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See also: British See also: man of letters, was See also: born in See also: London on the 15th of See also: September 1822
.
After unhappy experiences at See also: English See also: schools, he was sent to the Moravian school at Neuwied, whose See also: system strongly influenced his subsequent theories of See also: education
.
It was intended that he should follow his See also: father's profession of See also: medicine, and in 1844 he bought a share in a practice at See also: Madeley, See also: Shropshire
.
Plunged into See also: debt by his partner's dishonesty, he set up a small school for See also: young See also: children at Liscard, near Liverpool
.
His principle was to abolish all punishment, to make his pupils regard their See also: work as interesting instead of repellent, and to See also: form their character by appealing exclusively to higher motives
.
This scheme, carried out with much ingenuity, proved a See also: complete success
.
Mean-while he had devoted his spare See also: time to writing
.
His contributions to magazines attracted the See also: notice of See also: Charles Dickens, on whose invitation in 1851 he settled in London as a
See also: regular contributor to See also: Household Words
.
He was also on the staff of the Examiner, which he edited from 1861 to 1867
.
Meanwhile he had devoted much research to a See also: life of See also: Palissy the See also: Potter (1852), which was at the same, time a picture of life in See also: medieval See also: France
.
Encouraged by its favourable reception, he followed it up with lives of See also: Jerome Card an (1854) and Cornelius Agrippa (1856), and subsequently of See also: Clement Marot (187o)
.
His dramatic criticisms were reprinted in 1866 under the title of The Journal of a London Playgoer, 1851-1866
.
In 1857 he was appointed evening lecturer in English literature at See also: King's
See also: College, and in 1865 became, in succession to See also: David Masson, professor of English literature at University College, London
.
His First Sketch of English Lit era-See also: ture (1873), a comprehensive and useful See also: manual, reached its 34th thousand during the author's lifetime
.
He published in 1864 the first See also: volume of a monumental See also: history of English literature entitled English Writers, which he eventually carried in eleven volumes down to the See also: death of See also: Shakespeare
.
He was . indefatigable as a popularizer of See also: good literature
.
After editing a See also: standard text of See also: Addison's Spectator, he brought out a vast number of See also: classics at low prices in See also: Morley's Universal Library, See also: Cassell's See also: National Library, and the See also: Carisbrooke Library
.
His ready speech, retentive memory, earnest purpose, and bright See also: style made him perhaps the most popular lecturer of his See also: day
.
His teaching work at University College was marked by equally extraordinary success
.
In 1882 he accepted a See also: post that made See also: great calls on his time and energy-the principalship of University See also: Hall
.
This institution was partly a place of residence for students of University College, and partly the home of Manchester New College
.
During this time he rendered further services to the cause of education in London not only by his work on the council of University College, but by his advocacy of a teaching university for London
.
In 1889 he resigned the principalship of University Hall and his professorship at University College, and retired to Carisbrooke, Isle of
See also: Wight, intending to devote his leisure to the completion of the great task of his life, English Writers
.
But with his work only See also: half achieved he died on the 14th of May 1894
.
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