Percy Addleshaw
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Percy Addleshaw (1866 in Bowdon, Cheshire – 1916) was an English barrister and writer.
A graduate of Christ Church, Oxford, Addleshaw was called to the bar in 1893. He was an admirer and friend of Roden Noel.[1] He wrote articles, poems and reviews for various publications and, under the pseudonym of Percy Hemingway[2] published Out of Egypt,[3] a volume of short stories (1894) and The Happy Wanderer and other verse. In 1920 a posthumous collection of verse was published with a lenghty introduction by Arundel Osborne, titled Last Verses.
Bibliography
[edit]- 1896 - The happy wanderer & other verse
- 1912 - The cathedral church of exeter. A description of its fabric and a brief history of the epispocal see
- 1916 - Sir Philip Sidney
References
[edit]- ^ The Literary World, Volume 57, (1898) James Clarke & Co., London
- ^ Stedman, Edmund Clarence, ed. (1895). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895: Selections Illustrating the Editor's Critical Review of British Poetry in the Reign of Victoria, Volume 1. Houghton Mifflin. p. 679. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
- ^ Addleshaw, Percy (1895). "Out of Egypt: Stories from the Threshold of the East".
Further reading
[edit]- A Victorian Anthology, Houghton, Mifflin and Company (1895)
External links
[edit]Wikiquote has quotations related to Percy Addleshaw.
- Works by Percy Addleshaw at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Percy Addleshaw at the Internet Archive