- Collection Overview
- Collection Description & Creator Information
- Access & Use
- Collection History
- Find Related Materials
Collection Overview
- Creator:
- Davidson, John
- Collector:
- Princeton University. Library. Special Collections
- Title:
- Princeton University Library Collection of John Davidson Materials
- Repository:
- Manuscripts Division
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/2v23vt385
- Dates:
- 1879-1945 (mostly 1890-1909)
- Size:
- 4 boxes and 1.60 linear feet
- Storage Note:
- Firestone Library (scamss): Boxes B-001089, B-001097 to B-001099
- Language:
- English
Abstract
John Davidson was a late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Scottish poet hailed for his provincial, melancholy body of work. This collection contains letters, manuscripts, reports, galley proofs with Davidson's holograph corrections, documents, and clippings pertaining to his literary career.
Collection Description & Creator Information
- Description:
Contains over 350 letters by Davidson, most of which are addressed to Grant Richards, his friend and publisher. There are nine autograph manuscripts in the collection, including The Testament of John Davidson (London, G. Richards, 1908) and Fleet Street and Other Poems (London: G. Richards, 1909). Also included is a folder of reports prepared by Davidson for Grant Richards, in which the author gives his assessment of materials under consideration for publication. There are a substantial number of letters written by Mrs. Davidson to Richards concerning her husband's disappearance and subsequent suicide in 1909. Other items include galley proofs with Davidson's holograph corrections, documents, and clippings pertaining to his literary career.
- Collection Creator Biography:
Davidson, John
John Davidson was a late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Scottish poet hailed for his provincial, melancholy body of work. Born in Barrhead, Renfrewshire, Scotland in 1857, Davidson had a conflicted young adulthood, dabbling in different areas. During his teaching years, he made contact with different literary groups, and in 1890 he moved to London with his wife and two sons to pursue a career as a writer.
Davidson achieved moderate success with In a Music Hall (1891), Fleet Street Eclogues (1893). He is also known for being the first to translate the works of German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche into English. However, during his final years, not one of his twelve published original plays was produced and few of his plays or novels received any critical acclaim. Davidson suffered greatly from his lack of acceptance. His health deteriorated as he battled with asthma and bronchitis, and perhaps cancer at the end. He suffered from depression and in 1909 his body was discovered in the sea with a wound to the skull. Although it appeared to be a suicide, he was considered "found dead" and later buried at sea.
Although Davidson has been remembered primarily as a minor poet of the 1890s, his poetry and talent for capturing the urban experience was an important contribution to more modern verse. He is associated with the Rhymer's Club, and considered a part of Yeats's "Tragic Generation"; his poetry attracted the attention and admiration of such major modern writers as T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf.
Collection History
- Acquisition:
Most of the collection purchased from Sotheby and Maggs. Letter from Davidson to Harry Furniss is a gift of Robert J. Barry Jr. Manuscript of translation of "Memoires du Marechal Duc de Richelieu" is a gift of J. Harlin O'Connell. The collection was formed as a result of a departmental practice of combining into one collection manuscript material of various accessions pertaining to a particular author.
- Appraisal
No appraisal information is available.
- Processing Information
Finding aid updated by Chloe Pfendler in 2018.
Access & Use
- Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research use.
- Conditions Governing Use
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. No further photoduplication of copies of material in the collection can be made when Princeton University Library does not own the original. Inquiries regarding publishing material from the collection should be directed to RBSC Public Services staff through the Ask Us! form. The library has no information on the status of literary rights in the collection and researchers are responsible for determining any questions of copyright.
- Credit this material:
Princeton University Library Collection of John Davidson Materials; Manuscripts Division, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/2v23vt385
- Location:
-
Firestone LibraryOne Washington RoadPrinceton, NJ 08544, USA
- Storage Note:
- Firestone Library (scamss): Boxes B-001089, B-001097 to B-001099
Find More
- Subject Terms:
- Authors and publishers -- England -- 19th century.
Poets, Scottish -- 19th century.
Publishers and publishing -- England -- 19th century.
Scottish poetry -- 19th century. - Genre Terms:
- Correspondence -- 19th century
Drafts (preliminary versions)
Galley proofs (Printing)
Poems. - Names:
- Richards, Grant, 1872-1948