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Reference
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Cambridge History
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The Victorian Age, Part One
>
George Meredith, Samuel Butler, George Gissing
> Gissing
The Way of all Flesh;
The Pontifex cell
Gissings work transitional
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XIII. The Victorian Age, Part One.
XIV.
George Meredith, Samuel Butler, George Gissing
.
§ 13. Gissing.
George Robert Gissing was born at Wakefield on 22 November, 1857; at school, and at Owens college, Manchester, he worked with a furious energy, and seemed destined for a notable career in the academic world. His course was, however, cut short through an ill-starred marriage in 1875; he fled first to London, where he experienced the poverty and wretchedness described in many of his novels; and, afterwards, in 1876, to America, making use of that adventure in the narrative of Whelpdale in
New Grub Street.
After a brief stay in Germany, he returned to London, publishing his first novel
Workers in the Dawn,
at his own expense, in 1880. He made a precarious livelihood by private tuition, going without sufficient food, but steadfastly declining to take up journalism, which offered possible openings. The evidence is a little contradictory; but it seems that by the year 1882 Gissing had emerged from the bitterest of the miseries due to poverty. In 1884 appeared
The Unclassed,
in 1886
Isabel Clarendon
and
Demos,
and, from that year until 1895, he published one or more books annually; in 1887
Thyrza;
in 1888
A Lifes Morning;
in 1889
The Nether World;
in 1890, in which year he entered upon a second unfortunate matrimonial venture,
The Emancipated;
in 1891
New Grub Street;
in 1892
Born in Exile
and the short
Denzil Quarrier;
in 1893
The Odd Women;
in 1894
In the Year of Jubilee;
and, in 1895, four books,
Eves Ransom, Sleeping Fires, The Paying Guest
and
The Whirlpool. Human Odds and Ends,
a collection of short sketches, came out in 1898 and in the same year
Charles Dickens: A Critical Study.
Later writings connected with Dickens were the introductions to the (incomplete) Rochester edition beginning in 1900;
Dickens in Memory
(1902); the abridgment of
Forsters Life of Dickens
in the same year; and a chapter in
Homes and Haunts of Famous Authors,
published in 1906 after his death. Meanwhile, he had written
The Town Traveller
in 1898,
The Crown of Life
in 1899 and
Our Friend the Charlatan
in 1901. The two books that followed were of the essay kind,
By the Ionian Sea
(1901) and
The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft
in 1903. After his death were published the unfinished
Veranilda
in 1904,
Will Warburton
in 1905 and a second volume of short stories,
The House of Cobwebs,
in 1906. Gissing died at the age of forty-six at St. Jean de Luz on 28 December, 1903.
18
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Way of all Flesh;
The Pontifex cell
Gissings work transitional
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