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E. Nesbit

 
Biography: Edith Nesbit

Best known as the author of such children's novels as The Railway Children and The Story of the Treasure-Seekers, the English writer E. Nesbit (1858-1924) also authored fiction, drama, and poetry for adults. In addition she was active in political causes and together with her husband, Hubert Bland, the play wright Bernard Shaw, and others, founded the Fabian Society in England to further socialist aims.

Early Life

Nesbit was born August 15, 1858, in London to Sarah and John Collis Nesbit, a chemist who taught at an agricultural college in south London that had been established by his father. Nesbit's earliest years appear idyllic as she and her brothers, Arthur and Harry, were free to roam and play on the expansive grounds of the school. This period came to an abrupt end, however, with the sudden death of her father at age 43 in 1862. Nesbit's mother assumed the role of providing for her family, remaining connected with the college as an administrator until the ill-health of Nesbit's elder sister Mary prompted the family to relocate to the seaside. For the remainder of her childhood Nesbit alternated between terms at boarding school and summer holidays in the country, either in England or abroad. The depiction of one-parent households and siblings spending time together away from adult supervision that characterizes her later fiction is seen to stem directly from the experiences of her own childhood. When she was nineteen years old Nesbit met Hubert Bland, a young man who shared her socialist political ideals. The two wed in April 1880, two months prior to the birth of their first child, Paul.

After their marriage, Bland developed smallpox, an illness that prevented him from working, and Nesbit undertook the financial responsibility of providing for the household. During the 1880s, a period when she gave birth to two more children, Iris in 1881 and Fabian in 1885, she began contributing short stories to magazines and writing verses for greeting cards. It was also during this time that the couple participated in the founding of the Fabian Society, a group dedicated to social justice that proposed the gradual reform of society rather than revolutionary tactics. In addition to the Blands and Shaw, the early Fabians included Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Annie Besant, H. G. Wells, and Havelock Ellis. The society remains active in British politics more than a century after its founding, with Prime Minister Tony Blair and many Cabinet ministers counted among its members.

Nesbit's liberal outlook extended even to her own domestic arrangements. Bland, who at the time of their marriage was simultaneously engaged to another woman with whom he had a child, proved to be an unfaithful husband, and Nesbit raised as her own the two children he fathered with a third woman, Alice Hoatson. According to biographers, Nesbit also entered into a series of sexual relationships outside her marriage with other writers, including Shaw, Noel Griffith, and Oswald Barron, with whom she collaborated on the short story collection The Butler in Bohemia (1894).

Throughout the 1880s and 1890s Nesbit produced numerous volumes of poetry, romances, horror stories, children's fiction, and several plays, and edited a series of anthologies of poetry and sketches with Robert Ellis Mack. For the most part Nesbit's works throughout this period are considered conventional by critical standards though they provided necessary financial remuneration. She and Bland, who after recovering from his illness had turned to political journalism, also collaborated on a novel, The Prophet's Mantle, published under the joint pseudonym Fabian Bland in 1885. In 1899 Nesbit published her first novels, the Gothic romance The Secret of Kyriels for adult readers and The Story of the Treasure-Seekers, her groundbreaking children's work.

Success as a Children's Novelist

The Story of the Treasure-Seekers was published serially, beginning in 1897, and traces the fortunes of the impoverished and motherless Bastable children, who undertake various attempts at increasing their family's income. The novel represented a significant departure from Nesbit's previous works and comprised her most notable success. The appeal of the Treasure-Seekers owed much to its point of view, which refrained from direct moral instruction, and to the humor stemming from its lively narrator, Oswald Bastable, considered Nesbit's most memorable character. Alison Lurie, commenting in Writers for Children, described Oswald as "a child much after [Nesbit's] own pattern: bold, quick-tempered, egotistic, and literary." Unlike other children's works of the era, The Story of the Treasure-Seekers provided a realistic rather than sentimental view of sibling relationships, including squabbling among the family and the resistance of the younger members to be dominated by the elder. Following on the success of the Bastable stories Nesbit issued two additional volumes of their adventures, The Wouldbegoods (1901), in which the children, now comfortably settled in a fine home, try different means of doing good for others, and The New Treasure-Seekers (1904), considered the most serious of the series.

Children's Fantasy Novels

At the same time that Nesbit was issuing realistic stories of childhood, she wrote a number of fantasy works, including the popular Book of Dragons (1900). In 1902 she published Five Children and It, another children's work that would bring her renown. In it she depicted a family of children - Cyril, Robert, Anthea, Jane, and their baby brother (known as "the Lamb") - who undergo a series of adventures, but in this case the adventures are magical. During their summer holidays, the children encounter a Psammead, or sand fairy, who has the power to grant them one wish per day. The wishes, including having the ability to fly or possessing great beauty, all have unforeseen, humorous consequences, and the novel has proved enduringly popular: it remains in print more than a century after its first appearance. In a sequel, The Phoenix and the Carpet (1904), the mythological bird hatches in their nursery fireplace and leads the children on a number of magic carpet adventures. The Story of the Amulet (1906) continues the story, when the children, who are staying with a relative while their parents are out of the country, rediscover the Psammead in a London pet shop, and his gratitude at being rescued leads them on a time-travel adventure to ancient Atlantis and to a utopian future based on Fabian ideals. Their quest throughout the journey is to recover the missing half of a magic amulet that will grant their heart's desire: the restoration of their family.

The Railway Children

Returning to the realistic adventure tale, Nesbit published The Railway Children in 1906. Her most beloved work, the novel has been adapted for stage, musical theater, cinema, and television. In the story, Roberta ("Bobbie"), Peter, and Phyllis are the children of a government worker imprisoned as a suspected spy. During her husband's absence, the children's mother moves the family from their comfortable London home into a rural cottage to reduce housekeeping expenses, and she supports the family through free-lance writing. With little else to occupy them, the children find entertainment in the nearby railway and befriend its station workers. They ultimately become known to an "Old Gentleman" who rides the train each morning and who is instrumental in clearing their father and restoring their family.

The House of Arden (1908) and Harding's Luck (1909) center on Edred and Elfrida Arden, who use magic to visit the past in hopes of finding where their family fortune is hidden. Their adventure brings them into contact with Dickie Harding, an impoverished and crippled cousin. The rightful heir to the Arden title and fortune, he chooses to remain in the seventeenth century, where he is no longer lame. In the novel Nesbit uses the device of time travel to illustrate her socialist ideals, portraying Jacobean England as an era of social harmony in stark contrast to the disparity between high society and the slum life Dickie endures in the Edwardian world.

Fiction for Adults

Despite the popularity and critical regard of her novels for children, Nesbit continued throughout her career to think of herself as primarily a writer for adults. Her most successful adult novel, The Red House (1902) concerns a young couple renovating an old country house, a plot drawn directly from her own life and the restoration of Well Hall, the Blands' home in Eltham. Among her other works for adults are The Incomplete Amorist (1906), a romance centering on an English art student in Paris, and Daphne in Fitzroy Street (1909), a fictionalized account of her relationship with Shaw. Dormant (1911) shares some elements of fantasy with her more successful children's works. In the story a scientist inherits an estate and falls in love with a woman he discovers in an enchanted sleeplike state in a secret chamber. Her final novel, The Lark (1922) is a realistic depiction of two unmarried women struggling to maintain their financial independence by operating a boarding house.

Nesbit's husband, Hubert Bland, died in April 1914. She published few new works after that time, and interest in her works declined after World War I. She married Thomas Terry Tucker, a sea captain, in 1917. Financial difficulties and illness plagued her later years, and she died May 4, 1924, in New Romney, Kent.

Reputation and Legacy

In the decades since her death, Nesbit has come to be regarded as one of the most innovative writers for children of the early twentieth century. Her importance, particularly in the development of fantasy literature for children, has prompted numerous critical appraisals. As Daria Donnelly has noted in Commonweal, "Before Nesbit, such literature fell into two types: either the entire action took place in an exotic or fantastical setting, or the child character (Dorothy or Alice) traveled from this world into a fantastical one. But in Five Children and It, a group of middle-class Edwardian children find a prehistoric, ill-tempered thing called a Psammead right in the gravel pit behind their house. And each day, corresponding to each chapter, he reluctantly grants them a wish that results in a new adventure in their very neighborhood. Locating the fantastical in everyday life was Nesbit's great and enduring innovation." Colin N. Manlove, writing in MOSAIC X/2, added that "Nesbit's fantasy is not what one would call great literature… . [Her] work is fanci ful rather than imaginative. But fancy has its place: and one could claim that in Nesbit's work it reaches a high point of wit and ingenuity." Nesbit's realistic stories, too, continue to please young readers, and new admirers are brought to her works through television and theatre productions of The Railway Children. Summarizing Nesbit's achievement, Claudia Nelson concluded in the Dictionary of Literary Biography that "in writing for children Nesbit proved her ability to combine humor and sympathy, the personal and the universal. Not only does her popularity in this genre continue today, she also served as a major influence upon other writers for the young, including Edward Eager and C. S. Lewis."

Books

Briggs, Julia, A Woman of Passion: The Life of E. Nesbit, 1858-1924, New Amsterdam Books, 1991.

Lurie, Alison, Writers for Children, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1988.

Moore, Doris Langley-Levy, E. Nesbit: A Biography, Rev. Ed., Chilton Books, 1966.

Nelson, Claudia, Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 141: British Children's Writers, 1880-1914, edited by Laura M. Zaidman and Caroline C. Hunt, The Gale Group, 1994.

Nesbit, E., Long Ago When I Was Young, Macdonald and Jane's, 1974.

Streatfeild, Noel, Magic and the Magician: E. Nesbit and Her Children's Books, Abelard Schuman, 1958.

Periodicals

Commonweal, November 5, 1999.

MOSAIC X/2, Winter 1977.

New York Review of Books, December 3, 1964.

Online

"Edith Nesbit and the Railway Children," http://www.imagix.dial.pipex.com (February 9, 2003).

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Fairy Tale Companion: Edith Nesbit
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Nesbit, Edith (1858–1924), English writer whose children's books include many fantasies with a contemporary setting. Obliged to support herself and the family in the early years of her marriage to Hubert Bland in 1880, she did much hack work before she began writing stories for children. Initially these were about the Bastable family, genteelly poor like the Blands, and their efforts to restore the family fortunes. But in 1899 she contributed a series of modern fairy tales to the Strand under the title ‘Seven Dragons’—the beginning of a long association with that magazine, in which all her fantasies were to be serialized. The dragon stories, light‐hearted and inventive, collected under the title of The Book of Dragons in 1900, may have been suggested by Kenneth Grahame's anti‐heroic ‘The Reluctant Dragon’. There is a fabulous creature, a manticore, in the opening story ‘The Book of Beasts’, who is very like Grahame's dragon in his extreme reluctance to fight. The drawings were by H. R. Millar, always to be her favourite illustrator. Nine Unlikely Tales followed in 1901. It contains the remarkable ‘The Town in the Library in the Town in the Library’, where two children build a town out of books and picture blocks and toy bricks. They walk up the steps of books into it and find their own house there, and on the library floor the same town as they had built and realize that this could repeat itself into infinity. She was to develop the theme in the full‐length The Magic City (1910). Significantly, the cities are built from books, and people both friendly and hostile emerge from them. Books play an enormous part in her child characters' lives; Stephen Prickett writes of ‘a network of literary cross‐references to other writers’, and in her last fantasy, Wet Manic (1913), there is a Battle of the Books between her favourites and those she despised.

Nesbit's first full‐length fantasy, Five Children and It, was published in 1902. Its comedy and magic are reminiscent of F. Anstey, and indeed the children speak of The Brass Bottle. ‘It’ is a Psammead, a sand fairy, a furry creature with eyes on antennae. It was to be the prototype of two other Nesbit fairies who orchestrate events—the Mouldiwarp and the Phoenix. All are touchy, vain, and caustic, but are presented with humour, unlike Mrs Molesworth's fairy cuckoo (The Cuckoo Clock) from which they may have been derived. The Psammead condescends to allow the children one wish a day. In the style of the Three Wishes folk story, their rash choices—to have wings, to be as beautiful as the day—inevitably lead to disaster, and their final wishes have to be used to undo the havoc. Nesbit returned to the theme in The Phoenix and the Carpet (1904), where the children find an egg in an old carpet—in fact a magic travelling carpet, with a phoenix inside the egg. The narcissistic Phoenix, one of her best comic creations, much resembles the ludicrously vain Dodo in G. E. Farrow's The Little Panjandrums Dodo (1899), who bursts into a London office in the same way as the Phoenix was to do at the Phoenix Fire Office. (Like The Enchanted Castle, this now forgotten fantasy also featured prehistoric creatures from the Crystal Palace dinosaur park which opened in 1854.)

The Psammead reappears in The Story of the Amulet (1906), when the children, in London now, find it in a pet‐shop near the British Museum. It leads them to a charm—half an Egyptian amulet which, if they can only find the other half, will be able to give them their hearts' desire. To search for it, the children use their half of the amulet and the Word of Power inscribed on it to step back into the remote past. The story owes its origins and historical details to Wallis Budge, Keeper of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities at the British Museum. Himself the author of Egyptian Magic (1901), he suggested that she should use a form of amulet which supposedly gave its dead wearer access to the different regions of the underworld. Such an amulet carries a word of power, and he invented one for her, Ur Hekau Setcheh, which might be translated as ‘Great of magic is the Setcheh‐snake’ (a mythological serpent named in some early spells for the dead).

Time travel was then an innovation in children's books, and Nesbit may have been inspired by H. G. Wells's The Time Machine (1895). She was to use it in The House of Arden (1908) and its companion Harding's Luck (1909). In the first, two children move back into the past by dressing up in clothes they find in an old chest. In the second book, the central character, a poor lame boy from a London slum who discovers that he is in fact the heir of the Arden estates, elects to go back forever to the great Jacobean household which he has visited with the help of the Mouldiwarp.

Her most elaborately constructed fantasy is The Enchanted Castle (1907). It starts, like many of her books, with children in search of magic. They find a castle, and in it a magic ring. This brings misadventures which at first are comic, but gradually become more serious, even terrifying, as when the children make dummy figures and idly wish they were alive. The ring also allows the wearers to enter a world where the statues in the castle garden come to life, and in the last pages the children and two sympathetic adults have a vision of eternity.

The Wonderful Garden (1911) also shows children pursuing magic, but here, though they cast spells which apparently work, this is brought about by luck and outside intervention.

Bibliography

  • Briggs, Julia, A Woman of Passion (1987).
  • Lurie, Alison, ‘“E. Nesbit”’, in Jane Bingham (ed.), Writers for Children (1988).
  • Prickett, Stephen, Victorian Fantasy (1979).
  • Robson, W.W., “‘E. Nesbit and The Book of Dragons’”, in Gillian Avery and Julia Briggs (eds.), Children and their Books (1989).

— Gillian Avery

Wikipedia: E. Nesbit
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Edith Nesbit

Born 15 August 1858(1858-08-15)
Kennington, Surrey, England
Died 4 May 1924 (aged 65)
New Romney, Kent, England
Occupation Writer, poet

Edith Nesbit (married name Edith Bland; 15 August 1858 – 4 May 1924) was an English author and poet whose children's works were published under the name of E. Nesbit. She wrote or collaborated on over 60 books of fiction for children, several of which have been adapted for film and television. She was also a political activist and co-founded the Fabian Society, a precursor to the modern Labour Party.

Contents

Biography

Nesbit was born in 1858 at 38 Lower Kennington Lane in Kennington, Surrey (now part of Greater London), the daughter of an agricultural chemist, John Collis Nesbit, who died in March 1862, before her fourth birthday. Her sister Mary's ill health meant that the family moved around constantly for some years, living variously in Brighton, Buckinghamshire, France (Dieppe, Rouen, Paris, Tours, Poitiers, Angouleme, Bordeaux, Arcachon, Pau, Bagneres de Bigorre, and Dinan in Brittany), Spain and Germany, before settling for three years at Halstead Hall in Halstead in north-west Kent, a location which later inspired The Railway Children (this distinction has also been claimed by the Derbyshire town of New Mills.)[1]

When Nesbit was 17, the family moved again, this time back to London, living variously in South East London at Eltham, Lewisham, Grove Park and Lee.

A follower of William Morris, 19-year-old Nesbit met bank clerk Hubert Bland in 1877. Seven months pregnant, she married Bland on 22 April 1880, though she did not immediately live with him, as Bland initially continued to live with his mother. Their marriage was an open one. Bland also continued an affair with Alice Hoatson which produced two children (Rosamund in 1886 and John in 1899), both of whom Nesbit raised as her own. Her own children were Paul Bland (1880-1940), to whom The Railway Children was dedicated; Iris Bland (1881-1950s); and Fabian Bland (1885-1900), who died aged 15 after a tonsil operation, and to whom she dedicated Five Children And It and its sequels, as well as The Story of the Treasure Seekers and its sequels.

Nesbit and Bland were among the founders of the Fabian Society (a precursor to the Labour Party) in 1884. Their son Fabian was named after the society. They also jointly edited the Society's journal Today; Hoatson was the Society's assistant secretary. Nesbit and Bland also dallied briefly with the Social Democratic Federation, but rejected it as too radical. Nesbit was an active lecturer and prolific writer on socialism during the 1880s. Nesbit also wrote with her husband under the name "Fabian Bland,"[2] though this activity dwindled as her success as a children's author grew.

Nesbit lived from 1899 to 1920 in Well Hall House, Eltham, Kent (now in south-east Greater London). On 20 February 1917, some three years after Bland died, Nesbit married Thomas "the Skipper" Tucker, a ship's engineer on the Woolwich Ferry. She was a guest speaker at the London School of Economics.

Towards the end of her life she moved to a house called "Crowlink" in Friston, East Sussex, and later to St Mary's Bay in Romney Marsh, East Kent. Suffering from lung cancer, probably a result of her heavy smoking, she died in 1924 at New Romney, Kent, and was buried in the churchyard of St Mary in the Marsh.

E. Nesbit's grave in St Mary in the Marsh's churchyard bears a simple wooden grave marker lovingly made by her second husband, Thomas Terry Tucker. (It reads) Resting: E. Nesbit, Mrs. Bland-Tucker, Poet & Author. Died 4 May, 1924, Aged 65. There is also a memorial plaque to her inside the church.

Literature

Nesbit published approximately 40 books for children, both novels and collections of stories. Collaborating with others, she published almost as many more.

According to her biographer Julia Briggs, Nesbit was "the first modern writer for children": "(Nesbit) helped to reverse the great tradition of children's literature inaugurated by [Lewis] Carroll, [George] MacDonald and Kenneth Grahame, in turning away from their secondary worlds to the tough truths to be won from encounters with things-as-they-are, previously the province of adult novels." Briggs also credits Nesbit with having invented the children's adventure story. Noël Coward was a great admirer of hers and, in a letter to an early biographer Noel Streatfeild, wrote "she had an economy of phrase, and an unparalleled talent for evoking hot summer days in the English countryside." [3]

Among Nesbit's best-known books are The Story of the Treasure Seekers (1898) and The Wouldbegoods (1899), which both recount stories about the Bastables, a middle class family that has fallen on relatively hard times. Her children's writing also included numerous plays and collections of verse.

She created an innovative body of work that combined realistic, contemporary children in real-world settings with magical objects and adventures and sometimes travel to fantastic worlds. In doing so, she was a direct or indirect influence on many subsequent writers, including P. L. Travers (author of Mary Poppins), Edward Eager, Diana Wynne Jones and J. K. Rowling. C. S. Lewis wrote of her influence on his Narnia[4] series and mentions the Bastable children in The Magician's Nephew. Michael Moorcock would go on to write a series of steampunk novels with an adult Oswald Bastable (of The Treasure Seekers) as the lead character.

The Bastables Series

  • 1899 The Story of the Treasure Seekers
  • 1901 The Wouldbegoods
  • 1904 The New Treasure Seekers
  • 1905 Oswald Bastable And Others
  • 1928 Complete History of Bastable Family

Psammead Series

House of Arden Series

  • 1908 The House of Arden
  • 1909 Harding's Luck

Others

  • 1885 Pussy and Doggy Tales
  • 1885 All Round the Year
  • 1885 Many Voices
  • 1885 The Rainbow and the Rose
  • 1885 The Prophet's Mantle
  • 1886 Something Wrong
  • 1893 Grim Tales
  • 1893 The Pilot
  • 1894 Miss Mischief
  • 1894 The Butler in Bohemia
  • 1895 Tales of the Clock
  • 1896 In Homespun
  • 1897 Tales Told in Twilight
  • 1898 The Book of Dogs
  • 1897 The Children's Shakespeare
  • 1897 Royal Children of English History
  • 1899 The Secret of the Kyriels
  • 1900 The Book of Dragons
  • 1901 Nine Unlikely Tales
  • 1901 Thirteen Ways Home
  • 1902 The Red House
  • 1902 The Revolt of the Toys
  • 1902 Edith Nesbit's Tales of Terror
  • 1902 In the Dark: Tales of Terror
  • 1903 The Rainbow Queen
  • 1903 Playtime Stories
  • 1903 The Literary Sense
  • 1904 The Story of Five Rebellious Dolls
  • 1904 Cat Tales
  • 1905 Pug Peter, King of Mouseland
  • 1906 The Railway Children
  • 1906 The Incomplete Amorist
  • 1906 Man and Maid
  • 1907 Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare
  • 1907 The Enchanted Castle
  • 1908 The Old Nursery Stories
  • 1908 The Three Mothers
  • 1909 The House With No Address
  • 1909 These Little Ones
  • 1909 Daphne in Fitzroy Street
  • 1909 Salome and the Head
  • 1910 Fear
  • 1910 The Magic City
  • 1911 Dormant aka Rose Royal
  • 1911 The Wonderful Garden
  • 1912 The Magic World
  • 1913 Wet Magic
  • 1921 The Incredible Honeymoon
  • 1922 The Lark
  • 1923 To the Adventurous
  • 1925 Five of Us and Madeline

Poetry

  • 1887 Spring Songs and Sketches
  • 1894 A Pomander Of Verse
  • 1899 Villegiature

Anthologies

References

  1. ^ "Railway Children battle lines are drawn". Telegraph & Argus,. 2000-04-22. http://archive.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/2000/4/22/154169.html. 
  2. ^ The Prophet's Mantle (1885), a fictional story inspired by the life of Peter Kropotkin in London.
  3. ^ Barry Day, "The Letters of Noël Coward," (New York: Vintage Books, March 2009) 74.
  4. ^ C.S. Lewis and the scholarship of imagination in E. Nesbit and Rider Haggard | Renascence | Find Articles at BNET.com

External links

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