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W. E. Cule

William Edward Cule (5 December 1870 – 13 July 1944) was a British author of children's books and several books for adults on Christian themes. In all, he wrote some thirty books encompassing a number of popular genres – public school stories, adventure yarns, fairy tales, novels and Christian allegories and fable. His best children's books show an imaginative faculty of a high order and are soundly crafted, befitting his profession as a magazine and book editor. Cule's most popular Christian works are The Man at the Gate of the World and Sir Knight of the Splendid Way, the latter recently reprinted by Lamplighter Publishing in the United States.

W.E. Cule
Born(1870-12-05)5 December 1870
St Nicholas near Cardiff, Wales
Died13 July 1944(1944-07-13) (aged 73)
Aberdare, Wales
OccupationWriter (novelist)
Period20th century
GenreJuvenile fiction
Spouse
Blanche Williams
(m. 1897)
Children2

Life and works edit

Cule was born in 1870 in the village of St Nicholas near the city of Cardiff in Wales, the eldest son of Thomas and Elizabeth Cule. His family moved to Cardiff when his father was appointed as a Customs excise officer. In 1891 Cule was living with his family at 63 Glamorgan Street, Cardiff, and his father was a grocer.[1] The family were devout Baptists and Cule was a committed Christian from an early age, later becoming a Sunday school teacher.

Cule began writing in his teens, and one of his first literary successes was an eisteddfod prize for a poem, awarded by the Welsh preacher poet Evan Gurnos Jones.[2] In 1890 he won an eisteddfod prize for his poem "Violets".[3] Other poems published in the newspaper Barry Dock News included "The Duett Endeth",[4] "Verge of Night: A Fragment",[5]"Spring Visitors: A Ballad of Two Chestnuts"[6] and "Learning to Skate: In Seven Chapters".[7] In 1892 he won a prize of a guinea for a poem "True Bravery" published in the Boys' Own Paper.[8]

Cule gave this brief account of his early literary career: "I came to take to writing, I believe, because of my insatiable love of reading, and as a result, also, of my admiration for everybody who wrote books I liked. I was intended for commercial work, and made one or two attempts in that direction, writing all the while in my leisure time. My first efforts, at the age of sixteen or so, were made in the "Literary Olympic" of Young Folk's Paper. This was a page where young authors might exercise their energies and among my companions at that time, but far before me, were two whose names are better known now, Mr R. Murray Gilchrist and Mr A. J. Adcock. My first profitable venture was made in 1892, when Mr Edward Step (now literary adviser to F. Warne and Company) accepted one of my stories for a boy's magazine. In 1894 one of my stories went to Mr Andrew Melrose, manager of the Sunday School Union and it is through his kindness of suggestion and encouragement that most of my work has been done since. In 1895 I was able to devote myself entirely to writing, and in 1899 Mr Melrose published two volumes, Sir Constant and Child Voices; while Messrs W. and R. Chambers brought out a little fairy book, Mabel's Prince Wonderful.[9]

From 1889, Cule was active in the British Amateur Literary Association and in 1891 was elected Vice-President. He launched a literary magazine and review for young people" called Opinion which was issued for five or six months "at a great loss!" [10] In one of his editorials Cule argued for the introduction of schools of journalism such as exist in America to improve the standing of what "is now a despised and almost contemptible calling".[11]

After leaving school locally, Cule worked as a journalist in Cardiff and Porthcawl.[12] His first public school stories were published in the Boy's Own Paper and in the Young England magazine. Collections of these stories were subsequently issued in book form, the first such collection being Barfield's Blazer. He married Blanche Williams in 1897. In 1901, Cule and his wife were living at 41 Romilly Road, Canton, Cardiff, with their daughters Mabel (2) and Dilys (5 months).[13]

In 1900, Cule was appointed editor of the Sunday School Teacher magazine, which was afterwards merged in the Sunday School Chronicle.

He received encouragement from Andrew Melrose the publisher for the Sunday School Union after submitting a story to him. Melville published Cule's first two books in 1899 – Child Voices, a collection of sketches and stories about children, and Sir Constant Knight of the Great King, an allegory of the Christian life. The same year, W.& R.Chambers published his fairyland book Mabel's Prince Wonderful, whose heroine was named after Cule's eldest daughter Mabel.

Chambers had earlier published a number of his adult short stories including "Lady Stalland's Diamonds", "The Anthropologist's Coat", "Old Mr. Jellicoe's Plan" and "Lord Cumberwell's Lesson".

In 1903 Cule moved to London to take up a position in the publishing department of the National Sunday School Union. He continued to write boys' stories while also contributing serials to The Child's Own Magazine which were later published in the "Red Nursery" series of children's books. The White Caravan, Two Little New Zealanders and Mr Crusoe's Island are examples of serials that later became popular books.

In 1906, Cule's youngest daughter Dilys died of a childhood illness. A touching account of how the family rallied to furnish a doll's house for her is given in Dilys in the Christmas Garden. Her death is also alluded to in a story from the fairy tale collection The Rose-Coloured Bus, which tells of a grieving woodcarver who makes a doll's house for his daughter.

In 1906 Cule was appointed on the recommendation of Andrew Melrose and Rev Carey Bonner to head the publishing activities of the Baptist Missionary Society (BMS).[14] Cule worked as an editor of missionary publications, including the monthly Missionary Herald and a children's magazine Wonderlands. He was instrumental in setting up the Carey Press as the BMS's commercial publishing arm.

In 1911 he was living at 12 Genesta Road Westcliff, Southend-on-Sea, with his wife Blanche and their daughters Mabel (aged 12) and Daisy Elizabeth (aged 9).[15] His occupation is stated as Publishing Manager and Author.

Cule remained with the BMS for thirty years until his retirement, combining his professional editorial and publishing activities with his career as a popular writer.

Cule published five volumes of public school stories, which went through numerous reprints. All are good-humoured and entertaining stories with plots that often turn on the personal foibles of the characters, whether boys or schoolmasters. Cule is a moralist but a genial one: his stories uphold the public school values of honesty, generosity, sportsmanship and service to others. Typical of these is Barfield's Blazer, described by one reviewer as "... a volume to be greatly prized and thoroughly enjoyed, the entire series of stories affording delicious reading accompanied by rare hearty schoolboy fun. The stories have been well conceived and worked with remarkable skill and taste."[16]

Rollinson and I, the story of a public school boy accused of an offence he did not commit and sent to Coventry, is a full-length novel that explores in greater depth the themes of personal integrity, moral courage and loyalty to friends. The White Knights is not a school story but tells of three boys who elect to live by the values of medieval chivalry. They realise this ideal through acts of service to others. The enemy the "knights" have to fight is the innate human tendency towards selfishness. As this appealing and warm-hearted story unfolds, we are made aware of the Great War being fought just across the English Channel. In the Secret Sea, originally published as a serial in the Boy's Own Paper, is a "tale of the desert island variety, better written than most".[17]

Cule has a sure touch with fairy tale and fantasy. Mabel's Prince Wonderful tells of a little girl's visit to the land of fairy tales and nursery rhymes, where she becomes caught up in the story of Cinderella and Prince Charming.[18][19] One reviewer commented: The wonderful adventures and encounters of "The Child Who Believes" are told in the most graphic and convincing manner, and the juvenile reader who remains incredulous of the existence of "The Old World" after reading the entrancing story of Mabel and her fairy prince, deserves to be passed over by Santa on his annual visit.[20]

His later work,The Other Side of Nod is the story of a boy transported by a white car into the fairy tale land of Nod. Neither story is an allegory but a careful reading of them reveals that for Cule (as with George Macdonald) the "storybook world" of the imagination is linked to the Christian concept of the Kingdom of Heaven. These must be counted among Cule's most appealing children's books and worthy of reprinting. Some of the original fairy tales in the Rose-Coloured Bus are equally fine although the collection as a whole is less inspired.

Child Voices is a collection of whimsical sketches of children which Cule in his Preface says are not intended for children's reading. "For the greater part . . . they are simple records of incidents observed and children's conversations overheard. In other cases, stories have been framed upon a fanciful child's views and opinions of various matters. The result is dedicated, in all humility, to those who know and love their children."

Two Little New Zealanders, The White Caravan and the House of the Ogress are examples of Cule's children's fiction at its best. They reveal his understanding of children's emotional needs and sympathy for their plight when they fail to receive nurturing love from adults. These are well-crafted children's stories, which unfold naturally and reach an emotionally satisfying conclusion. Cule is good at creating memorable locales for his stories, whether the peaceful lanes and villages of Southern England or the bustle of Edwardian London, and today these stories have a distinct period charm.

Less successful are the serials Cule wrote for Wonderlands (under the pseudonym of Edward Seaman) and later published as books. Both The Parliament Man and The Adventures of Peter Playne are spoilt by religious sentimentality and didacticism, as are the short stories The Special Messenger and Peter, Bingo and Those Others. Under Eastern Skies, a retelling of stories about Old Testament kings is a workmanlike but otherwise undistinguished book. The Bells of Moulton – a history of the BMS for young people – could have been a dull subject but is entertainingly told by combining history, fiction and travelogue.

Cule's novelette The Prince of Zell is a curiosity – a Ruritanian romance with a wildly improbable plot and a denouement that strains credulity to the limit. However, the short stories included as a makeweight reveal Cule's talent for social comedy in the manner of H.G. Wells. Another such story – "The Auburn Emperor" – appears in Six Roads to Bethlehem. No indication is given as to where the stories in this collection were first published – they apparently come from different stages in Cule's career and make an awkward and uneven collection.

Another curiosity is the parable Thy Son Liveth: A Vision of the War, published in 1915. It tells of an unnamed son of an unnamed English couple who perishes in the Great War, dashing the parents' hopes for his great future. Though unsatisfying as fiction, it expresses Cule's deep conviction as a Christian that life continues after death. One contemporary review described it as "... a beautifully written little work of six chapters which should commend itself to the people, especially to those whose sons have gone forth in the country's defence.[21]

Cule's two masterpieces are his allegorical Sir Knight of the Splendid Way and the fable of The Man at the Gate of the World.

Sir Knight of the Splendid Way is an extensive reworking of his earlier book Sir Constant Knight of the Great King, published in 1899. Reviewing this, the Spectator said "This is an allegorical tale, modelled, we may say, on the lines of the "Pilgrim's Progress," the wayfarer in this case being a knight. He has a "chart of the journey," as the pilgrim has his roll, meets the peril of temptation in the "Palace of Sir Joyous," and finds it again in another shape in "The Black Knight of Law." There is some imagination and some power of expression in Sir Constant, but the allegories that have achieved a real success are very few."[22]Sir Knight of the Splendid Way tells of the knighting of Sir Constant in the Chapel of the Valley of Decision (his conversion) and the six "adventures" he undergoes on his way to the City of the King (eternal life), each testing his courage, fortitude and compassion for others. Drawing for its inspiration on Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, the Arthurian tradition of the questing knight and the New Testament epistles, it is a spiritually profound and richly detailed work, written in a language suggestive of another era with some of the finest examples of word painting Cule ever achieved. W.Y. Fullerton wrote of Cule's allegory: "For depth of experience and daintiness of touch, it may be placed alongside The Pilgrim's Progress itself without suffering by the comparison, and there can be no higher praise."[23] Sir Knight of the Splendid Way was published with illustrations by Joseph Finnemore.

The Man at the Gate of the World is the story of Caspar, one of the three magi of tradition who follow the star to the stable in Bethlehem. It tells of how Caspar subsequently forswears his wealth and privilege to stand at a city gate washing the feet of weary travellers, thus fulfilling Christ's mandate to his disciples. Cule tells us he meditated on this story for some time before writing it. He wondered whether to publish it after reading Henry Van Dyke's parable The Other Wise Man but decided his "Story of the Star" had its own spiritual truth that he was impelled to share.

A popular Christmas book, The Man at the Gate of the World was published in England with line illustrations by the painter Estella Canziani and in the United States with illustrations by Albert R. Thayer. It has been anthologised with the Van Dyke work.

Both works have been translated into other European languages.

Cule, who served as a Sunday School teacher and Baptist deacon, wrote two hymns of distinction, "Creator Lord of Life and Light" and "The Morning's Golden Glory", published in Hymns for Today.[24]

Cule retired from the BMS in 1936. His retirement was spent at Thorpe Bay and during the war years at Clevedon, Barmouth and Aberdare, where he died in 1944, having been predeceased by his wife.[25]

Works by W E Cule edit

School Stories and Adventure

Barfield's Blazer and Other School Stories, Andrew Melrose, London, 1900

The Captain's Fags, Sunday School Union, London, 1901

The Black Fifteen and Other School Stories, 1906

Rollinson and I: The Story of a Summer Term, Religious Tract Society, London, 1913

Rodborough School, (illustrated by Edgar Alfred Holloway), Religious Tract Society, London, 1915

Baker Secundus and Some Other Fellows (illustrated by Arthur Twidle) Boy's Own Paper Office, London, 1917

The White Knights 1919

In the Secret Sea, Sheldon Press, London, 1934

Fairy Tale and Fantasy

Child Voices, (illustrated by Charles Robinson), Andrew Melrose, London, 1899

Mabel's Prince Wonderful: Or a Trip to Storyland, (illustrated by Will G. Mein), W&R Chambers, London, Edinburgh, 1899

The Rose-Coloured Bus and Other Leaves from Mabel's Fairy Book, (illustrated by Florence Meyerheim), Andrew Melrose, London, 1906

The Other Side of Nod, 1924

Children's and Juvenile Fiction

Three Little Wise Men, (illustrated by Florence Meyerheim), Sunday School Union, London, 1896

The Kingdoms of this World, (illustrated by H. L. Shindler), Sunday School Union, London, 1904

The Lost Prince and the Golden Lamp, Sunday School Union, London, c1900.

Tom and Company, Limited, Sunday School Union, London, 1908

Two Little New Zealanders, (illustrated by Rosa C. Petherick), Sunday School Union, London, 1909

The Magic Uncle, Sunday School Union, London, 1911

Santa Claus at the Castle, (illustrated by Florence Meyerheim), Sunday School Union, London,1913

Mr Crusoe's Island, (illustrated by Watson Charlton), Sunday School Union, London, 1914

The White Caravan, (illustrated by Brian Hatton), Sunday School Union, London, 1914

The House of the Ogress, (illustrated by George Morrow), 1921

The Indian Storybook for Boys and Girls, Carey Press, London, c1921

The Adventures of Peter Playne, Carey Press, London, 1923

Peter, Bingo and Those Others, Carey Press, London, 1926

The Special Messenger, Carey Press, London, 1927

The Angel at the Door, 1930

The Parliament Man: A Story of Greyhound Court and Other Places, (illustrated by Ernest Prater), Carey Press, London, 1931

Bible Stories and Missionary History

Under Eastern Skies, John F. Shaw, London, 1913

The Bells of Moulton: A History of the Baptist Missionary Society for Young People, The Carey Press, London, 1942

Christian Allegory and Fable

Sir Constant: Knight of the Great King, (illustrated by Amelia Bauerle), Andrew Melrose, London, 1899

Thy Son Liveth: A Vision of the War. Nisbet & Co., London, 1915

Sir Knight of the Splendid Way, (illustrated by J. Finnemore), Religious Tract Society, London, 1926

The Man at the Gate of the World: A Story of the Star, [illustrated by Estelle Canzioni), 1929

Romance and Short Stories

The Prince of Zell: A Romance, 1908

Six Roads to Bethlehem, Sunday School Union, London, 1944

Memorial

Dilys in the Christmas Garden, Bagster, London, 1931 (reprinted in Six Roads to Bethlehem)

Edited Works

The Missionary Speaker and Reader A Collection of Recitations, Dialogues, Readings, and Responsive Services, The Carey Press, London, 1910

Everyland for Boys and Girls (children's annuals, illustrated by B. F. Gribble), The Carey Press, London, 1925–1926

References edit

  1. ^ 1891 Census Household Record
  2. ^ Cule: autobiographical notes.
  3. ^ Barry Dock News, 17 October 1890. Welsh Newspapers Online
  4. ^ Barry Dock News, 24 July 1891 Welsh Newspapers Online
  5. ^ Barry Dock News 12 August 1892 Welsh Newspapers Online
  6. ^ Barry Dock News 3 June 1892 Welsh Newspapers Online
  7. ^ Barry Dock News, 10 March 1893 Welsh Newspapers Online
  8. ^ B.O.P September 1892.
  9. ^ Barry Dock News, 30 November 1900 Welsh Newspapers Online
  10. ^ "Balaites who have Risen, No.1 Mr W.E. Cule. The British Amateur Literary Association, September 1902
  11. ^ Barry Dock News, 19 June 1891 Welsh Newspapers Online
  12. ^ Rosemary Auchmuty, Robert J. Kirkpatrick, Joy Wotton. The Encyclopaedia of Boys' School Stories, Volume 2, Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000, p.92
  13. ^ 1901 Census Household Record
  14. ^ Brian Stanley, History of the Baptist Missionary Society 1792–1992, Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1992.
  15. ^ 1911 Census Household Record.
  16. ^ Barry Dock News, 1 February 1901 Welsh Newspapers Online
  17. ^ "Christmas Books for Boys and Girls', The Times, Wed. Dec.5, 1934, p.20.
  18. ^ The Outlook: A Weekly Review of Politics, Art, Literature and Finance, Volume 4, p.284
  19. ^ The Journal of Education, Volume 21, p.756
  20. ^ Australian Town and Country Journal, Saturday 25 November 1899
  21. ^ Barry Dock News, 2 April 1915 Welsh Newspapers Online
  22. ^ The Spectator, 27 May, 1899, p.26
  23. ^ W. Y. Fullerton, John Bunyan: A Legacy, London: Ernest Benn,1928.
  24. ^ Carey Bonner, Some Baptist Hymnists, Baptist Union Publication Department, 1937 p.428
  25. ^ Resolution of the General Committee of the Baptist Missionary Society, 7 November 1944

External links edit

  • Works by Cule, William Edward at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Biography W.E. Cule

cule, william, edward, cule, december, 1870, july, 1944, british, author, children, books, several, books, adults, christian, themes, wrote, some, thirty, books, encompassing, number, popular, genres, public, school, stories, adventure, yarns, fairy, tales, no. William Edward Cule 5 December 1870 13 July 1944 was a British author of children s books and several books for adults on Christian themes In all he wrote some thirty books encompassing a number of popular genres public school stories adventure yarns fairy tales novels and Christian allegories and fable His best children s books show an imaginative faculty of a high order and are soundly crafted befitting his profession as a magazine and book editor Cule s most popular Christian works are The Man at the Gate of the World and Sir Knight of the Splendid Way the latter recently reprinted by Lamplighter Publishing in the United States W E CuleBorn 1870 12 05 5 December 1870St Nicholas near Cardiff WalesDied13 July 1944 1944 07 13 aged 73 Aberdare WalesOccupationWriter novelist Period20th centuryGenreJuvenile fictionSpouseBlanche Williams m 1897 wbr Children2 Contents 1 Life and works 2 Works by W E Cule 3 References 4 External linksLife and works editCule was born in 1870 in the village of St Nicholas near the city of Cardiff in Wales the eldest son of Thomas and Elizabeth Cule His family moved to Cardiff when his father was appointed as a Customs excise officer In 1891 Cule was living with his family at 63 Glamorgan Street Cardiff and his father was a grocer 1 The family were devout Baptists and Cule was a committed Christian from an early age later becoming a Sunday school teacher Cule began writing in his teens and one of his first literary successes was an eisteddfod prize for a poem awarded by the Welsh preacher poet Evan Gurnos Jones 2 In 1890 he won an eisteddfod prize for his poem Violets 3 Other poems published in the newspaper Barry Dock News included The Duett Endeth 4 Verge of Night A Fragment 5 Spring Visitors A Ballad of Two Chestnuts 6 and Learning to Skate In Seven Chapters 7 In 1892 he won a prize of a guinea for a poem True Bravery published in the Boys Own Paper 8 Cule gave this brief account of his early literary career I came to take to writing I believe because of my insatiable love of reading and as a result also of my admiration for everybody who wrote books I liked I was intended for commercial work and made one or two attempts in that direction writing all the while in my leisure time My first efforts at the age of sixteen or so were made in the Literary Olympic of Young Folk s Paper This was a page where young authors might exercise their energies and among my companions at that time but far before me were two whose names are better known now Mr R Murray Gilchrist and Mr A J Adcock My first profitable venture was made in 1892 when Mr Edward Step now literary adviser to F Warne and Company accepted one of my stories for a boy s magazine In 1894 one of my stories went to Mr Andrew Melrose manager of the Sunday School Union and it is through his kindness of suggestion and encouragement that most of my work has been done since In 1895 I was able to devote myself entirely to writing and in 1899 Mr Melrose published two volumes Sir Constant and Child Voices while Messrs W and R Chambers brought out a little fairy book Mabel s Prince Wonderful 9 From 1889 Cule was active in the British Amateur Literary Association and in 1891 was elected Vice President He launched a literary magazine and review for young people called Opinion which was issued for five or six months at a great loss 10 In one of his editorials Cule argued for the introduction of schools of journalism such as exist in America to improve the standing of what is now a despised and almost contemptible calling 11 After leaving school locally Cule worked as a journalist in Cardiff and Porthcawl 12 His first public school stories were published in the Boy s Own Paper and in the Young England magazine Collections of these stories were subsequently issued in book form the first such collection being Barfield s Blazer He married Blanche Williams in 1897 In 1901 Cule and his wife were living at 41 Romilly Road Canton Cardiff with their daughters Mabel 2 and Dilys 5 months 13 In 1900 Cule was appointed editor of the Sunday School Teacher magazine which was afterwards merged in the Sunday School Chronicle He received encouragement from Andrew Melrose the publisher for the Sunday School Union after submitting a story to him Melville published Cule s first two books in 1899 Child Voices a collection of sketches and stories about children and Sir Constant Knight of the Great King an allegory of the Christian life The same year W amp R Chambers published his fairyland book Mabel s Prince Wonderful whose heroine was named after Cule s eldest daughter Mabel Chambers had earlier published a number of his adult short stories including Lady Stalland s Diamonds The Anthropologist s Coat Old Mr Jellicoe s Plan and Lord Cumberwell s Lesson In 1903 Cule moved to London to take up a position in the publishing department of the National Sunday School Union He continued to write boys stories while also contributing serials to The Child s Own Magazine which were later published in the Red Nursery series of children s books The White Caravan Two Little New Zealanders and Mr Crusoe s Island are examples of serials that later became popular books In 1906 Cule s youngest daughter Dilys died of a childhood illness A touching account of how the family rallied to furnish a doll s house for her is given in Dilys in the Christmas Garden Her death is also alluded to in a story from the fairy tale collection The Rose Coloured Bus which tells of a grieving woodcarver who makes a doll s house for his daughter In 1906 Cule was appointed on the recommendation of Andrew Melrose and Rev Carey Bonner to head the publishing activities of the Baptist Missionary Society BMS 14 Cule worked as an editor of missionary publications including the monthly Missionary Herald and a children s magazine Wonderlands He was instrumental in setting up the Carey Press as the BMS s commercial publishing arm In 1911 he was living at 12 Genesta Road Westcliff Southend on Sea with his wife Blanche and their daughters Mabel aged 12 and Daisy Elizabeth aged 9 15 His occupation is stated as Publishing Manager and Author Cule remained with the BMS for thirty years until his retirement combining his professional editorial and publishing activities with his career as a popular writer Cule published five volumes of public school stories which went through numerous reprints All are good humoured and entertaining stories with plots that often turn on the personal foibles of the characters whether boys or schoolmasters Cule is a moralist but a genial one his stories uphold the public school values of honesty generosity sportsmanship and service to others Typical of these is Barfield s Blazer described by one reviewer as a volume to be greatly prized and thoroughly enjoyed the entire series of stories affording delicious reading accompanied by rare hearty schoolboy fun The stories have been well conceived and worked with remarkable skill and taste 16 Rollinson and I the story of a public school boy accused of an offence he did not commit and sent to Coventry is a full length novel that explores in greater depth the themes of personal integrity moral courage and loyalty to friends The White Knights is not a school story but tells of three boys who elect to live by the values of medieval chivalry They realise this ideal through acts of service to others The enemy the knights have to fight is the innate human tendency towards selfishness As this appealing and warm hearted story unfolds we are made aware of the Great War being fought just across the English Channel In the Secret Sea originally published as a serial in the Boy s Own Paper is a tale of the desert island variety better written than most 17 Cule has a sure touch with fairy tale and fantasy Mabel s Prince Wonderful tells of a little girl s visit to the land of fairy tales and nursery rhymes where she becomes caught up in the story of Cinderella and Prince Charming 18 19 One reviewer commented The wonderful adventures and encounters of The Child Who Believes are told in the most graphic and convincing manner and the juvenile reader who remains incredulous of the existence of The Old World after reading the entrancing story of Mabel and her fairy prince deserves to be passed over by Santa on his annual visit 20 His later work The Other Side of Nod is the story of a boy transported by a white car into the fairy tale land of Nod Neither story is an allegory but a careful reading of them reveals that for Cule as with George Macdonald the storybook world of the imagination is linked to the Christian concept of the Kingdom of Heaven These must be counted among Cule s most appealing children s books and worthy of reprinting Some of the original fairy tales in the Rose Coloured Bus are equally fine although the collection as a whole is less inspired Child Voices is a collection of whimsical sketches of children which Cule in his Preface says are not intended for children s reading For the greater part they are simple records of incidents observed and children s conversations overheard In other cases stories have been framed upon a fanciful child s views and opinions of various matters The result is dedicated in all humility to those who know and love their children Two Little New Zealanders The White Caravan and the House of the Ogress are examples of Cule s children s fiction at its best They reveal his understanding of children s emotional needs and sympathy for their plight when they fail to receive nurturing love from adults These are well crafted children s stories which unfold naturally and reach an emotionally satisfying conclusion Cule is good at creating memorable locales for his stories whether the peaceful lanes and villages of Southern England or the bustle of Edwardian London and today these stories have a distinct period charm Less successful are the serials Cule wrote for Wonderlands under the pseudonym of Edward Seaman and later published as books Both The Parliament Man and The Adventures of Peter Playne are spoilt by religious sentimentality and didacticism as are the short stories The Special Messenger and Peter Bingo and Those Others Under Eastern Skies a retelling of stories about Old Testament kings is a workmanlike but otherwise undistinguished book The Bells of Moulton a history of the BMS for young people could have been a dull subject but is entertainingly told by combining history fiction and travelogue Cule s novelette The Prince of Zell is a curiosity a Ruritanian romance with a wildly improbable plot and a denouement that strains credulity to the limit However the short stories included as a makeweight reveal Cule s talent for social comedy in the manner of H G Wells Another such story The Auburn Emperor appears in Six Roads to Bethlehem No indication is given as to where the stories in this collection were first published they apparently come from different stages in Cule s career and make an awkward and uneven collection Another curiosity is the parable Thy Son Liveth A Vision of the War published in 1915 It tells of an unnamed son of an unnamed English couple who perishes in the Great War dashing the parents hopes for his great future Though unsatisfying as fiction it expresses Cule s deep conviction as a Christian that life continues after death One contemporary review described it as a beautifully written little work of six chapters which should commend itself to the people especially to those whose sons have gone forth in the country s defence 21 Cule s two masterpieces are his allegorical Sir Knight of the Splendid Way and the fable of The Man at the Gate of the World Sir Knight of the Splendid Way is an extensive reworking of his earlier book Sir Constant Knight of the Great King published in 1899 Reviewing this the Spectator said This is an allegorical tale modelled we may say on the lines of the Pilgrim s Progress the wayfarer in this case being a knight He has a chart of the journey as the pilgrim has his roll meets the peril of temptation in the Palace of Sir Joyous and finds it again in another shape in The Black Knight of Law There is some imagination and some power of expression in Sir Constant but the allegories that have achieved a real success are very few 22 Sir Knight of the Splendid Way tells of the knighting of Sir Constant in the Chapel of the Valley of Decision his conversion and the six adventures he undergoes on his way to the City of the King eternal life each testing his courage fortitude and compassion for others Drawing for its inspiration on Bunyan s Pilgrim s Progress the Arthurian tradition of the questing knight and the New Testament epistles it is a spiritually profound and richly detailed work written in a language suggestive of another era with some of the finest examples of word painting Cule ever achieved W Y Fullerton wrote of Cule s allegory For depth of experience and daintiness of touch it may be placed alongside The Pilgrim s Progress itself without suffering by the comparison and there can be no higher praise 23 Sir Knight of the Splendid Way was published with illustrations by Joseph Finnemore The Man at the Gate of the World is the story of Caspar one of the three magi of tradition who follow the star to the stable in Bethlehem It tells of how Caspar subsequently forswears his wealth and privilege to stand at a city gate washing the feet of weary travellers thus fulfilling Christ s mandate to his disciples Cule tells us he meditated on this story for some time before writing it He wondered whether to publish it after reading Henry Van Dyke s parable The Other Wise Man but decided his Story of the Star had its own spiritual truth that he was impelled to share A popular Christmas book The Man at the Gate of the World was published in England with line illustrations by the painter Estella Canziani and in the United States with illustrations by Albert R Thayer It has been anthologised with the Van Dyke work Both works have been translated into other European languages Cule who served as a Sunday School teacher and Baptist deacon wrote two hymns of distinction Creator Lord of Life and Light and The Morning s Golden Glory published in Hymns for Today 24 Cule retired from the BMS in 1936 His retirement was spent at Thorpe Bay and during the war years at Clevedon Barmouth and Aberdare where he died in 1944 having been predeceased by his wife 25 Works by W E Cule editSchool Stories and AdventureBarfield s Blazer and Other School Stories Andrew Melrose London 1900The Captain s Fags Sunday School Union London 1901The Black Fifteen and Other School Stories 1906Rollinson and I The Story of a Summer Term Religious Tract Society London 1913Rodborough School illustrated by Edgar Alfred Holloway Religious Tract Society London 1915Baker Secundus and Some Other Fellows illustrated by Arthur Twidle Boy s Own Paper Office London 1917The White Knights 1919In the Secret Sea Sheldon Press London 1934Fairy Tale and FantasyChild Voices illustrated by Charles Robinson Andrew Melrose London 1899Mabel s Prince Wonderful Or a Trip to Storyland illustrated by Will G Mein W amp R Chambers London Edinburgh 1899The Rose Coloured Bus and Other Leaves from Mabel s Fairy Book illustrated by Florence Meyerheim Andrew Melrose London 1906The Other Side of Nod 1924Children s and Juvenile FictionThree Little Wise Men illustrated by Florence Meyerheim Sunday School Union London 1896The Kingdoms of this World illustrated by H L Shindler Sunday School Union London 1904The Lost Prince and the Golden Lamp Sunday School Union London c1900 Tom and Company Limited Sunday School Union London 1908Two Little New Zealanders illustrated by Rosa C Petherick Sunday School Union London 1909The Magic Uncle Sunday School Union London 1911Santa Claus at the Castle illustrated by Florence Meyerheim Sunday School Union London 1913Mr Crusoe s Island illustrated by Watson Charlton Sunday School Union London 1914The White Caravan illustrated by Brian Hatton Sunday School Union London 1914The House of the Ogress illustrated by George Morrow 1921The Indian Storybook for Boys and Girls Carey Press London c1921The Adventures of Peter Playne Carey Press London 1923Peter Bingo and Those Others Carey Press London 1926The Special Messenger Carey Press London 1927The Angel at the Door 1930The Parliament Man A Story of Greyhound Court and Other Places illustrated by Ernest Prater Carey Press London 1931Bible Stories and Missionary HistoryUnder Eastern Skies John F Shaw London 1913The Bells of Moulton A History of the Baptist Missionary Society for Young People The Carey Press London 1942Christian Allegory and FableSir Constant Knight of the Great King illustrated by Amelia Bauerle Andrew Melrose London 1899Thy Son Liveth A Vision of the War Nisbet amp Co London 1915Sir Knight of the Splendid Way illustrated by J Finnemore Religious Tract Society London 1926The Man at the Gate of the World A Story of the Star illustrated by Estelle Canzioni 1929Romance and Short StoriesThe Prince of Zell A Romance 1908Six Roads to Bethlehem Sunday School Union London 1944MemorialDilys in the Christmas Garden Bagster London 1931 reprinted in Six Roads to Bethlehem Edited WorksThe Missionary Speaker and Reader A Collection of Recitations Dialogues Readings and Responsive Services The Carey Press London 1910Everyland for Boys and Girls children s annuals illustrated by B F Gribble The Carey Press London 1925 1926References edit 1891 Census Household Record Cule autobiographical notes Barry Dock News 17 October 1890 Welsh Newspapers Online Barry Dock News 24 July 1891 Welsh Newspapers Online Barry Dock News 12 August 1892 Welsh Newspapers Online Barry Dock News 3 June 1892 Welsh Newspapers Online Barry Dock News 10 March 1893 Welsh Newspapers Online B O P September 1892 Barry Dock News 30 November 1900 Welsh Newspapers Online Balaites who have Risen No 1 Mr W E Cule The British Amateur Literary Association September 1902 Barry Dock News 19 June 1891 Welsh Newspapers Online Rosemary Auchmuty Robert J Kirkpatrick Joy Wotton The Encyclopaedia of Boys School Stories Volume 2 Aldershot Ashgate 2000 p 92 1901 Census Household Record Brian Stanley History of the Baptist Missionary Society 1792 1992 Edinburgh T amp T Clark 1992 1911 Census Household Record Barry Dock News 1 February 1901 Welsh Newspapers Online Christmas Books for Boys and Girls The Times Wed Dec 5 1934 p 20 The Outlook A Weekly Review of Politics Art Literature and Finance Volume 4 p 284 The Journal of Education Volume 21 p 756 Australian Town and Country Journal Saturday 25 November 1899 Barry Dock News 2 April 1915 Welsh Newspapers Online The Spectator 27 May 1899 p 26 W Y Fullerton John Bunyan A Legacy London Ernest Benn 1928 Carey Bonner Some Baptist Hymnists Baptist Union Publication Department 1937 p 428 Resolution of the General Committee of the Baptist Missionary Society 7 November 1944External links edit nbsp Children s literature portal Works by Cule William Edward at Faded Page Canada Biography W E Cule Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W E Cule amp oldid 1177434672, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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