Edmund Yates
Edmund Hodgson Yates (3 July 1831 – 20 May 1894) was a British journalist, novelist and dramatist.
Early life
He was born in Edinburgh to the actor and theatre manager Frederick Henry Yates and was educated at Highgate School in London from 1840 to 1846,[1] and later in Düsseldorf.[2] His first career was a clerk in the General Post Office, becoming in 1862 head of the missing letter department, and where he stayed until 1872. Meanwhile, he entered journalism, working on the Court Journal and then Daily News, under Charles Dickens.[2]
In 1854 he published his first book My Haunts and their Frequenters, after which followed a succession of novels and plays. As a contributor to All the Year Round and Household Words, he gained the high opinion of Dickens, who was a friend; in the 1850s, Yates lived at No. 43 Doughty Street, London, close to Dickens's former home at No. 48, which is now the Charles Dickens Museum.
Journalism career
In 1858 Yates was made editor of a new paper called Town Talk. His first number contained a laudatory article on Dickens, and the second a disparaging one on Thackeray, containing various personal references to private matters. Thackeray brought the article before the committee of the Garrick Club, of which he contended that Yates had made improper use, and the result was that Yates was expelled from the club. Besides editing the magazine Temple Bar and Tinsley's Magazine, Yates during the 1860s took to lecturing on social topics, and published several books, including the novel Black Sheep (1867). In the Morning Star, under the heading of "Le Flâneur", he continued the sort of column which he had inaugurated in the Illustrated Times. On his retirement from the Post Office he went to the United States on a lecture tour, and afterwards, as a special correspondent for the New York Herald, travelled through Europe.[3]
Back in London, Yates was perhaps best known as proprietor and editor, under the pen-name of "Atlas", of The World society newspaper, which he established in 1874 with Eustace Clare Grenville Murray, and which for a time was edited by Alexander Meyrick Broadley. The World, which was perceived as a newspaper chronicling upper class London Society, was a pioneer in "personal journalism", such as the interview, which was later adopted by newspapers generally.[4]
In 1885 he was sentenced to four months' imprisonment for libelling Lord Lonsdale,[5] yet in later life enjoyed a second career as a county magistrate.[4]
Yates was also the author of, and performed in, Invitations at Egyptian Hall, London, which ran in 1862–1863. The work was a highly successful comedy in which he and Harold Littledale Power posed as hosts to a variety of singers and actors. Power also performed songs and imitations.
Edmund Yates wrote his autobiography titled Edmund Yates, His Recollections and Experiences, the first edition of which was published by Richard Bentley and Son in 1884.
Assessments
Marie Corelli wrote of him: "Too hastily judged by some, and maligned by others, he was to those who recognised his real character 'a man among men' – a frank friend, an equally frank foe, and an open hater of all things mean and false and hypocritical."[6] According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, "He had been the typical flâneur in the literary world of the period, an entertaining writer and talker, with a talent for publicity of the modern type—developed, no doubt, from his theatrical parentage—which, through his imitators, was destined to have considerable influence on journalism."[3]
Works
- After Office-Hours (1861)
- Running the Gauntlet (1865)
- For Better, for Worse (1864)
- The Business of Pleasure (1865)
- Land at Last (1866)
- Kissing the Rod (1866)
- Broken to Harness: A Story of English Domestic Life (2v., 1866)
- The Forlorn Hope (2v., 1867)
- The Rock Ahead (1868)
- Wrecked in Port (2v., 1869)
- A Righted Wrong (1870)
- Dr. Wainwright's Patient (2v., 1871)
- The Yellow Flag (1872)
- A Waiting Race (2v., 1872)
- Castaway (2v., 1872)
- Nobody’s Fortune (2v., 1872)
- The Yellow Flag (2v., 1873)
- The Impending Sword (2v., 1874; sometimes cited as Impeding)
- Two by Tricks (1874)
- Black Sheep (1874)
- A Silent Witness (2v., 1875)
- Going to the Bad (1876)
Strangely enough, most of Yates's works, although they appeared in English, were apparently originally published in Leipzig, Germany.[7]
References
- ^ Highgate School Roll 1833–1912 (1st ed.). London. 1913. p. 48.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
- ^ a b public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Yates, Edmund Hodgson". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 907–908. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
- ^ a b Mr Edmund Yates, The Atheneum, 26 May 1894, No. 3474, p. 679
- ^ Mr. Edmund Yates's Libel, Goulburn Evening Penny Post (Australia), Sat 12 April 1884, Page 6; http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/98433968
- ^ Correlli, Marie The Last Days of Edmund Yates, Temple Bar, Jul 1894 pp378-384
- ^ Worldcat (www.worldcat.org).
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- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cousin, John William (1910). "Yates, Edmund". A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London: J. M. Dent & Sons – via Wikisource.
External links
- Works by Edmund Yates at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Edmund Yates at the Internet Archive
- Works by Edmund Yates at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .
- Anonymous (1873). Cartoon portraits and biographical sketches of men of the day. Illustrated by Frederick Waddy. London: Tinsley Brothers. pp. 104–105. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
- Edmund Yates Papers in The University of Queensland Library – Victorian Fiction Research Guide
- Letters of George Augustus Sala to Edmund Yates – Victorian Fiction Research Guide
- Edmund Yates – Victorian Fiction Research Guide