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Francis Marion Crawford

Francis Marion Crawford (August 2, 1854 – April 9, 1909)[1] was an American writer noted for his many novels, especially those set in Italy, and for his classic weird and fantastical stories.

Francis Marion Crawford
Born(1854-08-02)August 2, 1854
DiedApril 9, 1909(1909-04-09) (aged 54)
Villa Crawford, Sant'Agnello
EducationSt Paul's School
Alma materCambridge University
University of Heidelberg
University of Rome
Harvard University
OccupationWriter
Spouse
Elizabeth Berdan
(after 1884)
Children4
Parent(s)Thomas Crawford
Louisa Cutler Ward
RelativesMary Crawford Fraser (sister)
Julia Ward Howe (aunt)
Signature

Early life

Crawford was born in Bagni di Lucca, in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, on August 2, 1854. He was the only son of the American sculptor Thomas Crawford and Louisa Cutler Ward. His sister was the writer Mary Crawford Fraser (aka Mrs. Hugh Fraser), and he was the nephew of Julia Ward Howe, the American poet.[2] After his father's death in 1857, his mother remarried to Luther Terry, with whom she had Crawford's half-sister, Margaret Ward Terry, who later became the wife of Winthrop Astor Chanler.[3]

He studied successively at St Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire; Cambridge University; University of Heidelberg; and the University of Rome.[1]

In 1879, he went to India, where he studied Sanskrit and edited in Allahabad The Indian Herald. Returning to America in February 1881, he continued to study Sanskrit at Harvard University for a year and for two years contributed to various periodicals, mainly The Critic.[4] Early in 1882, he established his lifelong close friendship with Isabella Stewart Gardner.[5]

During this period he lived most of the time in Boston at his aunt Julia Ward Howe's house and in the company of his uncle, Sam Ward. His family was concerned about his financial prospects. His mother had hoped he could train in Boston for a career as an operatic baritone based on his private renditions of Schubert lieder. In January 1882, George Henschel, conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, assess his prospects and determined Crawford would "never be able to sing in perfect tune". His uncle Sam Ward suggested he try writing about his years in India and helped him develop contacts with New York publishers.[6]

Career

 
Francis Marion Crawford, ca. 1904

In December 1882, he produced his first novel, Mr Isaacs, a sketch of modern Anglo-Indian life mingled with a touch of Oriental mystery. It had an immediate success, and Dr Claudius (1883) followed promptly. In May 1883, he returned to Italy, where he made his permanent home.[4] He lived at the historic Hotel Cocumella in Sorrento during 1885 and settled permanently in Sant'Agnello, where in the fall he bought the Villa Renzi that became Villa Crawford. More than half his novels are set in Italy. He wrote three long historical studies of Italy and was well advanced with a history of Rome in the Middle Ages when he died. This may explain why Marion Crawford's books stand apart from any distinctively American current in literature.[7]

Year by year Crawford published a number of successful novels. However his 1896 novel Adam Johnstone's Son was thought by the late nineteenth century English novelist George Gissing to be "rubbish".[8] Late in the 1890s, Crawford began to write his historical works. These are: Ave Roma Immortalis (1898), Rulers of the South (1900) renamed Southern Italy and Sicily and The Rulers of the South in 1905 for the American market, and Gleanings from Venetian History (1905) with the American title Salvae Venetia, reissued in 1909 as Venice; the Place and the People. In these, his intimate knowledge of local Italian history combines with the romanticist's imaginative faculty to excellent effect.[4] His shorter book Constantinople (1895) belongs to this category.

After most of his fictional works had been published, most came to think he was a gifted narrator; and his books of fiction, full of historic vitality and dramatic characterization, became widely popular among readers to whom the realism of problems or the eccentricities of subjective analysis were repellent.[4] In The Novel: What It Is (1893), he defended his literary approach, self-conceived as a combination of romanticism and realism, defining the art form in terms of its marketplace and audience. The novel, he wrote, is "a marketable commodity" and "intellectual artistic luxury" (8, 9) that "must amuse, indeed, but should amuse reasonably, from an intellectual point of view. . . . Its intention is to amuse and please, and certainly not to teach and preach; but in order to amuse well it must be a finely-balanced creation. . . ." (82).

The Saracinesca series is perhaps known to be his best work, with the third in the series, Don Orsino (1892) set against the background of a real estate bubble, told with effective concision. The second volume is Sant' Ilario [Hilary] (1889). A fourth book in the series, Corleone (1897), was the first major treatment of the Mafia in literature, and used the now-familiar but then-original device of a priest unable to testify to a crime because of the Seal of the Confessional; the novel is not one of his major works, having failed to live up to the standard set by the books earlier in the series. Crawford ended Rulers of the South (1900) with a chapter about the Sicilian Mafia.

Crawford himself was fondest of Khaled: A Tale of Arabia (1891), a story of a genie (genius is Crawford's word) who becomes human, which was reprinted (1971) in the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series of the early 1970s. A Cigarette-Maker's Romance (1890) was dramatized, and had considerable popularity on the stage as well as in its novel form; and in 1902 an original play from his pen, Francesca da Rimini, was produced in Paris by his friend Sarah Bernhardt. Crawford's best known dramatization was that of The White Sister (1909). Its main actress was Viola Allen, whose first film was the 1915 film of this novel; it was filmed again in 1923 and 1933. In the Palace of the King (1900) was filmed in 1915 and 1923; Mr. Isaacs (1882) was filmed in 1931 as Son of India.

Several of his short stories, such as "The Upper Berth" (1886; written in 1885), "For the Blood Is the Life" (1905, a vampiress tale), "The Dead Smile" (1899), and "The Screaming Skull" (1908), are often-anthologized classics of the horror genre. An essay on Crawford's weird tales can be found in S. T. Joshi's The Evolution of the Weird Tale (2004); there are many other essays and introductions. The collected weird stories were posthumously published in 1911 as Wandering Ghosts in the U.S. and as Uncanny Tales in the UK, both without the long-forgotten "The King's Messenger" (1907). The present definitive edition is that edited by Richard Dalby as Uncanny Tales and published by the Tartarus Press (1997; 2008). Crawford's novella Man Overboard! (1903) is often overlooked, but belongs with his supernatural works.

In 1901, the American Macmillan firm began a deluxe uniform edition of his novels, as reprintings required. In 1904 the P. F. Collier Co. (N. Y.) was authorized to publish a 25-volume edition, later increased to 32 volumes. Around 1914 the subscription firm McKinlay, Stone, Mackenzie was authorized to publish an edition using the Macmillan binding decorations. In 1919 the American Macmillan firm published the "Sorrento Edition". They also had issued some first American editions and reprints in a uniform binding from 1891 through 1899. The British Macmillan firm used two separate uniform bindings from 1889 until after 1910.

Crawford wrote numerous articles for major periodicals and a few contributions to books. See the section "Bibliographical History" in An F. Marion Crawford Companion (1981) by John C. Moran.

Personal life

In 1880, Crawford converted to Roman Catholicism.[9] In October 1884 he married Elizabeth Berdan, the daughter of the American Civil War Union General Hiram Berdan.[7] They had two sons and two daughters, Eleanor, Harold, Clara and Bertram.[10]

Crawford died at Sorrento on Good Friday 1909 at Villa Crawford of a heart attack.[11][12][1] It was the result of a severe lung injury ten years previous, caused by inhalation of toxic gases at a glass-smelting works in Colorado, which happened during his American lecture tour in the winter of 1897–1898. He was gathering technical information for his historical novel Marietta (1901), that describes glass-making in late medieval Venice. After his death, his widow sued for breach of contract related to the production of Crawford's novels into a film.[13]

Legacy and influence

In his 1929 article "Some Remarks on Ghost Stories" M. R. James praised Crawford's supernatural fiction. James stated that "Marion Crawford and his horrid story of 'The Upper Berth', which (with 'The Screaming Skull' some distance behind) is the best in his collection of Uncanny Tales, and stands high among ghost stories in general."[14] H. Russell Wakefield, in an essay on ghost stories, called Crawford's "The Upper Berth" "the very best one" of such stories.[15] Norman Douglas credits Crawford's financial success as instrumental in encouraging himself to write (though he remained critical of Crawford's habit of inserting first-person editorial comments into his fiction).[16]

The F. Marion Crawford Memorial Society was founded in 1975 and published the literary review The Romantist from 1977 until 1997. In 1997 the Centro Studi e Ricerche Francis Marion Crawford was founded at Sant'Agnello di Sorrento. It is formally associated with the FMC Memorial Society and continues The Romantist in its annual review Genius Loci (1997–).

In early May 1988 at Sant'Agnello, a Conference was held to commemorate Crawford. It was organized by the Comune di Sant' Agnello di Sorrento and the Istituto Universitario Orientale (Naples). Its "Acta" were published in English and Italian as Il Magnifico Crawford. Scrittore per Mestiere / The Magnificent Crawford. Writer by Trade (1990), edited by Gordon Poole. In mid-May 2009 the Centro Studi e Ricerche Francis Marion Crawford and the Comune di Sant' Agnello organized another Conference – Francis Marion Crawford; 100 Anni Dopo – to remember Crawford on the centenary of his death. Its "Acta" were published in Italian and English as Nuova Luce Su Francis Marion Crawford. Cento Anni Dopo 2009-1909 / A Hundred Years Later: New Light on Francis Marion Crawford early in 2011, edited by Gordon Poole. The F. Marion Crawford Memorial Society collaborated in the organization of both Conferences.

There is a major street in the Italian town of Sant'Agnello di Sorrento (the town where he died) named after him, the Corso Marion Crawford. There is a historical marker on the house where Crawford was born, in Bagni di Lucca. Villa Crawford was donated many years ago by Crawford's daughters Lady Eleanor Rocca-Crawford and Mother Clare Marion-Crawford to the Salesian Sisters, who operate it today as a high school for girls.[17]

In San Nicola Arcella, in the province of Cosenza, the Saracen tower where Francis Marion Crawford stayed in the summer is remembered as Torre Crawford. In 2020, the writer Andrea Carlo Cappi with Matteo Fazzolari and Cosimo Gentile, created the literary prize for short story "Torre Crawford", whose annual theme is taken from a short story by Francis Marion Crawford (the theme of the first edition was "For the blood is the life ").[18]

Bibliography

Novels

  • Mr. Isaacs: A Tale of Modern India (1882)
  • Dr. Claudius (1883)
  • To Leeward (1884), actually late 1883. The second American edition (Macmillan, 1893) is the only novel that Crawford substantively revised.
  • A Roman Singer (1884); Bernhard Tauchnitz, Leipzig, Vol. 2254 of the Collection of British Authors. All of Crawford's novels, except for Love in Idleness (1893), were authorized by him for inclusion in his friend Baron Tauchnitz's series Collection of British Authors, whose name was later changed to Collection of British and American Authors. The Tauchnitz editions do not take bibliographical precedence over the British and United States editions. See the Crawford section of the Bibliography of American Literature.
  • An American Politician (1884); U.S. title-page has 1885.
  • Zoroaster (1885), historical novel about the Persian religious leader.[19]
  • A Tale of a Lonely Parish (1886)
  • Saracinesca (1887)
  • Marzio's Crucifix (1887)
  • Paul Patoff (1887)
  • With the Immortals (1888)
  • Greifenstein (1889)
  • Sant' Ilario (1889); sequel to Saracinesca
  • A Cigarette-Maker's Romance (1890)
  • Khaled: A Tale of Arabia (1891)
  • The Witch of Prague (1891)
  • The Three Fates (1892)
  • Don Orsino (1892); sequel to Sant' Ilario
  • The Children of the King (1893)
  • Pietro Ghisleri (1893)
  • Marion Darche (1893)
  • Katharine Lauderdale (1894) (partly written while Crawford was staying at the Sinclair House)
  • The Upper Berth (1894); with "By the Waters of Paradise"
  • Love in Idleness (1894)
  • The Ralstons (1894); sequel to Katharine Lauderdale
  • Casa Braccio (1895); related to Katharine Lauderdale and The Ralstons.
  • Adam Johnstone's Son (1896)
  • Taquisara (1896)
  • A Rose of Yesterday (1897)
  • Corleone (1897)
  • Via Crucis (1899) historical novel about the Second Crusade.[19]
  • In the Palace of the King (1900) historical novel about Philip II of Spain.[19]
  • Marietta (1901) historical novel set in Venice in 1470.[19]
  • Cecilia (1902)
  • Man Overboard! (1903) [novella]
  • The Heart of Rome (1903)
  • Whosoever Shall Offend (1904)
  • Soprano (1905); U.S. title Fair Margaret.
  • A Lady of Rome (1906)
  • Arethusa (1907)
  • The Little City of Hope (1907)
  • The Primadonna (1908); sequel to Soprano / Fair Margaret
  • The Diva's Ruby (1908); sequel to The Primadonna
  • The White Sister (1909)
  • Stradella (1909)
  • The Undesirable Governess (1910)

Short stories

  • Wandering Ghosts; British title: Uncanny Tales (1911)

Nonfiction

  • Our Silver (1881) [pamphlet]
  • The Novel: What It Is (1893)
  • Constantinople (1895)
  • Bar Harbor (1896)
  • Ave Roma Immortalis (1898)
  • Rulers of the South (1900; 1905 in the U.S. as Southern Italy and Sicily and The Rulers of the South)
  • Gleanings from Venetian History (1905; in the U.S. as Salvae Venetia and in 1909 as Venice; the People and the Place)

Drama

  • In the Palace of the King (1900); with Lorrimer Stoddard.
  • Francesca da Rimini (1902). Written at the request of Crawford's good friend Sarah Bernhardt. Translated by Marcel Schwob (Paris: Charpentier et Fasquelle, 1902); new edition traduction de l'américain en français par Marcel Schwob, Sulliver, 1996. The English text was not published until 1980, with introductory matter, by The F. Marion Crawford Memorial Society. Ten unpublished copies of the English text were set up and printed for The Macmillan Company (New York City) in 1902 to copyright the text. The piece was adapted into an opera by Franco Leoni in 1904.
  • Evelyn Hastings (1902). Unpublished typescript discovered in 2008.
  • The White Sister (1909); with Walter C. Hackett.

Filmography

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c "MARION CRAWFORD, NOVELIST, IS DEAD End of American Writer's Active Career Came in Italy, Where He Was Born. THE ITALIANS MOURN HIM Shops In Sorrento Closed — Mayor of Rome Sends Message — City Guards Watch by Bier. MARION CRAWFORD, NOVELIST, IS DEAD" (PDF). The New York Times. April 10, 1909. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  2. ^ "F. MARION CRAWFORD" (PDF). The New York Times. December 19, 1897. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  3. ^ "MRS. W.A. CHANLER, AUTHOR, MUSICIAN; Niece of Julia Ward Howe and the Half-Sister of F. Marion Crawford Dies at 91" (PDF). The New York Times. December 20, 1952. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911.
  5. ^ "F. Marion Crawford's Career in the Grand Manner; MY COUSIN, F. MARION CRAWFORD. By Maud Howe Elliott. Illustrated. 312 pp. New York: The Macmillan Company. $2.50. Crawford" (PDF). The New York Times. October 7, 1934. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  6. ^ Henschel, George (1919). Musings and memories of a musician. The Macmillan Company. pp. 256–258. Retrieved February 5, 2010.
  7. ^ a b Carter, Marina (2012). Naples, Sorrento and the Amalfi Coast. Hunter Publishing, Inc. p. 222. ISBN 9781588436016. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  8. ^ Coustillas, Pierre ed. London and the Life of Literature in Late Victorian England: the Diary of George Gissing, Novelist. Brighton: Harvester Press, 1978, p.423.
  9. ^ "After converting to Catholicism in 1880, at the age of twenty—six, Crawford wrote dozens of books in which Catholic religion is prominent but not evangelically presented, frequently using his native Italy as the setting for his stories." James Emmett Ryan, Faithful Passages: American Catholicism in Literary Culture, 1844–1931. University of Wisconsin Press, 2013 ISBN 9780299290634 (p.166).
  10. ^ Crawford, Villa. "The Heirs". www.villacrawford.it. Villa Crawford. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  11. ^ "F. MARION CRAWFORD VERY ILL. Brother-in-Law Says He Has Only a Fighting Chance" (PDF). The New York Times. April 1, 1909. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  12. ^ "F. MARION CRAWFORD BETTER. Attending Physician Hopes the Crisis Has Passed" (PDF). The New York Times. April 2, 1909. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  13. ^ "NOVELIST'S WIDOW SUES Mrs. F. Marion Crawford Alleges Breach of Contract to Film Novels" (PDF). The New York Times. July 12, 1921. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  14. ^ James, M. R. "Some Remarks on Ghost Stories", in The Bookman, December 1929. Reprinted in James, Collected Ghost Stories, edited by Darryl Jones. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2011. p. 415. ISBN 9780199568840
  15. ^ H. Russell Wakefield, "Why I Write Ghost Stories", in Stories From The Clock Strikes Twelve, New York : Ballantine Books, 1961. (p. 7)
  16. ^ Norman Douglas, Looking Back (Chatto and Windus, 1934) p. 496-8
  17. ^ "Collection: F. Marion Crawford papers | HOLLIS for Archival Discovery". hollisarchives.lib.harvard.edu. Harvard Library. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  18. ^ "Home – Premio Torre Crawford". Retrieved August 17, 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d Nield, Jonathan (1925). A Guide to the Best Historical Novels and Tales. G. P. Putnam's sons. (pp.34,44, 51,241.)

References

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Crawford, Francis Marion". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 386.
  • John Pilkington, Jr. (1964): Francis Marion Crawford, Twayne Publishers Inc. (Library of Congress Catalog Number: 64-20717)
  • Maud Howe Elliott (1934): My Cousin, F. Marion Crawford, The Macmillan Company
  • John C. Moran (1981): An F. Marion Crawford Companion, Greenwood Press (LC Catalog Num.: 80-1707)
  • Bleiler, Everett (1948). The Checklist of Fantastic Literature. Chicago: Shasta Publishers. p. 88.
  • Alessandra Contenti (1992) : Esercizi di Nostalgia. La Roma Sparita di F. Marion Crawford, Archivo Guido Izzi
  • Crawford has been the subject of a voluminous amount of biographical and critical writings beginning in 1883: articles in periodicals, sections of books, introductions, theses and dissertations (mainly in the U.S. and Italy), etc.
  • Crawford's works form a section of the Bibliography of American Literature.

Further reading

  • "F. Marion Crawford" by Chris Morgan, in E. F. Bleiler, ed. Supernatural Fiction Writers. New York: Scribner's, 1985, pp. 747–752.
  • "The Wandering Ghosts of F. Marion Crawford" by Douglas Robillard, in Robillard (ed.), American Supernatural Fiction: From Edith Wharton to the Weird Tales Writers. New York: Garland, 1996. pp. 43–58.
  • "F. Marion Crawford and The Witch of Prague: A Prague Novel?" by Cyril Simsa, Foundation No. 73, pp. 17–46. Summer 1998.
  • "F. Marion Crawford: Blood-and-Thunder Horror" in S.T. Joshi, The Evolution of the Weird Tale. NY: Hippocampus Press, 2004, pp. 26–38.
  • "I Was to Have a Companion": Rereading F. Marion Crawford's "The Upper Berth" as Victorian Double Tale" by Terry W. Thompson. The New York Review of Science Fiction 25(10): 19–22. June 2013. (No. 298)

External links

francis, marion, crawford, august, 1854, april, 1909, american, writer, noted, many, novels, especially, those, italy, classic, weird, fantastical, stories, born, 1854, august, 1854bagni, lucca, grand, duchy, tuscanydiedapril, 1909, 1909, aged, villa, crawford. Francis Marion Crawford August 2 1854 April 9 1909 1 was an American writer noted for his many novels especially those set in Italy and for his classic weird and fantastical stories Francis Marion CrawfordBorn 1854 08 02 August 2 1854Bagni di Lucca Grand Duchy of TuscanyDiedApril 9 1909 1909 04 09 aged 54 Villa Crawford Sant AgnelloEducationSt Paul s SchoolAlma materCambridge UniversityUniversity of HeidelbergUniversity of RomeHarvard UniversityOccupationWriterSpouseElizabeth Berdan after 1884 wbr Children4Parent s Thomas CrawfordLouisa Cutler WardRelativesMary Crawford Fraser sister Julia Ward Howe aunt Signature Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 3 1 Legacy and influence 4 Bibliography 4 1 Novels 4 2 Short stories 4 3 Nonfiction 4 4 Drama 5 Filmography 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life EditCrawford was born in Bagni di Lucca in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany on August 2 1854 He was the only son of the American sculptor Thomas Crawford and Louisa Cutler Ward His sister was the writer Mary Crawford Fraser aka Mrs Hugh Fraser and he was the nephew of Julia Ward Howe the American poet 2 After his father s death in 1857 his mother remarried to Luther Terry with whom she had Crawford s half sister Margaret Ward Terry who later became the wife of Winthrop Astor Chanler 3 He studied successively at St Paul s School Concord New Hampshire Cambridge University University of Heidelberg and the University of Rome 1 In 1879 he went to India where he studied Sanskrit and edited in Allahabad The Indian Herald Returning to America in February 1881 he continued to study Sanskrit at Harvard University for a year and for two years contributed to various periodicals mainly The Critic 4 Early in 1882 he established his lifelong close friendship with Isabella Stewart Gardner 5 During this period he lived most of the time in Boston at his aunt Julia Ward Howe s house and in the company of his uncle Sam Ward His family was concerned about his financial prospects His mother had hoped he could train in Boston for a career as an operatic baritone based on his private renditions of Schubert lieder In January 1882 George Henschel conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra assess his prospects and determined Crawford would never be able to sing in perfect tune His uncle Sam Ward suggested he try writing about his years in India and helped him develop contacts with New York publishers 6 Career Edit Francis Marion Crawford ca 1904 In December 1882 he produced his first novel Mr Isaacs a sketch of modern Anglo Indian life mingled with a touch of Oriental mystery It had an immediate success and Dr Claudius 1883 followed promptly In May 1883 he returned to Italy where he made his permanent home 4 He lived at the historic Hotel Cocumella in Sorrento during 1885 and settled permanently in Sant Agnello where in the fall he bought the Villa Renzi that became Villa Crawford More than half his novels are set in Italy He wrote three long historical studies of Italy and was well advanced with a history of Rome in the Middle Ages when he died This may explain why Marion Crawford s books stand apart from any distinctively American current in literature 7 Year by year Crawford published a number of successful novels However his 1896 novel Adam Johnstone s Son was thought by the late nineteenth century English novelist George Gissing to be rubbish 8 Late in the 1890s Crawford began to write his historical works These are Ave Roma Immortalis 1898 Rulers of the South 1900 renamed Southern Italy and Sicily and The Rulers of the South in 1905 for the American market and Gleanings from Venetian History 1905 with the American title Salvae Venetia reissued in 1909 as Venice the Place and the People In these his intimate knowledge of local Italian history combines with the romanticist s imaginative faculty to excellent effect 4 His shorter book Constantinople 1895 belongs to this category After most of his fictional works had been published most came to think he was a gifted narrator and his books of fiction full of historic vitality and dramatic characterization became widely popular among readers to whom the realism of problems or the eccentricities of subjective analysis were repellent 4 In The Novel What It Is 1893 he defended his literary approach self conceived as a combination of romanticism and realism defining the art form in terms of its marketplace and audience The novel he wrote is a marketable commodity and intellectual artistic luxury 8 9 that must amuse indeed but should amuse reasonably from an intellectual point of view Its intention is to amuse and please and certainly not to teach and preach but in order to amuse well it must be a finely balanced creation 82 The Saracinesca series is perhaps known to be his best work with the third in the series Don Orsino 1892 set against the background of a real estate bubble told with effective concision The second volume is Sant Ilario Hilary 1889 A fourth book in the series Corleone 1897 was the first major treatment of the Mafia in literature and used the now familiar but then original device of a priest unable to testify to a crime because of the Seal of the Confessional the novel is not one of his major works having failed to live up to the standard set by the books earlier in the series Crawford ended Rulers of the South 1900 with a chapter about the Sicilian Mafia Crawford himself was fondest of Khaled A Tale of Arabia 1891 a story of a genie genius is Crawford s word who becomes human which was reprinted 1971 in the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series of the early 1970s A Cigarette Maker s Romance 1890 was dramatized and had considerable popularity on the stage as well as in its novel form and in 1902 an original play from his pen Francesca da Rimini was produced in Paris by his friend Sarah Bernhardt Crawford s best known dramatization was that of The White Sister 1909 Its main actress was Viola Allen whose first film was the 1915 film of this novel it was filmed again in 1923 and 1933 In the Palace of the King 1900 was filmed in 1915 and 1923 Mr Isaacs 1882 was filmed in 1931 as Son of India Several of his short stories such as The Upper Berth 1886 written in 1885 For the Blood Is the Life 1905 a vampiress tale The Dead Smile 1899 and The Screaming Skull 1908 are often anthologized classics of the horror genre An essay on Crawford s weird tales can be found in S T Joshi s The Evolution of the Weird Tale 2004 there are many other essays and introductions The collected weird stories were posthumously published in 1911 as Wandering Ghosts in the U S and as Uncanny Tales in the UK both without the long forgotten The King s Messenger 1907 The present definitive edition is that edited by Richard Dalby as Uncanny Tales and published by the Tartarus Press 1997 2008 Crawford s novella Man Overboard 1903 is often overlooked but belongs with his supernatural works In 1901 the American Macmillan firm began a deluxe uniform edition of his novels as reprintings required In 1904 the P F Collier Co N Y was authorized to publish a 25 volume edition later increased to 32 volumes Around 1914 the subscription firm McKinlay Stone Mackenzie was authorized to publish an edition using the Macmillan binding decorations In 1919 the American Macmillan firm published the Sorrento Edition They also had issued some first American editions and reprints in a uniform binding from 1891 through 1899 The British Macmillan firm used two separate uniform bindings from 1889 until after 1910 Crawford wrote numerous articles for major periodicals and a few contributions to books See the section Bibliographical History in An F Marion Crawford Companion 1981 by John C Moran Personal life EditIn 1880 Crawford converted to Roman Catholicism 9 In October 1884 he married Elizabeth Berdan the daughter of the American Civil War Union General Hiram Berdan 7 They had two sons and two daughters Eleanor Harold Clara and Bertram 10 Crawford died at Sorrento on Good Friday 1909 at Villa Crawford of a heart attack 11 12 1 It was the result of a severe lung injury ten years previous caused by inhalation of toxic gases at a glass smelting works in Colorado which happened during his American lecture tour in the winter of 1897 1898 He was gathering technical information for his historical novel Marietta 1901 that describes glass making in late medieval Venice After his death his widow sued for breach of contract related to the production of Crawford s novels into a film 13 Legacy and influence Edit In his 1929 article Some Remarks on Ghost Stories M R James praised Crawford s supernatural fiction James stated that Marion Crawford and his horrid story of The Upper Berth which with The Screaming Skull some distance behind is the best in his collection of Uncanny Tales and stands high among ghost stories in general 14 H Russell Wakefield in an essay on ghost stories called Crawford s The Upper Berth the very best one of such stories 15 Norman Douglas credits Crawford s financial success as instrumental in encouraging himself to write though he remained critical of Crawford s habit of inserting first person editorial comments into his fiction 16 The F Marion Crawford Memorial Society was founded in 1975 and published the literary review The Romantist from 1977 until 1997 In 1997 the Centro Studi e Ricerche Francis Marion Crawford was founded at Sant Agnello di Sorrento It is formally associated with the FMC Memorial Society and continues The Romantist in its annual review Genius Loci 1997 In early May 1988 at Sant Agnello a Conference was held to commemorate Crawford It was organized by the Comune di Sant Agnello di Sorrento and the Istituto Universitario Orientale Naples Its Acta were published in English and Italian as Il Magnifico Crawford Scrittore per Mestiere The Magnificent Crawford Writer by Trade 1990 edited by Gordon Poole In mid May 2009 the Centro Studi e Ricerche Francis Marion Crawford and the Comune di Sant Agnello organized another Conference Francis Marion Crawford 100 Anni Dopo to remember Crawford on the centenary of his death Its Acta were published in Italian and English as Nuova Luce Su Francis Marion Crawford Cento Anni Dopo 2009 1909 A Hundred Years Later New Light on Francis Marion Crawford early in 2011 edited by Gordon Poole The F Marion Crawford Memorial Society collaborated in the organization of both Conferences There is a major street in the Italian town of Sant Agnello di Sorrento the town where he died named after him the Corso Marion Crawford There is a historical marker on the house where Crawford was born in Bagni di Lucca Villa Crawford was donated many years ago by Crawford s daughters Lady Eleanor Rocca Crawford and Mother Clare Marion Crawford to the Salesian Sisters who operate it today as a high school for girls 17 In San Nicola Arcella in the province of Cosenza the Saracen tower where Francis Marion Crawford stayed in the summer is remembered as Torre Crawford In 2020 the writer Andrea Carlo Cappi with Matteo Fazzolari and Cosimo Gentile created the literary prize for short story Torre Crawford whose annual theme is taken from a short story by Francis Marion Crawford the theme of the first edition was For the blood is the life 18 Bibliography EditNovels Edit Mr Isaacs A Tale of Modern India 1882 Dr Claudius 1883 To Leeward 1884 actually late 1883 The second American edition Macmillan 1893 is the only novel that Crawford substantively revised A Roman Singer 1884 Bernhard Tauchnitz Leipzig Vol 2254 of the Collection of British Authors All of Crawford s novels except for Love in Idleness 1893 were authorized by him for inclusion in his friend Baron Tauchnitz s series Collection of British Authors whose name was later changed to Collection of British and American Authors The Tauchnitz editions do not take bibliographical precedence over the British and United States editions See the Crawford section of the Bibliography of American Literature An American Politician 1884 U S title page has 1885 Zoroaster 1885 historical novel about the Persian religious leader 19 A Tale of a Lonely Parish 1886 Saracinesca 1887 Marzio s Crucifix 1887 Paul Patoff 1887 With the Immortals 1888 Greifenstein 1889 Sant Ilario 1889 sequel to Saracinesca A Cigarette Maker s Romance 1890 Khaled A Tale of Arabia 1891 The Witch of Prague 1891 The Three Fates 1892 Don Orsino 1892 sequel to Sant Ilario The Children of the King 1893 Pietro Ghisleri 1893 Marion Darche 1893 Katharine Lauderdale 1894 partly written while Crawford was staying at the Sinclair House The Upper Berth 1894 with By the Waters of Paradise Love in Idleness 1894 The Ralstons 1894 sequel to Katharine Lauderdale Casa Braccio 1895 related to Katharine Lauderdale and The Ralstons Adam Johnstone s Son 1896 Taquisara 1896 A Rose of Yesterday 1897 Corleone 1897 Via Crucis 1899 historical novel about the Second Crusade 19 In the Palace of the King 1900 historical novel about Philip II of Spain 19 Marietta 1901 historical novel set in Venice in 1470 19 Cecilia 1902 Man Overboard 1903 novella The Heart of Rome 1903 Whosoever Shall Offend 1904 Soprano 1905 U S title Fair Margaret A Lady of Rome 1906 Arethusa 1907 The Little City of Hope 1907 The Primadonna 1908 sequel to Soprano Fair Margaret The Diva s Ruby 1908 sequel to The Primadonna The White Sister 1909 Stradella 1909 The Undesirable Governess 1910 Short stories Edit Wandering Ghosts British title Uncanny Tales 1911 Nonfiction Edit Our Silver 1881 pamphlet The Novel What It Is 1893 Constantinople 1895 Bar Harbor 1896 Ave Roma Immortalis 1898 Rulers of the South 1900 1905 in the U S as Southern Italy and Sicily and The Rulers of the South Gleanings from Venetian History 1905 in the U S as Salvae Venetia and in 1909 as Venice the People and the Place Drama Edit In the Palace of the King 1900 with Lorrimer Stoddard Francesca da Rimini 1902 Written at the request of Crawford s good friend Sarah Bernhardt Translated by Marcel Schwob Paris Charpentier et Fasquelle 1902 new edition traduction de l americain en francais par Marcel Schwob Sulliver 1996 The English text was not published until 1980 with introductory matter by The F Marion Crawford Memorial Society Ten unpublished copies of the English text were set up and printed for The Macmillan Company New York City in 1902 to copyright the text The piece was adapted into an opera by Franco Leoni in 1904 Evelyn Hastings 1902 Unpublished typescript discovered in 2008 The White Sister 1909 with Walter C Hackett Filmography EditA Cigarette Maker s Romance directed by Frank Wilson UK 1913 based on the novella A Cigarette Maker s Romance The White Sister directed by Fred E Wright 1915 based on the novel The White Sister In the Palace of the King it directed by Fred E Wright 1915 based on the novel In the Palace of the King Whosoever Shall Offend directed by Arrigo Bocchi UK 1919 based on the novel Whosoever Shall Offend Il cuore di Roma directed by Edoardo Bencivenga Italy 1919 based on the novel The Heart of Rome A Cigarette Maker s Romance directed by Tom Watts UK 1920 based on the novella A Cigarette Maker s Romance Saracinesca it directed by Gaston Ravel Italy 1921 based on the novel Saracinesca Sant Ilario it directed by Henry Kolker Italy 1923 based on the novel Sant Ilario The White Sister directed by Henry King 1923 based on the novel The White Sister In the Palace of the King directed by Emmett J Flynn 1923 based on the novel In the Palace of the King Son of India directed by Jacques Feyder 1931 based on the novel Mr Isaacs The White Sister directed by Victor Fleming 1933 based on the novel The White Sister The Screaming Skull directed by Alex Nicol 1958 named after the short story The Screaming Skull The White Sister directed by Tito Davison Mexico 1960 based on the novel The White Sister See also Edit Novels portalCrawford and Theosophy List of horror fiction authorsNotes Edit a b c MARION CRAWFORD NOVELIST IS DEAD End of American Writer s Active Career Came in Italy Where He Was Born THE ITALIANS MOURN HIM Shops In Sorrento Closed Mayor of Rome Sends Message City Guards Watch by Bier MARION CRAWFORD NOVELIST IS DEAD PDF The New York Times April 10 1909 Retrieved February 24 2019 F MARION CRAWFORD PDF The New York Times December 19 1897 Retrieved February 24 2019 MRS W A CHANLER AUTHOR MUSICIAN Niece of Julia Ward Howe and the Half Sister of F Marion Crawford Dies at 91 PDF The New York Times December 20 1952 Retrieved February 24 2019 a b c d Chisholm 1911 F Marion Crawford s Career in the Grand Manner MY COUSIN F MARION CRAWFORD By Maud Howe Elliott Illustrated 312 pp New York The Macmillan Company 2 50 Crawford PDF The New York Times October 7 1934 Retrieved February 24 2019 Henschel George 1919 Musings and memories of a musician The Macmillan Company pp 256 258 Retrieved February 5 2010 a b Carter Marina 2012 Naples Sorrento and the Amalfi Coast Hunter Publishing Inc p 222 ISBN 9781588436016 Retrieved February 24 2019 Coustillas Pierre ed London and the Life of Literature in Late Victorian England the Diary of George Gissing Novelist Brighton Harvester Press 1978 p 423 After converting to Catholicism in 1880 at the age of twenty six Crawford wrote dozens of books in which Catholic religion is prominent but not evangelically presented frequently using his native Italy as the setting for his stories James Emmett Ryan Faithful Passages American Catholicism in Literary Culture 1844 1931 University of Wisconsin Press 2013 ISBN 9780299290634 p 166 Crawford Villa The Heirs www villacrawford it Villa Crawford Retrieved February 24 2019 F MARION CRAWFORD VERY ILL Brother in Law Says He Has Only a Fighting Chance PDF The New York Times April 1 1909 Retrieved February 24 2019 F MARION CRAWFORD BETTER Attending Physician Hopes the Crisis Has Passed PDF The New York Times April 2 1909 Retrieved February 24 2019 NOVELIST S WIDOW SUES Mrs F Marion Crawford Alleges Breach of Contract to Film Novels PDF The New York Times July 12 1921 Retrieved February 24 2019 James M R Some Remarks on Ghost Stories in The Bookman December 1929 Reprinted in James Collected Ghost Stories edited by Darryl Jones Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 p 415 ISBN 9780199568840 H Russell Wakefield Why I Write Ghost Stories in Stories From The Clock Strikes Twelve New York Ballantine Books 1961 p 7 Norman Douglas Looking Back Chatto and Windus 1934 p 496 8 Collection F Marion Crawford papers HOLLIS for Archival Discovery hollisarchives lib harvard edu Harvard Library Retrieved February 24 2019 Home Premio Torre Crawford Retrieved August 17 2022 a b c d Nield Jonathan 1925 A Guide to the Best Historical Novels and Tales G P Putnam s sons pp 34 44 51 241 References Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Crawford Francis Marion Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 386 John Pilkington Jr 1964 Francis Marion Crawford Twayne Publishers Inc Library of Congress Catalog Number 64 20717 Maud Howe Elliott 1934 My Cousin F Marion Crawford The Macmillan Company John C Moran 1981 An F Marion Crawford Companion Greenwood Press LC Catalog Num 80 1707 Bleiler Everett 1948 The Checklist of Fantastic Literature Chicago Shasta Publishers p 88 Alessandra Contenti 1992 Esercizi di Nostalgia La Roma Sparita di F Marion Crawford Archivo Guido Izzi Crawford has been the subject of a voluminous amount of biographical and critical writings beginning in 1883 articles in periodicals sections of books introductions theses and dissertations mainly in the U S and Italy etc Crawford s works form a section of the Bibliography of American Literature Further reading Edit F Marion Crawford by Chris Morgan in E F Bleiler ed Supernatural Fiction Writers New York Scribner s 1985 pp 747 752 The Wandering Ghosts of F Marion Crawford by Douglas Robillard in Robillard ed American Supernatural Fiction From Edith Wharton to the Weird Tales Writers New York Garland 1996 pp 43 58 F Marion Crawford and The Witch of Prague A Prague Novel by Cyril Simsa Foundation No 73 pp 17 46 Summer 1998 F Marion Crawford Blood and Thunder Horror in S T Joshi The Evolution of the Weird Tale NY Hippocampus Press 2004 pp 26 38 I Was to Have a Companion Rereading F Marion Crawford s The Upper Berth as Victorian Double Tale by Terry W Thompson The New York Review of Science Fiction 25 10 19 22 June 2013 No 298 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Francis Marion Crawford Wikisource has original works by or about Francis Marion Crawford Wikimedia Commons has media related to Francis Marion Crawford Works by Francis Marion Crawford in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Francis Marion Crawford at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Francis Marion Crawford at Internet Archive Works by Francis Marion Crawford at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by Francis Marion Crawford at Open Library The Upper Berth Creative Commons Audio Book Howe Julia Ward 1900 Crawford Thomas Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography This article has information about Francis Marion Crawford toward its end F Marion Crawford Papers permanent dead link at Houghton Library Harvard University F Marion Crawford at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database F Marion Crawford at Library of Congress Authorities with 153 catalog records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis Marion Crawford amp oldid 1127645936, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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