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DAVID MASSON (1822–1907)

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 870 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DAVID MASSON (1822–1907)  , Scottish man of letters, was born at Aberdeen on the and of December 1822, and educated at the grammar school there and at Marischal College . Intending to enter the Church, he proceeded to
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Edinburgh University, where he studied
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theology under Dr Chalmers, whose friendship he enjoyed until the divine's
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death in 1847 . However, abandoning his project of the
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ministry, he returned to his native city to undertake the editorship of the Banner, a weekly paper devoted to the advocacy of
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Free Kirk principles . After two years he resigned this
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post and went back to the capital, bent upon pursuing a purely
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literary career . There he wrote a
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great
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deal, contributing to Fraser's
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Magazine,
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Dublin University Magazine (in which appeared his essays on Chatterton) and other
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periodicals . In 1847 he went to
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London, where he found wider scope for his energy and knowledge . He was secretary (1851—1852) of the " Society of the Friends of Italy." In a famous interview with Mrs Browning at Florence he contested her admiration for
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Napoleon III . He had known De Quincey, whose biography he contributed in 1878 to the "
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English Men of Letters " series, and he was an enthusiastic friend and admirer of Carlyle . In 1852 he was appointed professor of English literature at University College, London, in succession to A . H . Clough, and from 1858 to 1865 he edited the newly established
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Macmillan's Magazine . In 1865 he was selectedfor the chair of rhetoric and English literature at Edinburgh, and during the early years of his professorship actively promoted the
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movement for the university
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education of
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women .

In 1879 he became editor of the

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Register of the Scottish Privy Council, and in 1893 was appointed Historiographer Royal for Scotland . Two years later he resigned his professorship . His magnum opus in his
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Life of Milton in Connexion with the
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History of His Own Time in six volumes, the first of which appeared in 1858 and the last in 1880 . He also edited the library edition of Milton's Poetical
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Works (3 vols., 1874), and De Quincey's Collected Works (14 vols., 1889–189o) . Among his other publications are Essays,
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Biographical and Critical (1856, reprinted with additions, 3 vols., 1874),
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British Novelists and their Styles (1859), Drummond of Hawthornden (1873), Chatterton (1873) and Edinburgh Sketches (1892) . He died on the 6th of
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October 1907 . A bust of Masson was presented to the senate of the university of Edinburgh in 1897 . Professor Masson had married Rosaline Orme . His son Orme Masson became professor of chemistry in the university of Melbourne, and his daughter Rosaline is known as a writer and novelist .

End of Article: DAVID MASSON (1822–1907)
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