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John William Cousin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John W. Cousin
BornJohn William Cousin
1849
Scotland
DiedDecember 1910
United Kingdom
Pen nameJohn W. Cousin, J.W. Cousin
OccupationWriter, editor
NationalityScottish
GenreNon-fiction, biographies, encyclopedias, literary criticism
Notable worksA Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature

John William Cousin (1849–1910) was a British writer, editor and biographer. He was one of six children born to William and Anne Ross Cousin, his mother being a noted hymn-writer, in Scotland.[1] A fellow of the Faculty of Actuaries[2] and secretary of the Actuarial Society of Edinburgh,[3] he revised and wrote the introduction for Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Evangeline in 1907.

However, he is best known as the editor of A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature, a collection of biographical entries on numerous authors and literary figures, originally published in 1910 for J.M. Dent's "Everyman Library" series.[1] The bulk of his work was later used by David Clayton Browning to compile the Everyman's Dictionary of Literary Biography which was released in 1958, and subsequently reprinted during the 1960s and 1970s.

Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^ a b Lee, Sidney, ed. (1912). "Cousin, Anne Ross" . Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). Vol. 1. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 426.
  2. ^ Faculty of Actuaries in Scotland Transactions of the Faculty of Actuaries. Vol. 1. No. 4. London: Charles & Edwin Layton, 1902. (pg. 1)
  3. ^ The Insurance Yearbook, 1898–9. [Life and Miscellaneous]. 26th ed. New York: The Spectator Company, 1898. (pg. 129)
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