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JOHN STERLING (1806-1844)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 901 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN STERLING (1806-1844)  ,
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British author, was born at Karnes Castle in Bute on the loth of
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July 18o6 . He belonged to a
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family of Scottish origin which had settled in Ireland during the Cromwellian period . His
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father,
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Edward Sterling (1773_ 1847), had been called to the Irish bar, but, having fought as a militia captain at
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Vinegar Hill, afterwards volunteered with his
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company into the
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line . On the breaking up of his regiment he went to Scotland and took to farming at Kames Castle . In 1804 he married Hester Coningham . In 1810 the family removed to Llanblethian, Glamorganshire, and during his residence there Edward Sterling, under the signature of " Vetus," contributed a number of letters to The Times, which were reprinted in 1812, and a second series in 1814 . In the latter
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year he removed to Paris, but on the escape of
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Napoleon from Elba in 1815 took up his residence in
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London, obtaining a position on the staff of The Times newspaper; and during the
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late years of Thomas Barnes's administration he was practically editor . His fiery, emphatic and oracular mode of writing conferred those characteristics on The Times which were recognized in the
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sobriquet of the " Thunderer." John Sterling was his second son, the elder being Colonel
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Sir Anthony Coningham Sterling (1805-1871), who besides serving in the Crimea and as military secretary to Lord Clyde during the
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Indian Mutiny, was the author of The Highland Brigade in the Crimea and other books . After studying for one year at the university of
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Glasgow, John Sterling in 1824 entered Trinity College, Cambridge, where he had for tutor
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Julius Charles Hare . At Cambridge he took a distinguished
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part in the debates of the union, and became a member of the " Apostles' " Club, forming friendships with Frederick Denison Maurice and Richard Trench . He removed to Trinity Hall with the intention of graduating in law, but
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left the university without taking a degree . During the next four years he resided chiefly in London, employing himself actively in literature and making a number of
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literary friends .

With Maurice he

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purchased the
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Athenaeum in 1828 from J .
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Silk Buckingham, but the enterprise was not a pecuniary success . He also formed an intimacy with the
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Spanish revolutionist General Torrijos, in whose unfortunate expedition he took an active
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interest . But he did not accompany it, as he was kept in England by his
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marriage to Susannah, daughter of Lieut.-General Barton . Shortly after his marriage in 183o symptoms of pulmonary disease induced him to take up his residence in the island of St Vincent, where he had inherited some
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property, and he remained there fifteen months before returning to England . After spending some time on the Continent in
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June 1834 he was ordained and became curate at Hurstmonceaux, where his old tutor Julius Hare was vicar . Acting on the advice of his physician he resigned his clerical duties in the following
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February, but, according to Carlyle, the
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primary cause was a divergence from the opinions of the Church . There remained to him the " re-source of the pen," but, having to " live all the rest of his days as in continual
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flight for his very existence," his literary achievements were necessarily fragmentary . He published in 1833 Arthur Coningsby, a novel, which attracted little attention, and his Poems (1839), the Election, a Poem (1841), and Strafford, a tragedy (1843), were not more successful . He had, however, established a connexion in 1837 with Blackwood's
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Magazine, to which he contributed a variety of papers and several tales of extraordinary promise not fulfilled in his more considerable undertakings . Among these papers were " The
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Onyx Ring " and " The Palace of Morgana." He died at
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Ventnor on the 18th of September 1844, his wife having died in the preceding year . His son, Major-General John B .

Sterling (b . 1840), after entering the

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navy. went into the army, and had a distinguished career (wounded at Tel-el-Kebir in 1882), both as a soldier and as a writer on military subjects . John Sterling's papers were entrusted to the joint care of Thomas Carlyle and Archdeacon Hare . Essays and Tales, by John Sterling, collected and edited, with a memoir of his
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life, by Julius Charles Hare, appeared in 1848 in two volumes . So dissatisfied was Carlyle with the memoir that he resolved to give his own " testimony 'about his friend, and his vivid Life (1851) has perpetuated the memory of Sterling more than any of the latter's own writings .

End of Article: JOHN STERLING (1806-1844)
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