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Horace Howard Furness

Horace Howard Furness (November 2, 1833 – August 13, 1912) was an American Shakespearean scholar of the 19th century.

Horace Howard Furness
BornNovember 2, 1833
DiedAugust 13, 1912(1912-08-13) (aged 78)
SpouseHelen Kate (Rogers) Furness
ChildrenWalter Rogers Furness
Horace Howard Furness Jr.
William Henry Furness III
Caroline Augusta (Furness) Jayne
Parent(s)William Henry Furness
Annis Pulling (Jenks) Furness
Signature

Life and career edit

Horace Furness was the son of the Unitarian minister and abolitionist William Henry Furness (1802–1896), and brother of the architect Frank Furness (1839–1912). He graduated from Harvard University in 1854, embarked on a journey to Europe with Atherton Blight, and then studied in Germany.[1] After returning to the United States, he was admitted to the Philadelphia Bar in 1858,[2] but his growing deafness interfered with the practice of law.[3]

In 1860, he joined the Shakspere [sic] Society of Philadelphia, an amateur study group that took its scholarship seriously. As he later wrote:

Every member had a copy of the Variorum of 1821, which we fondly believed had gathered under each play all Shakespearian lore worth preserving down to that date. What had been added since that year was scattered in many different editions, and in numberless volumes dispersed over the whole domain of literature. To gather these stray items of criticism was real toil, real but necessary if we did not wish our labour over the text to be in vain.[4]

As editor of the "New Variorum" editions of Shakespeare—also called the "Furness Variorum"—he collected in a single source 300 years of references, antecedent works, influences and commentaries.[5] He devoted more than forty years to the series, completing the annotation of sixteen plays.[6] His son, Horace Howard Furness, Jr. (1865–1930), joined as co-editor of the Variorum's later volumes, and continued the project after the father's death, annotating three additional plays and revising two others.[7]

Nowhere, perhaps, has more labor been devoted to the study of the works of the poet than that given by Mr. H. H. Furness, of Philadelphia, to the preparation of the new Variorum edition. — Sir Sidney Lee[8]

He was a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania, a long-serving trustee (1880–1904), and chairman of the building committee for its library. Designed by his brother Frank, Horace selected the Shakepearean quotes for the 1891 building's leaded glass windows.[9] He was the advisor for doctoral student Emily Jordan Folger who, with her husband Henry Clay Folger, would co-found the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC.[10]

An 1890 review in Blackwood's Magazine may indicate the esteem in which British critics held Furness's scholarship:

In what is called 'The Variorum Edition of Shakespeare,' America has the honor of having produced the very best and most complete edition, so far as it has gone, of our great national poet. For text, illustration (happily, not pictorial), commentary and criticism, it leaves nothing to be desired. The editor combines with the patience and accuracy of the textural scholar, an industry which has overlooked nothing of value that has been written about Shakespeare by the best German and French, as well as English commentators and critics; and what is of no less moment he possesses in himself a rare delicacy of literary appreciation and breadth of judgment, disciplined by familiarity with all that is best in the literature of antiquity as well as of modern times, which he brings to bear on his notes with great effect.[11]

New Variorum edit

 
Horace Howard Furness in his brick library at "Lindenshade," c. 1910[12]
 
"Dr. Furness's House, West Washington Square, just before it was torn down." (1914), Joseph Pennell.

Volumes edited by Horace Howard Furness edit

These volumes went through a number of reprints: the external links connect to the last online edition available.

  • Romeo and Juliet (published 1871)
  • Macbeth (1873)
  • Hamlet, vol. 1 (1877)
  • Hamlet, vol. 2 (1877)
  • King Lear (1880)
  • Othello (1886)
  • Merchant of Venice (1888)
  • As You Like It (1891, copyright 1890)
  • The Tempest (1892)
  • A Midsommer Nights Dreame (1895)
  • The Winter's Tale (1898)
  • Twelfth Night (1901)
  • Much Ado About Nothing (1904)
  • Love's Labors Lost (1904)
  • Anthony and Cleopatra (1907)
  • Richard III (1908)
  • Cymbeline (1913) (published posthumously)

Volumes edited by H. H. Furness, Jr. edit

  • Julius Caesar (Google books preview only) (1913)[13]
  • Macbeth (revised) (1903, 2nd ed. 1915)
  • Merchant of Venice (revised) (1916)
  • King John (1919)
  • Coriolanus (1928)

The Modern Language Association of America continues the "New Variorum" project with the goal of definitively annotating all 38 of Shakespeare's plays.[14]

Other works edit

  • F. R. (1903). Philadelphia: privately printed. (A memorial of brother-in-law Fairman Rogers, signed H. H. F.)
  • Jayne, Horace H. F., ed. (1922). The Letters of Horace Howard Furness. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Volume 1 · Volume 2
  • Haupt, Paul; Furness, H. H., eds. (1893–1904). The Sacred Books of the Old and New Testaments. A New English Translation. With Explanatory Notes and Pictorial Illustrations. Prepared by eminent Biblical scholars of Europe and of America. (Polychrome Bible). New York: Dodd, Mead & Co.
  • Wellhausen, Julius (1898). The Book of Psalms : a new English translation. Polychrome Bible, part 14. Translated by H. H. Furness (psalms); John Taylor (notes); J. A. Paterson (appendix). New York: Dodd, Mead & Co.
  • Records of a lifelong friendship, 1807-1882: Ralph Waldo Emerson and William Henry Furness (1910), edited by H. H. F. (Horace Howard Furness). Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin

Honors edit

Furness was elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society on April 16, 1880.[15] He was the recipient of honorary degrees from Harvard University, University of Halle, University of Pennsylvania, Columbia University, and University of Cambridge.[16] He was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1905.[17]

Personal edit

 
Helen Kate Furness, (c. 1880)

In 1860 Furness married Helen Kate Rogers (1837–1883), heir to an ironmaking fortune and sister of University of Pennsylvania instructor Fairman Rogers. She compiled a concordance to Shakespeare's poems, published in 1874.[18] They had four children:[19]

  • Walter Rogers Furness (1861–February 7, 1914), an architect, who in 1896 became a partner in the firm of his uncle, Frank Furness. He built Furness Cottage at the Jekyll Island Club, Georgia, where his family vacationed from 1889 to 1895. He was permanently blinded in one eye in 1898, after a ball hit him during a game of racquets. From then on his life became worse and worse, descending into raging alcoholism. His wife, Helen Key Bullitt, died at age 47 in January 1914, and he died a month later at age 53, following a heart attack.[20]
  • Horace Howard Furness Jr. (1865–1930), who continued his father's work on the New Variorum project. Author of a play, The Gloss of Youth : an imaginary episode in the lives of William Shakespeare and John Fletcher (1920).
  • William Henry Furness III, (1866-1920), an explorer and ethnologist. One of the University of Pennsylvania medical students depicted in Thomas Eakins's painting The Agnew Clinic (1889).[21] Undertook anthropological expeditions to the South Pacific with Hiram M. Hiller, Jr. and Alfred C. Harrison, Jr., and wrote books and articles about Borneo and Polynesia. Died unmarried.
  • Caroline Augusta Furness (1873-1909), also an ethnologist, she married University of Pennsylvania instructor Horace Jayne, and died from a heart attack at age 35 in 1909. Their children were Kate Furness Jayne and Horace H. F. Jayne, an art historian and museum director.

Horace and Kate Furness inherited her family's Philadelphia city house, at the SW corner of Locust Street & West Washington Square. Frank Furness altered the house in 1873, and designed the 1909 office building that replaced it.[22] He also designed their country house, "Lindenshade" (c. 1873, demolished 1940) and its many expansions, including the 1903 fireproof brick library.

Legacy edit

  • Horace Howard Furness High School in South Philadelphia is named for him.
  • Horace Jr. donated his father's Shakespearean collection to the University of Pennsylvania, whose Horace Howard Furness Memorial Library honors both father and son.[23]
  • William Henry Furness III donated the land for the Helen Kate Furness Free Library in Wallingford, Pennsylvania,[24] built in 1916 on the former grounds of his parents' country house, "Lindenshade."

References edit

  1. ^ Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Harvard Memorial Biographies, Volume 1, p. 311.
  2. ^ "A Catalogue of Members of the Pennsylvania Bar Association; admitted Between June 1, 1855-1861". Law Association of Philadelphia. 1861.
  3. ^ Lang, Harry (1995). Deaf Persons in the Arts and Sciences: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 136. ISBN 0313291705.
  4. ^ Horace Howard Furness, "How did you become a Shakespeare Student?" Shakespeariana, vol. 5 (October 1888), pp. 439-40.
  5. ^ Jean Jules Jusserand, "Horace Howard Furness," With Americans of Past and Present Days (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1916), pp. 322-323.
  6. ^ Jacob I. Kobrick, Furness-Bullitt Family Papers (Collection 1903), Historical Society of Pennsylvania, p. 2.(PDF)
  7. ^ John Woolf Jordan, A History of Delaware County, Pennsylvania, and Its People, Volume 2 (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1914), pp. 670-671.[1]
  8. ^ Sir Sidney Lee, A Life of William Shakespeare (London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1899), p. 285.[2]
  9. ^ Following a 6-year restoration, Frank Furness's University of Pennsylvania Library was rededicated in 1991, on the occasion of its centennial, as the Fisher Fine Arts Library.
  10. ^ Joseph Quincy Adams and Paul Cret, The Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington (Amherst College, 1933).
  11. ^ Quoted in "Horace Howard Furness," Dictionary of Literary Biography (Thomson Gale, 2005-06)
  12. ^ Historic American Buildings Survey PA.23-WALF.2A-5, Library of Congress.[3]
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2017. (Online version of the full text)
  14. ^ Shakespeare Variorum Handbook: A Manual of Editorial Practice.
  15. ^ "List of Members of the American Philosophical Society Elected Since the Publication of the Fourteenth Volume". Front Matter. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. American Philosophical Society. 15 (3): i–x. 1881. ISSN 0065-9746. JSTOR 1005422.
  16. ^ Horace Howard Furness from Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
  17. ^ Deceased Members 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine from American Academy of Arts and Letters.
  18. ^ "Mrs. Horace Howard Furness" (1874). A concordance to Shakespeare's poems. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott.
  19. ^ Jayne 1922, Vol. 1, pp. xxiv-xxxv.
  20. ^ McCash, June Hall (1998). The Jekyll Island Cottage Colony (illustrated ed.). University of Georgia Press. pp. 79–88. ISBN 9780820319285.
  21. ^ Wm. H. Furness III is the student at the top center of the painting, leaning sideways to get a better look.File:Thomas Eakins, The Agnew Clinic 1889.jpg
  22. ^ 700 Locust Street, from Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  23. ^ Horace Howard Furness Memorial Library
  24. ^ Helen Kate Furness Free Library

Further reading edit

  • Chapman, John Jay (1915). Memories and Milestones. New York: Moffat, Yard and Company, pp 45–60.
  • Gibson, James M. The Philadelphia Shakespeare Story: Horace Howard Furness and the New Variorum Shakespeare (New York: AMS Press, 1990)
  • Jusserand, J. J. (1917). With Americans of Past and Present Days. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, pp. 319–332.
  • Repplier, Agnes, "Horace Howard Furness," The Atlantic Monthly, November 1912.
  • Williams, Talcott, "Appreciations of Horace Howard Furness: Our Great Shakespere Critic", The Century Magazine, November 1912.

External links edit

  • "Furness, Horace Howard" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
  • The Horace Howard Furness collection on the Great Central Fair, containing Furness' papers and ephemera from the U.S. Sanitary Commission's Great Central Fair in 1864, are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
  • The Furness Library and the papers of the Furness family are located at the Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts at the University of Pennsylvania.

horace, howard, furness, november, 1833, august, 1912, american, shakespearean, scholar, 19th, century, bornnovember, 1833philadelphia, pennsylvaniadiedaugust, 1912, 1912, aged, wallingford, pennsylvaniaspousehelen, kate, rogers, furnesschildrenwalter, rogers,. Horace Howard Furness November 2 1833 August 13 1912 was an American Shakespearean scholar of the 19th century Horace Howard FurnessBornNovember 2 1833Philadelphia PennsylvaniaDiedAugust 13 1912 1912 08 13 aged 78 Wallingford PennsylvaniaSpouseHelen Kate Rogers FurnessChildrenWalter Rogers FurnessHorace Howard Furness Jr William Henry Furness IIICaroline Augusta Furness JayneParent s William Henry FurnessAnnis Pulling Jenks FurnessSignature Contents 1 Life and career 2 New Variorum 2 1 Volumes edited by Horace Howard Furness 2 2 Volumes edited by H H Furness Jr 3 Other works 4 Honors 5 Personal 6 Legacy 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife and career editHorace Furness was the son of the Unitarian minister and abolitionist William Henry Furness 1802 1896 and brother of the architect Frank Furness 1839 1912 He graduated from Harvard University in 1854 embarked on a journey to Europe with Atherton Blight and then studied in Germany 1 After returning to the United States he was admitted to the Philadelphia Bar in 1858 2 but his growing deafness interfered with the practice of law 3 In 1860 he joined the Shakspere sic Society of Philadelphia an amateur study group that took its scholarship seriously As he later wrote Every member had a copy of the Variorum of 1821 which we fondly believed had gathered under each play all Shakespearian lore worth preserving down to that date What had been added since that year was scattered in many different editions and in numberless volumes dispersed over the whole domain of literature To gather these stray items of criticism was real toil real but necessary if we did not wish our labour over the text to be in vain 4 As editor of the New Variorum editions of Shakespeare also called the Furness Variorum he collected in a single source 300 years of references antecedent works influences and commentaries 5 He devoted more than forty years to the series completing the annotation of sixteen plays 6 His son Horace Howard Furness Jr 1865 1930 joined as co editor of the Variorum s later volumes and continued the project after the father s death annotating three additional plays and revising two others 7 Nowhere perhaps has more labor been devoted to the study of the works of the poet than that given by Mr H H Furness of Philadelphia to the preparation of the new Variorum edition Sir Sidney Lee 8 He was a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania a long serving trustee 1880 1904 and chairman of the building committee for its library Designed by his brother Frank Horace selected the Shakepearean quotes for the 1891 building s leaded glass windows 9 He was the advisor for doctoral student Emily Jordan Folger who with her husband Henry Clay Folger would co found the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington DC 10 An 1890 review in Blackwood s Magazine may indicate the esteem in which British critics held Furness s scholarship In what is called The Variorum Edition of Shakespeare America has the honor of having produced the very best and most complete edition so far as it has gone of our great national poet For text illustration happily not pictorial commentary and criticism it leaves nothing to be desired The editor combines with the patience and accuracy of the textural scholar an industry which has overlooked nothing of value that has been written about Shakespeare by the best German and French as well as English commentators and critics and what is of no less moment he possesses in himself a rare delicacy of literary appreciation and breadth of judgment disciplined by familiarity with all that is best in the literature of antiquity as well as of modern times which he brings to bear on his notes with great effect 11 New Variorum edit nbsp Horace Howard Furness in his brick library at Lindenshade c 1910 12 nbsp Dr Furness s House West Washington Square just before it was torn down 1914 Joseph Pennell Volumes edited by Horace Howard Furness edit These volumes went through a number of reprints the external links connect to the last online edition available Romeo and Juliet published 1871 Macbeth 1873 Hamlet vol 1 1877 Hamlet vol 2 1877 King Lear 1880 Othello 1886 Merchant of Venice 1888 As You Like It 1891 copyright 1890 The Tempest 1892 A Midsommer Nights Dreame 1895 The Winter s Tale 1898 Twelfth Night 1901 Much Ado About Nothing 1904 Love s Labors Lost 1904 Anthony and Cleopatra 1907 Richard III 1908 Cymbeline 1913 published posthumously Volumes edited by H H Furness Jr edit Julius Caesar Google books preview only 1913 13 Macbeth revised 1903 2nd ed 1915 Merchant of Venice revised 1916 King John 1919 Coriolanus 1928 The Modern Language Association of America continues the New Variorum project with the goal of definitively annotating all 38 of Shakespeare s plays 14 Other works editF R 1903 Philadelphia privately printed A memorial of brother in law Fairman Rogers signed H H F Jayne Horace H F ed 1922 The Letters of Horace Howard Furness Boston Houghton Mifflin Volume 1 Volume 2 Haupt Paul Furness H H eds 1893 1904 The Sacred Books of the Old and New Testaments A New English Translation With Explanatory Notes and Pictorial Illustrations Prepared by eminent Biblical scholars of Europe and of America Polychrome Bible New York Dodd Mead amp Co Wellhausen Julius 1898 The Book of Psalms a new English translation Polychrome Bible part 14 Translated by H H Furness psalms John Taylor notes J A Paterson appendix New York Dodd Mead amp Co Records of a lifelong friendship 1807 1882 Ralph Waldo Emerson and William Henry Furness 1910 edited by H H F Horace Howard Furness Boston and New York Houghton MifflinHonors editFurness was elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society on April 16 1880 15 He was the recipient of honorary degrees from Harvard University University of Halle University of Pennsylvania Columbia University and University of Cambridge 16 He was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1905 17 Personal edit nbsp Helen Kate Furness c 1880 In 1860 Furness married Helen Kate Rogers 1837 1883 heir to an ironmaking fortune and sister of University of Pennsylvania instructor Fairman Rogers She compiled a concordance to Shakespeare s poems published in 1874 18 They had four children 19 Walter Rogers Furness 1861 February 7 1914 an architect who in 1896 became a partner in the firm of his uncle Frank Furness He built Furness Cottage at the Jekyll Island Club Georgia where his family vacationed from 1889 to 1895 He was permanently blinded in one eye in 1898 after a ball hit him during a game of racquets From then on his life became worse and worse descending into raging alcoholism His wife Helen Key Bullitt died at age 47 in January 1914 and he died a month later at age 53 following a heart attack 20 Horace Howard Furness Jr 1865 1930 who continued his father s work on the New Variorum project Author of a play The Gloss of Youth an imaginary episode in the lives of William Shakespeare and John Fletcher 1920 William Henry Furness III 1866 1920 an explorer and ethnologist One of the University of Pennsylvania medical students depicted in Thomas Eakins s painting The Agnew Clinic 1889 21 Undertook anthropological expeditions to the South Pacific with Hiram M Hiller Jr and Alfred C Harrison Jr and wrote books and articles about Borneo and Polynesia Died unmarried Caroline Augusta Furness 1873 1909 also an ethnologist she married University of Pennsylvania instructor Horace Jayne and died from a heart attack at age 35 in 1909 Their children were Kate Furness Jayne and Horace H F Jayne an art historian and museum director Horace and Kate Furness inherited her family s Philadelphia city house at the SW corner of Locust Street amp West Washington Square Frank Furness altered the house in 1873 and designed the 1909 office building that replaced it 22 He also designed their country house Lindenshade c 1873 demolished 1940 and its many expansions including the 1903 fireproof brick library Legacy editHorace Howard Furness High School in South Philadelphia is named for him Horace Jr donated his father s Shakespearean collection to the University of Pennsylvania whose Horace Howard Furness Memorial Library honors both father and son 23 William Henry Furness III donated the land for the Helen Kate Furness Free Library in Wallingford Pennsylvania 24 built in 1916 on the former grounds of his parents country house Lindenshade nbsp Lindenshade built c 1873 demolished 1940 Wallingford Pennsylvania designed by Frank Furness nbsp Lindenshade circa 1888 nbsp Brick library at Lindenshade 1903 in 2017 nbsp The University of Pennsylvania Library 1891 now the Fisher Fine Arts Library nbsp Leaded glass fanlight over the main entrance to the University of Pennsylvania Library nbsp Horace Howard Furness High School in South Philadelphia nbsp Helen Kate Furness Free Library 1916 Providence Road amp Furness Lane Wallingford PA nbsp Horace Howard Furness tombstone in Laurel Hill CemeteryReferences edit Thomas Wentworth Higginson Harvard Memorial Biographies Volume 1 p 311 A Catalogue of Members of the Pennsylvania Bar Association admitted Between June 1 1855 1861 Law Association of Philadelphia 1861 Lang Harry 1995 Deaf Persons in the Arts and Sciences A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 136 ISBN 0313291705 Horace Howard Furness How did you become a Shakespeare Student Shakespeariana vol 5 October 1888 pp 439 40 Jean Jules Jusserand Horace Howard Furness With Americans of Past and Present Days New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1916 pp 322 323 Jacob I Kobrick Furness Bullitt Family Papers Collection 1903 Historical Society of Pennsylvania p 2 PDF John Woolf Jordan A History of Delaware County Pennsylvania and Its People Volume 2 New York Lewis Historical Publishing Company 1914 pp 670 671 1 Sir Sidney Lee A Life of William Shakespeare London Smith Elder amp Co 1899 p 285 2 Following a 6 year restoration Frank Furness s University of Pennsylvania Library was rededicated in 1991 on the occasion of its centennial as the Fisher Fine Arts Library Joseph Quincy Adams and Paul Cret The Folger Shakespeare Library Washington Amherst College 1933 Quoted in Horace Howard Furness Dictionary of Literary Biography Thomson Gale 2005 06 Historic American Buildings Survey PA 23 WALF 2A 5 Library of Congress 3 The New Variorum Shakespeare The Tragedy of Julius Caesar Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved January 26 2017 Online version of the full text Shakespeare Variorum Handbook A Manual of Editorial Practice List of Members of the American Philosophical Society Elected Since the Publication of the Fourteenth Volume Front Matter Transactions of the American Philosophical Society American Philosophical Society 15 3 i x 1881 ISSN 0065 9746 JSTOR 1005422 Horace Howard Furness from Historical Society of Pennsylvania Deceased Members Archived 2011 07 26 at the Wayback Machine from American Academy of Arts and Letters Mrs Horace Howard Furness 1874 A concordance to Shakespeare s poems Philadelphia J B Lippincott Jayne 1922 Vol 1 pp xxiv xxxv McCash June Hall 1998 The Jekyll Island Cottage Colony illustrated ed University of Georgia Press pp 79 88 ISBN 9780820319285 Wm H Furness III is the student at the top center of the painting leaning sideways to get a better look File Thomas Eakins The Agnew Clinic 1889 jpg 700 Locust Street from Philadelphia Architects and Buildings Horace Howard Furness Memorial Library Helen Kate Furness Free LibraryFurther reading editChapman John Jay 1915 Memories and Milestones New York Moffat Yard and Company pp 45 60 Gibson James M The Philadelphia Shakespeare Story Horace Howard Furness and the New Variorum Shakespeare New York AMS Press 1990 Jusserand J J 1917 With Americans of Past and Present Days New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 319 332 Repplier Agnes Horace Howard Furness The Atlantic Monthly November 1912 Williams Talcott Appreciations of Horace Howard Furness Our Great Shakespere Critic The Century Magazine November 1912 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Horace Howard Furness nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Horace Howard Furness Furness Horace Howard Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 The Horace Howard Furness collection on the Great Central Fair containing Furness papers and ephemera from the U S Sanitary Commission s Great Central Fair in 1864 are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania The Furness Library and the papers of the Furness family are located at the Kislak Center for Special Collections Rare Books and Manuscripts at the University of Pennsylvania Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Horace Howard Furness amp oldid 1168242826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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