William Alexander Clouston

William Alexander Clouston (1843 – 23 October 1896) was a Scottish 19th century folklorist from Orkney.[1]

A Supplement to Alliborne's Dictionary (1891, pp. 349–350), as quoted in Folklore,[1] gives the following biographical information:

b. 1843, at Stromness, Orkney Islands, of an old Norse family, in early life was engaged in commercial pursuits in Glasgow and London, but relinquished these to engage in journalism and literature; he edited several Scotch provincial newspapers, 1871-79, and is a writer for the Glasgow Herald, Evening Times, &c. He has given particular attention to Oriental fiction and folklore, and contributed to Sir R. F. Burton's "Supplemental Arabian Nights" analogues and variants of some of the tales in vols. I-III.

Bibliography

  • Arabian Poetry for English Readers
  • Flowers from a Persian Garden and Other Papers
  • Book of Wise Sayings: Selected Largely from Eastern Sources
  • The Book of Noodles: Stories Of Simpletons; Or, Fools And Their Follies
  • The Book of Sindibad, 1884, 300 privately printed copies.
gollark: I mean, the main reason to have an underscore is to avoid special characters like space, except then you just stick an exclamation mark in for no reason.
gollark: "Pop_OS!". It's so stupid a name.
gollark: It is generally desired that help-asking people will provide relevant information, like distro in this case, and also check the wikis or interwebs first.
gollark: https://peter-is-stupid.osmarks.tk/en/Java.html Here's the wiki page for Arch.
gollark: Just check the... Debian? Ubuntu? package list or wiki page.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.