Sidney Lee

Sir Sidney Lee FSA FBA (5 December 1859 – 3 March 1926) was an English biographer, writer and critic.


Sidney Lee

FSA FBA
Sir Sidney in 1924
BornSolomon Lazarus Lee
5 December 1859
Bloomsbury, London, England
Died3 March 1926(1926-03-03) (aged 66)
Kensington, London, England
Occupation
  • Biographer
  • writer
  • critic
NationalityEnglish
EducationCity of London School
Alma materBalliol College, Oxford
RelativesElizabeth Lee (sister)

Biography

Lee was born Solomon Lazarus Lee in 1859 at 12 Keppel Street, Bloomsbury, London. He was educated at the City of London School and at Balliol College, Oxford, where he graduated in modern history in 1882. In 1883, Lee became assistant-editor of the Dictionary of National Biography.[1] In 1890 he became joint editor, and on the retirement of Sir Leslie Stephen in 1891, succeeded him as editor.

Lee wrote over 800 articles in the Dictionary, mainly on Elizabethan authors or statesmen.[1] His sister Elizabeth Lee also contributed. While still at Balliol, Lee had written two articles on Shakespearean questions, which were printed in The Gentleman's Magazine. In 1884, he published a book about Stratford-on-Avon, with illustrations by Edward Hull. Lee's article on Shakespeare in the 51st volume (1897) of the Dictionary of National Biography formed the basis of his Life of William Shakespeare (1898), which reached its fifth edition in 1905.

In 1902, Lee edited the Oxford facsimile edition of the first folio of Shakespeare's comedies, histories and tragedies, followed in 1902 and 1904 by supplementary volumes giving details of extant copies, and in 1906 by a complete edition of Shakespeare's works.

Lee received a knighthood in 1911.[2] Between 1913 and 1924, he served as Professor of English Literature and Language at East London College.

Works

Besides the editions of English classics, Lee's works include:

  • Queen Victoria: A Biography (1904)
  • Great Englishmen of the Sixteenth century (1904), based on his Lowell Institute lectures at Boston, Massachusetts, in 1903
  • Shakespeare and the Modern Stage (1906)[1]
  • Shakespeare's England : an account of the life & manners of his age (1916, with Walter Alexander Raleigh)
  • King Edward VII, a Biography (1925)[3]

There are personal letters from Lee, including those written during his final illness, in the T.F. Tout Collection of the John Rylands Library in Manchester.

gollark: ```javascriptconst spaces = regex(/^ */)const whitespace = regex(/^[ \n\t]*/)const name = regex(/^[^ \n\t():]+/)const code = many(coroutine(function*() { yield spaces return yield choice([ coroutine(function*() { yield char("(") const x = yield code yield spaces yield char(")") return x }), name ])}))const program = sequenceOf([ many1(coroutine(function*() { yield whitespace const n = yield name yield whitespace yield str(":=") const c = yield code return { code: c, name: n } })), possibly(whitespace)]).map(([x, _]) => x)```parsing™
gollark: It was very elegant. I combinated™ it in a few lines of code.
gollark: It went nicely and I had a cool parser and all until it turned out that we were accidentally pushing to the wrong end of a list or something in a stupidly hard to debug way.
gollark: Fun times, that was. We were using JS to implement that weird stacky language.
gollark: Oh, like our interpreter race.

See also

References

  1. Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lee, Sidney" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  2. "Obituary: Sir Sidney Lee, Shakespearean scholar and biographer" . The Times. p. 9. 1926 via Wikisource.
  3. Works written by or about Sidney Lee at Wikisource

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