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See also: English biographer and See also: literary critic, See also: grandson of See also: James
See also: Stephen (1758-1832), master in See also: chancery, a friend of See also: Wilberforce, and author of a See also: book called See also: Slavery Delineated, and son of See also: Sir James Stephen (1789-1859), colonial under-secretary for many years, and author of Essays on Ecclesiastical Biography, was See also: born at See also: Kensington Gore on the 28th of See also: November 1832
.
At his See also: father's See also: house he saw a See also: good See also: deal of the Abolitionists and other members of the Clapham See also: sect, and the Macaulays, James See also: Spedding, Sir See also: Henry
See also: Taylor and
See also: Nassau See also: Senior were intimate See also: friends of his See also: family
.
After See also: education at See also: Eton, See also: King's
See also: College, See also: London, and Trinity See also: Hall, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A
.
(loth wrangler) 1854, M.A
.
1857, Stephen remained for several years a
See also: fellow and tutor of his college
.
He has recounted the experiences of a See also: resident fellow at that See also: period in a delightful chapter in his See also: Life of Fawcett as well as in some less formal Sketches from Cambridge: By a See also: Don (1865)
.
These sketches were reprinted from the See also: Pall Mall See also: Gazette, to the proprietor of which, See also: George See also: Smith, he had been introduced by his
See also: brother (Sir) James Fitzjames Stephen
.
It was at Smith's house at See also: Hampstead that Stephen met his first wife, Harriet Marion (d
.
1875), daughter of W
.
M
.
Thackeray; after her See also: death he married Julia Prinsep, widow of See also: Herbert Duckworth
.
While still a fellow he had taken See also: holy orders, which he relinquished in See also: March 1875 upon the passing of the Clerical Disabilities
See also: Act
.
In the meantime (after a visit to See also: America, where he formed lasting friendships with See also: Lowell and See also: Eliot See also: Norton) he settled in London, and wrote largely, not only for the Pall Mall Gazette and the Saturday Review, but also for See also: Fraser, See also: Macmillan, the Fortnightly and other See also: periodicals
.
He was already known as an ardent mountaineer, as a contributor to Peaks, Passes and Glaciers (1862), and as one of the earliest presidents of the Alpine See also: Club, when in 1871, as a vindication in some sort of the See also: mountaineering See also: mania, and as a See also: commemoration of his own first ascents of the Schreckhorn and Rothhorn, he published his fascinating Playground of See also: Europe (republished with additions, 1894)
.
In the same See also: year he was appointed editor of the Cornhill See also: Magazine, the reputation of which he maintained by enlisting R
.
L
.
See also: Stevenson, See also: Thomas
See also: Hardy, W
.
E
.
See also: Norris, Henry James and James See also: Payn among his contributors
.
During the eleven years of his editorship, in addition to three See also: sharp and penetrating volumes of critical studies, reprinted mainly from the Cornhill under the title of See also: Hours in a Library (1874,1876 and 1879), and some Essays on Freethinking and Plain Speaking (1873 and 1897, with See also: introductory essays by J
.
See also: Bryce and H
.
See also: Paul), which included the very striking " A See also: Bad Five Minutes in the See also: Alps " (reprinted from Fraser and the Fortnightly in 1873), he made two valuable contributions to philosophical See also: history and theory, The History of English Thought in the Eighteenth Century (1876 and 1881) and The Science of See also: Ethics (1882); the second of these was extensively adopted as a textbook on the subject
.
The first was generally recognized as an important addition to philosophical literature, and led immediately to Stephen's election at the See also: Athenaeum Club in 1877
.
In 1879 he set on See also: foot a See also: Sunday Walking Club, which contained well-known names, among them Sir F
.
See also: Pollock, F
.
W
.
See also: Maitland, Croom See also: Robertson and See also: Cotter Morison
.
which was entirely contrary to his real nature
.
Sir James Stephen married Mary Richenda See also: Cunningham in 1855
.
On his death his eldest son, Herbert, succeeded to the baronetcy
.
A second son of brilliant literary promise, James See also: Kenneth Stephen (1859-1892), died in his father's lifetime: his See also: principal literary achievements consisted in two small volumes of verse—Lapsus calami and Quo Musa tendis, the former of which went through five See also: editions in a very See also: short See also: time
.
The third son, Mr H
.
L
.
Stephen, was appointed. in 1901 See also: judge of the High See also: Court of See also: Calcutta
.
In the autumn of 1882 he abandoned the direction of the Cornhill to James Payn, having accepted the more responsible duty of the editor of the See also: Dictionary of See also: National Biography, for the first planning and conception of which he was largely responsible
.
The first See also: volume of the Dictionary was published in See also: January 1885, and twenty quarterly volumes followed under Stephen's See also: sole editorship
.
Five volumes were then published under the joint editorship ofSee also: Leslie Stephen and of Mr See also: Sidney See also: Lee, whom he had appointed as his assistant in March 1883
.
Early in 1891, after eight and a
See also: half years' service, Stephen, whose See also: health had been impaired by the labour inseparable from the direction of such an undertaking, resigned the responsibility to his coadjutor
.
Not a trained historian, he often found it difficult to curb his impatience with Carlyle's old enemy Dryasdust
.
Fortunately for the success of the See also: work, re-established health enabled him to remain a contributor to the Dictionary
.
Among his lives are those of See also: Addison, Bolingbroke, Burns, See also: Charlotte Bronte, See also: Byron, Carlyle, See also: Marlborough, See also: Coleridge, See also: Defoe, Dickens, See also: Dryden, See also: Fielding, George Eliot, See also: Gibbon, Gold-smith, See also: Hobbes, Hume, See also: Johnson,
See also: Landor, See also: Locke, Macaulay, the two Mills, See also: Milton, See also: Pope, See also: Scott, See also: Swift, See also: Adam Smith, Thackeray, See also: Warburton, See also: Wordsworth and See also: Young
.
Many of these are salted with irony, and most of them are characterized by felicitous phrases, by frequent flashes of insight (especially of the sardonic See also: order), and by the good See also: fortune which attends a consummate artist in his See also: special craft
.
His particular See also: style of treatment is more appropriate, perhaps, to the self-complacent worthies of the 18th century than to quietists such as See also: Law and Words-worth; but where space demands that a character should be inscribed upon a See also: cherry-See also: stone, Stephen seldom if ever failed to rise to the occasion
.
For the " English Men of Letters " he wrote lives of Swift, Pope and Johnson—the last well described as " the peerless
See also: model of short See also: biographies "—and subsequently George Eliot and Hobbes (1904)
.
During his tenure of the editorship of the Dictionary he was appointed first See also: Clark lecturer at Cambridge (1883), and lectured upon his favourite period—Berkeley, Mandeville, Warburton and Hume; a few years later, upon one of several visits to his intimate friends and old correspondents, Norton and Lowell, he received (1890) a See also: doctor's degree from Harvard University
.
After Lowell's death in 1891 Stephen was mainly instrumental in having a memorial window placed in See also: Westminster Abbey
.
In 1885 he brought out his See also: standard Life of Fawcett, in 1893 his Agnostic's See also: Apology and other Essays, and in 1895 the Life of his brother, Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, which, less essayistic in manner than the Life of Fawcett, contains his most finished See also: biographical work
.
In the same year, in succession to See also: Lord See also: Tennyson, Stephen was elected president of the London Library, and shortly afterwards appointed a trustee of the National Portrait Gallery
.
Some of his experiences as an editor were embodied in Studies of a Biographer, issued in 1898, while in 1900 appeared an important work which he had long had in preparation in continuation of his English Thought in the Eighteenth Century, entitled The English Utilitarians, being full-length studies of Bentham and the two Mills . As a thinker Leslie Stephen showed himself consistently a follower of Hume, Bentham, the Mills and G . H .See also: Lewes, but he accepted the older See also: utilitarianism only as modified by the application of Darwinian principles, upon lines to some extent indicated by Herbert See also: Spencer (see ETHICS)
.
The negative character of his teaching, his See also: anti-sacerdotal See also: bias, his continual attitude of irony, and even the very subtlety of his thought, have co-operated to retard the recognRion of his value as rivalled only by See also: Bagehot among critics of the incisive school
.
For blowing the froth off the flagon of extravagant or inflated eulogy he certainly met no equal in his generation
.
Voluminous as his work is, it is never dull
.
While making self-depreciation a See also: fine See also: art, and perpetually laughing in his sleeve at the literary bias and the literary foible, he fulfilled with exceptional See also: conscience the literary duty of never writing below his best
.
Brought up in a rigid and precise school which scorned all pretence and discouraged See also: enthusiasm as the sign of an See also: ill-regulated mind, heproduced no magnum See also: opus, but he enriched English literature with a fine gallery of literary portraits, not all of them perhaps wholly accurate, but restrained, concise and always significant
.
Besides being a member of the Metaphysical Society, he was for some years president of the Ethical Society (many of his addresses to which were published as Social Rights and Duties in 1896)
.
In addition to his See also: separate See also: works, he superintended a large number of editions, among them Clifford's Essays (1879), Fielding (1882), See also: Richardson (1883), Payn's Backwater of Life (1899), and J
.
R
.
See also: Green's Letters (1901)
.
In 1896 he wrote a memoir of his friend James Dykes See also: Campbell for the second edition of Campbell's Coleridge, and in 1897 he contributed a preface to the English
See also: translation of The Early Life of Wordsworth, by M
.
Legouis
.
His name was included in the See also: Coronation honours See also: list of See also: June 1902, when he was made K.C.B
.
In See also: December of this year he had to undergo an operation, after which his health began to wane rapidly
.
In 1903 his See also: Ford lectures, one last luminous talk about the 18th century, were delivered by his See also: nephew, H
.
L
.
See also: Fisher
.
He told a nurse that his enjoyment of books had begun and would end with Bowwell's Johnson
.
Like Johnson, under a brusque exterior and a coltish temper, he concealed a sympathetic and humorous soul
.
In spite of " natural sorrows "—the loss of two much loved wives, he pronounced his life to have been a happy one
.
He died at his house, 22 See also: Hyde See also: Park See also: Gate, on the 22nd of See also: February 1904, and his remains were buried at Golders Green
.
A Leslie Stephen memorial lectureship was founded at Cambridge in 1905 . Under an austere See also: form and visage Stephen was in reality the soul of susceptibility and of an almost freakish fun
.
This is shown very clearly in the fantastic marginal drawings with which he delighted to illustrate his life for the amusement of young See also: people
.
See Life and Letters, by F
.
W
.
See also: Mai tland (1906) ; and Dictionary of National Biography, postscript to Statistical Account in the 1908=1909 reissue
.
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