Difference between revisions of "Walter Pater"

From LGBT Archive
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 3: Line 3:
 
He was born in [[Stepney]], the son of a doctor, who died while Walter was an infant. The family then moved to [[Enfield]]. He was educated at the King's School [[Canterbury]] and Queen's College, [[Oxford]]. He abandoned boyhood thoughts of becoming a clergyman, and remained in Oxford as a private tutor and then a fellow of Brasenose College.
 
He was born in [[Stepney]], the son of a doctor, who died while Walter was an infant. The family then moved to [[Enfield]]. He was educated at the King's School [[Canterbury]] and Queen's College, [[Oxford]]. He abandoned boyhood thoughts of becoming a clergyman, and remained in Oxford as a private tutor and then a fellow of Brasenose College.
  
Letters have recently emerged documenting a "romance"<ref name=Inman>Billie Andrew Inman | year = 1991 | title = Pater in the 1990s |chapter = Estrangement and Connection: Walter Pater, Benjamin Jowett, and William M. Hardinge | url = http://www.uncg.edu/eng/elt/pater/chap2.html | accessdate =27 November 2007 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070804230203/http://www.uncg.edu/eng/elt/pater/chap2.html |archivedate = 4 August 2007</ref> with a nineteen-year-old Balliol undergraduate, William Money Hardinge, who had attracted unfavorable attention as a result of his outspoken homosexuality and blasphemous verse, and who later became a novelist.[14] Many of Pater's works focus on male beauty, friendship and love, either in a Platonic way or, obliquely, in a more physical way.<ref name="eribon">{{Citation |title = Insult and the Making of the Gay Self |first= Didier |last= Eribon | others = Lucey, Michael (transl.) |year = 2004 |publisher = Duke University Press |isbn= 0-8223-3371-6 | pages = 159–79}} Another undergraduate, W. H. Mallock, had passed the Pater-Hardinge letters to Jowett,<ref>Information given by [[Edmund Gosse]] to [[A. C. Benson]] (Benson's ''Diary'', 73, 1 September 1905); ''Walter Pater: An Imaginative Sense of Fact'', ed. Philip Dodd (London, 1981), p.48</ref> who summoned Pater:
+
Letters have recently emerged documenting a "romance"<ref name=Inman>http://www.uncg.edu/eng/elt/pater/chap2.html Billie Andrew Inman, "Estrangement and Connection: Walter Pater, Benjamin Jowett, and William M. Hardinge" in ''Pater in the 1990s'', 1991. Accessed: 2007-08-04. (Archived by WebCite® at http://web.archive.org/web/20070804230203/http://www.uncg.edu/eng/elt/pater/chap2.html</ref> with a nineteen-year-old Balliol undergraduate, William Money Hardinge, who had attracted unfavorable attention as a result of his outspoken homosexuality and blasphemous verse, and who later became a novelist.<ref name=Inman/> Many of Pater's works focus on male beauty, friendship and love, either in a Platonic way or, obliquely, in a more physical way.<ref name="eribon">Didier Eribon, "Insult and the Making of the Gay Self", transl, Michael Lucey, (Duke University Press, 2004, isbn= 0-8223-3371-6), pages 159–79</ref> Another undergraduate, W. H. Mallock, had passed the Pater-Hardinge letters to Jowett,<ref>Information given by [[Edmund Gosse]] to [[A. C. Benson]] (Benson's ''Diary'', 73, 1 September 1905); ''Walter Pater: An Imaginative Sense of Fact'', ed. Philip Dodd (London, 1981), p.48</ref> who summoned Pater:
  
 
:"Pater's whole nature changed under the strain" (wrote A. C. Benson in his diary) "after the dreadful interview with Jowett. He became old, crushed, despairing – and this dreadful weight lasted for years; it was years before he realised that Jowett would not use them."<ref>A. C. Benson, ''Diary'', 73, 1 September 1905; ''Walter Pater: An Imaginative Sense of Fact'', ed. Philip Dodd (London, 1981), p.48</ref>
 
:"Pater's whole nature changed under the strain" (wrote A. C. Benson in his diary) "after the dreadful interview with Jowett. He became old, crushed, despairing – and this dreadful weight lasted for years; it was years before he realised that Jowett would not use them."<ref>A. C. Benson, ''Diary'', 73, 1 September 1905; ''Walter Pater: An Imaginative Sense of Fact'', ed. Philip Dodd (London, 1981), p.48</ref>

Revision as of 11:12, 21 March 2015

Walter Pater Walter Horatio Pater (1839–1894) was an essayist, literary and art critic, and novelist.

He was born in Stepney, the son of a doctor, who died while Walter was an infant. The family then moved to Enfield. He was educated at the King's School Canterbury and Queen's College, Oxford. He abandoned boyhood thoughts of becoming a clergyman, and remained in Oxford as a private tutor and then a fellow of Brasenose College.

Letters have recently emerged documenting a "romance"[1] with a nineteen-year-old Balliol undergraduate, William Money Hardinge, who had attracted unfavorable attention as a result of his outspoken homosexuality and blasphemous verse, and who later became a novelist.[1] Many of Pater's works focus on male beauty, friendship and love, either in a Platonic way or, obliquely, in a more physical way.[2] Another undergraduate, W. H. Mallock, had passed the Pater-Hardinge letters to Jowett,[3] who summoned Pater:

"Pater's whole nature changed under the strain" (wrote A. C. Benson in his diary) "after the dreadful interview with Jowett. He became old, crushed, despairing – and this dreadful weight lasted for years; it was years before he realised that Jowett would not use them."[4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 http://www.uncg.edu/eng/elt/pater/chap2.html Billie Andrew Inman, "Estrangement and Connection: Walter Pater, Benjamin Jowett, and William M. Hardinge" in Pater in the 1990s, 1991. Accessed: 2007-08-04. (Archived by WebCite® at http://web.archive.org/web/20070804230203/http://www.uncg.edu/eng/elt/pater/chap2.html
  2. Didier Eribon, "Insult and the Making of the Gay Self", transl, Michael Lucey, (Duke University Press, 2004, isbn= 0-8223-3371-6), pages 159–79
  3. Information given by Edmund Gosse to A. C. Benson (Benson's Diary, 73, 1 September 1905); Walter Pater: An Imaginative Sense of Fact, ed. Philip Dodd (London, 1981), p.48
  4. A. C. Benson, Diary, 73, 1 September 1905; Walter Pater: An Imaginative Sense of Fact, ed. Philip Dodd (London, 1981), p.48