John Churton Collins

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John Churton Collins
Portrait of John Churton Collins.jpg
Born(1848-03-26)26 March 1848
Died25 September 1908(1908-09-25) (aged 60)
Lowestoft, Suffolk, England
Alma materBalliol College

John Churton Collins (26 March 1848 – 25 September 1908) was a British literary critic.

Biography[]

Churton Collins was born at Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire, England. From King Edward's School, Birmingham, he went to Balliol College, Oxford, where he graduated in 1872, and at once devoted himself to a literary career, as journalist, essayist and lecturer. His first book was a study of Sir Joshua Reynolds (1874), and later he edited various classical English writers, and published volumes on Bolingbroke and Voltaire in England (1886),[1] The Study of English Literature (1891),[2] a study of Dean Swift (1893), Essays and Studies (1895),[3] Ephemera Critica (1901), Essays in Poetry and Criticism (1905), and Rousseau and Voltaire (1908), his original essays being sharply controversial in tone, but full of knowledge.

In 1904 he became professor of English literature at Birmingham University.[4] For many years he was a prominent University Extension lecturer, and a constant contributor to the principal reviews. On 25 September 1908 he was found dead in a ditch near Lowestoft, Suffolk, at which place he had been staying with a doctor for the benefit of his health. The circumstances necessitated the holding of an inquest, the verdict being that of accidental death.

Criticism[]

Lord Tennyson, a target of Collins' pen,[5] referred to him as "a louse in the locks of literature".[6]

Works[]

References[]

  1. ^ Courtney, W. P. (10 July 1886). "Review of Bolingbroke, a Historical Study; and Voltaire in England by John Churton Collins". The Academy. 30 (740): 19.
  2. ^ Ryland, F. (12 December 1891). "Review of The Study of English Literature by John Churton Collins". The Academy. 40 (1023): 529–530.
  3. ^ Walker, Hugh (23 November 1895). "Review of Essays and Studies by John Churton Collins". The Academy. 48 (1229): 427–428.
  4. ^ "COLLINS, John Churton". Who's Who. Vol. 59. 1907. p. 365.
  5. ^ Kearney, Anthony (1992). "Making Tennyson a Classic: Churton Collins' 'Illustrations of Tennyson' in Context". Victorian Poetry. 30 (1): 75–82.
  6. ^ Berlin, Isaiah (12 April 1987). "Edmund Wilson Among the 'Despicable English'". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 June 2012.
  7. ^ Buckingham, James Silk; Sterling, John; Maurice, Frederick Denison; Stebbing, Henry; Dilke, Charles Wentworth; Hervey, Thomas Kibble; Dixon, William Hepworth; MacColl, Norman; Rendall, Vernon Horace; Murry, John Middleton (18 April 1908). "Review: Voltaire, Montesquieu and Rousseau in England by J. Churton Collins". The Athenaeum. No. 4199. p. 471.

Further reading[]

  • Kearney, Anthony (1981). "John Churton Collins and the Attempt to Link English and Classics". British Journal of Educational Studies. 29 (3): 258–267. doi:10.2307/3119935. JSTOR 3119935.
  • Kearney, Anthony (1986). John Churton Collins: the Louse on the Locks of Literature. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press.
  • Theobald, Robert M. (1904). The Ethics of Criticism, Illustrated by Mr. Churton Collins. London: Watts & Co.

External links[]

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