Benjamin Farjeon

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Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Benjamin Leopold Farjeon (12 May 1838 – 23 July 1903) was an English novelist, playwright, printer and journalist. As an author, he was known for his huge output.

Life

Farjeon was born in London to Dinah Levy and Jacob Farjeon, Orthodox Jews. He was raised in Whitechapel and had no formal secular education.

At 14, he entered the office of the Nonconformist, a Christian journal, to learn the printing trade. He broke away from the strict faith of his father and in 1854 emigrated to Australia. During the voyage he was moved from steerage to cabin class because he had produced some numbers of a ship newspaper, the Ocean Record.Template:Sfn

Farjeon worked as a gold miner in Victoria (Australia), started a newspaper, then went to New Zealand in 1861. He settled in Dunedin, working as a journalist on the Otago Daily Times, edited by Julius Vogel, of which he became manager and sub-editor.

Farjeon began writing novels and plays, as a self-confessed disciple of Dickens, whose attention he managed to catch.Template:Sfn In his novel Grif: A story of Australian life,[1] for example, he modelled the Melbourne street Arab Grif on Jo in Bleak House.[2] In 1868, he returned to Britain and lived in London in the Adelphi Theatre.

Over the next 35 years, Farjeon produced nearly 60 novels. Many of his works were illustrated by his long-time friend Nicholas Chevalier.

Benjamin Farjeon died in Hampstead on 23 July 1903, aged 65.Template:Sfn

Family

Farjeon married Margaret Jane "Maggie" Jefferson (1853–1933), daughter of the American actor Joseph Jefferson, on 6 June 1877. Their children included J. Jefferson Farjeon, Eleanor Farjeon, Herbert Farjeon, and Harry Farjeon.Template:Sfn

Selected novels

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  • Shadows on the Snow: A Christmas Story (1865)
  • Grif: a Story of Australian Life (1870)
  • Jessie Trim (1870)
  • Blade-o'-Grass: A Christmas Story (1871)
  • Joshua Marvel (1871)
  • London's Heart (1873)
  • Bread-and-Cheese and Kisses: A Christmas Story (1873)
  • Golden Grain (1874)
  • The King of No-Land (1875)
  • The Duchess of Rosemary Lane (1876)
  • An Island Pearl (1876)
  • At the Sign of the Silver Flagon (1880)
  • Great Porter Square: A Mystery (1884)
  • The House of White Shadows (1884)
  • Love's Harvest (1885)
  • The Sacred Nugget (1885)
  • In a Silver Sea (1886)
  • The Nine of Hearts (1886)
  • A Secret Inheritance (1887)
  • The Tragedy of Featherstone (1887)
  • Devlin the Barber (1888)
  • Toilers of Babylon (1888)
  • The Peril of Richard Pardon (1888)
  • Miser Fairbrother (1888)
  • The Mystery of M. Felix (1890)
  • For the Defense (1891)
  • The Blood White Rose (1891)
  • The Last Tenant (1893)
  • Something Occurred (1893)
  • Aaron the Jew (1894) (US title: A Fair Jewess)
  • Miriam Rozella (1898)
  • Samuel Boyd of Catchpole Square: A Mystery (1899)
  • The Mesmerists (1900)

Notes

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  1. 1870, 2 vols, London: Tinsley Brothers.
  2. XIX Century Fiction, Part I, A–K (Jarndyce, Bloomsbury, 2019).

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References

External links

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