological biography At the age of 18 and working in the British Museum in London he broke away from his father s influence in a dramatic coming of age Nearly a century after Gosse s death a study based on his published remarks and writings about his father concluded that in varying degrees they are riddled with error distortion contradictions unwarranted claims misrepresentation abuse of the written record and unfamiliarity with the subject 2 Eliza Gosse s brother George Brightwen was the husband of Eliza Brightwen nee Elder 1830 1906 a naturalist and author whose first book was published in 1890 3 After Eliza Brightwen s death Edmund Gosse arranged for 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 Gosse was second cousin of Annie Morgan also of strict Plymouth Brethren upbringing who married physician Alexander Waugh 1840 1906 and was mother of Arthur Waugh and grandmother to the writers Alec Waugh and Evelyn Waugh 4 Career edit nbsp Edmund Gosse in 1857 with father Philip Henry Gosse Gosse started his career as assistant librarian at the British Museum from 1867 alongside the songwriter Theo Marzials 5 a post which Charles Kingsley helped his father obtain for him An early book of poetry published with a friend John Arthur Blaikie gave him an introduction to the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood Trips to Denmark and Norway in 1872 74 where he visited Hans Christian Andersen and Frederik Paludan Muller led to publishing success with reviews of Henrik Ibsen and Bjornstjerne Bjornson in the Cornhill Magazine 6 He was soon reviewing Scandinavian literature in a variety of publications He became acquainted with Alfred Lord Tennyson and friends with Robert Browning Algernon Charles Swinburne Thomas Hardy and Henry James In the meantime he published his first solo 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 In 1875 Gosse became a translator at the Board of Trade a post which he held until 1904 and gave him time for his writing 7 and enabled him to marry and start a family 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 8 He made a successful American lecture tour in 1884 and was much in demand as a speaker and on committees as well as publishing a string of critical works as well as poetry and histories 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 In 1904 he became the librarian of the House of Lords Library where he exercised considerable influence till he retired in 1914 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 Henrik 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 George Bernard Shaw were perhaps the literary critics most responsible for popularising Ibsen s plays among English speaking audiences Gosse was instrumental in getting official financial support for two struggling Irish writers W B Yeats in 1910 and James Joyce in 1915 This enabled both writers to continue their chosen careers 9 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 Published anonymously in 1907 this followed a biography he had written of his father as naturalist when he was urged by George Moore among others to write more about his own past Historians caution though that notwithstanding its psychological insight and literary excellence Gosse s narrative is often at odds with the verifiable facts of his own and his parents lives 10 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 Andre Gide Another work of his is The Autumn Garden which was published in 1908 by the London publisher William Heinemann This book includes Proem Lyrics in the Mood of Reflection Sonnets Songs of Roses Commemorations and Inscriptions Verses of Occasion Paraphrases and a final Epilogue in the Autumn Garden It contains more than 50 individual pieces within it 11 He was the literary editor for the 1911 edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica 12 Personal life editGosse married Ellen Epps 23 March 1850 29 August 1929 a young painter in the Pre Raphaelite circle who was the daughter of George Napoleon Epps Though she was initially determined to pursue her art she succumbed to his determined courting and they married in August 1875 with a reception at the house of Lawrence Alma Tadema her brother in law and visiting Gosse s father and step mother who did not attend the registry office wedding at the end of their honeymoon in Devon and Cornwall She continued to paint and wrote stories and reviews for various publications In 1907 she inherited a sizeable fortune from her uncle James Epps the brother of John Epps and who had made his fortune in cocoa 6 They were married more than 53 years and they had three children Emily Teresa Tessa 1877 1951 13 Philip Henry George 1879 1959 who became a physician but is probably best known as the author of The Pirates Who s Who 1924 14 15 and Laura Sylvia 1881 1968 who became a well known painter Despite a reportedly happy marriage Gosse had consistent if deeply closeted homosexual desires Although initially reluctant to acknowledge these desires in 1890 Gosse did acknowledge to John Addington Symonds around the time the latter was working on A Problem in Modern Ethics that indeed he Gosse was attracted to men thus confirming suspicions Symonds had voiced earlier Either way I entirely deeply sympathize with you Years ago I wanted to write to you about all this Gosse wrote to Symonds and withdrew through cowardice I have had a very fortunate life but there has been this obstinate twist in it I have reached a quieter time some beginnings of that Sophoclean period when the wild beast dies He is not dead but tamer I understand him amp the trick of his claws 16 17 Honours editGosse was named a Companion of the Order of the Bath CB in 1912 18 He was knighted in 1925 19 In popular culture editHis book Father and Son partially inspired Oscar and Lucinda a novel by Peter Carey which won the 1988 Booker Prize and the 1989 Miles Franklin Award Father and Son was also the basis for Dennis Potter s television play Where Adam Stood Julian Barnes has an academic called Ed Winterton devoted to writing a biography of Gosse in his 1984 novel Flaubert s Parrot 20 Works editPublished verse edit 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 The Autumn Garden 1908 Critical works edit English Odes 1881 Seventeenth Century Studies 1883 Life of Thomas Gray whose works he edited 4 vols 1884 Life of William Congreve 1888 A History of Eighteenth Century Literature 1889 Gossip in a Library essays about books 1892 Questions at issue 1893 The Jacobean Poets 1894 Critical Kit kats 1896 A Short History of Modern English Literature 1897 21 Life and Letters of Dr John Donne Dean of St Paul s 1899 Illustrated Record of English Literature with Richard Garnett vols iii and iv 1903 1904 Jeremy Taylor 1903 English Men of Letters Life of Sir Thomas Browne 1905 French Profiles 1905 Portraits and Studies 1912 Collected Essays 1912 Three French Moralists 1918 Malherbe and the Classical Reaction in the Seventeenth Century 1920 More Books on the Table 1923 Biography edit Gray 1882 The Life of Philip Henry Gosse F R S 1890 online text Father and Son 1907 The Life of Algernon Charles Swinburne 1917 online text Other edit The Secret of Narcisse A Romance 1892 Two Visits to Denmark 1872 1874 1911 Inter Arma 1916 Some Diversions of a Man of Letters 1919 References editCitations edit Sir Edmund Gosse Encyclopaedia Britannica D Wertheimer A Son and His Father Edmund Gosse s Comments and Portraits 1875 1910 Nineteenth Century Prose 48 Spring Fall 2021 45 92 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Lee Sidney ed 1912 Brightwen Eliza Dictionary of National Biography 2nd supplement London Smith Elder amp Co pp 255 256 Brennan Michael G Evelyn Waugh Fictions Faith and Family Bloomsbury 2013 p xvi Betjeman John 2007 Trains and Buttered Toast John Murray p 170 ISBN 978 0 7195 6127 6 a b Thwaite Ann 1984 Edmund Gosse A Literary Landscape London Secker amp Warburg Addison Henry Robert Oakes Charles Henry Lawson William John Sladen Douglas Brooke Wheelton 1907 Gosse Edmund Who s Who 59 706 Gosse Edmund William GS886EW A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Arthur Griffith with James Joyce and W B Yeats Liberating Ireland Anthony J Jordan Westport books 2013 p 106 ISBN 978 0957622906 Thwaite Ann 2002 Glimpses of the Wonderful The Life of Philip Henry Gosse 1810 1888 London Faber amp Faber pp xvi xvii Gosse Edmund 1908 The Autumn Garden London William Heinemann p 113 Thomas Gillian 1992 A Position to Command Respect Women and the Eleventh Britannica Scarecrow Press p 3 R B Freeman and D Wertheimer Philip Henry Gosse A Bibliography Folkestone Kent Dawson 1980 p 130 Obituary Philip Gosse Br Med J 2 5154 761 764 1959 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 5154 761 c S2CID 220163089 Capt Philip Henry George Gosse M D Doctor Naturalist Author Australian Postal History amp Social Philately Toward Stonewall Homosexuality and Society in the Modern Western World Nicholas C Edsal page 106 Essays on Gay Literature Stuart Kellogg page 87 Leeds University Library The Gosse Collection Retrieved 4 August 2013 The New Year Honours Three Peerages Rewards For Public Service Two O M S The Times No 43848 London 1 January 1925 p 13 col G Barnes Julian 1984 Flaubert s Parrot London Picador p 38 ISBN 0 330 28976 4 OCLC 13426315 Buckingham James Silk Sterling John Maurice Frederick Denison Stebbing Henry Dilke Charles Wentworth Hervey Thomas Kibble Dixon William Hepworth MacColl Norman Rendall Vernon Horace Murry John Middleton 27 November 1897 Review of A Short History of English Literature by Edmund Gosse and Victorian Literature by Clement Shorter The Athenaeum 3657 742 743 Sources edit Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Gosse Edmund Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 286 and its supplement Gosse Edmund Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed 1922 p 298 Further reading editBenson A C 1896 The Poetry of Edmund Gosse In Essays London William Heinemann pp 292 309 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Edmund Gosse nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edmund Gosse Library resources about Edmund Gosse Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Edmund Gosse Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Works by Edmund Gosse at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Edmund Gosse at Internet Archive Works by Edmund Gosse at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Archival material at Edmund Gosse Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library House of Lords Library by Benjamin Stone Living Heritage UK Parliament Government offices Preceded bySandford Arthur Strong House of Lords Librarian1904 1914 Succeeded byArthur Butler Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edmund Gosse amp oldid 1197062963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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