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Home  »  library  »  BIOS  »  Sir Henry Taylor (1800–1886)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Sir Henry Taylor (1800–1886)

Taylor, Sir Henry. An English poet of celebrity; born at Bishop-Middleham, Durham, Oct. 18, 1800; died on March 28, 1886. In 1824 he became editor of the London Magazine, and obtained a position in the Colonial Office, which he retained until 1872. His dramatic works are: ‘Isaac Comnenus’ (1827); ‘Philip van Artevelde’ (1834), his best; ‘Edwin the Fair’ (1842); ‘The Virgin Widow’ (1850); and ‘St. Clement’s Eve’ (1862). He published several volumes of essays,—‘The Statesman’ (1836); ‘Notes from Life’ (1847); ‘Notes from Books’ (1849); also ‘The Eve of the Conquest, and Other Poems’ (1847); and his ‘Autobiography’ (1885). In 1888 his ‘Letters’ appeared, edited by Dowden. (See Critical and Biographical Introduction).