xt7qjq0stw34_2380 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qjq0stw34/data/mets.xml https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qjq0stw34/data/1997ms474.dao.xml unknown archival material 1997ms474 English University of Kentucky The physical rights to the materials in this collection are held by the University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center.  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. W. Hugh Peal manuscript collection Edward Verrall Lucas clippings text 43.94 Cubic Feet 86 boxes, 4 oversize boxes, 22 items Poor-Good Peal accession no. 11453. Edward Verrall Lucas clippings 2017 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qjq0stw34/data/1997ms474/Box_86/Folder_16/Multipage8099.pdf 1901-1938, undated 1938 1901-1938, undated 
  Scope and Contents
  

Peal accession no. 8803.

section false xt7qjq0stw34_2380 xt7qjq0stw34 E. V. Lucas V. LUCAS was an extraordinary man. The massive shouldering . build, the slow sardonic moods, the moist evasive eye, a sort of smolder— ing grimness (like a cornered bull, a friend once described him) were what might have been expected in a great tycoon, an owner of mines and fac— tories, a disinher- ited marquis or unexpectedly de- feated prizefight- er. Some albatross hung round his neck, but no one ever inquired and those who read his light and well bred writings were unlikely to guess the savage quality of the spirit. Like many to whom the emetic epithet “whimsical” has been hastily ap- E. V. plied, E. V. was master of protective discoloration. Even his handwriting was a cryptogram. His essays, ' because they were the merest fooling, will easily be forgotten; not so his incomparable anthologies, guide- books, and the masterpiece—patiently elaborated through so many years—the Lives and Letters of Charles and Mary Lamb. The old saying would be true in this case: Lucas knew the Lambs better than they knew themselves. Here he found a deep consoling symbolism, in the sister who was intermittently mad and the brother who wore the dreadful mask of comedy. As editor and as understander 1868-1938 Lucas was here supreme. Copious indus— try to assemble was balanced by beauti— ful terseness of comment; tingling through to the gristle of the situation. Hepatic in mien, but ecstatic in vitality, loved and feared and marvelled at, mas— ter of the unexpected kindliness and the savage phrase, E. V. was a sketch for something very great indeed. He lived hard; punished others as he did himself; to be thought of as a humorist amused him (more than his humor amused his read- ers) because there is a malicious pleasure in ful- filling simple cate- gories. He was a great business man and (from simple Quaker stock) loved to oscillate from so- cial grade A to very low com- pany indeed. At both ends of the scale he kept his own counsel. Using the word affectionately, he was a perfect snob. He scarcely ever found anyone good enough to confide what he really thought. Lowering, witty, of power unsuspected by the casual, he would have humphed with cynical amusement at his Obits. Only one as lovingly frank as this would have satisfied his savage passion for the actual and the absurd. In the phrase he knew so well, he was an archangel con— siderably tarnished, but the gold showed through. 32L iguana/3K Lucas C. M. “IE.‘/f’ Is [)ead EDITH CHRISTINA jOHNSON V. LUCAS is dead. His 0 friends echo the lament of Charles Lamb for Coleridge. For the suddenness of the event, on June 26, makes its finality the more difficult to realize. His last public appearance was, characteris- tically, at the weekly lunch of the Punch editorial staff, just the day before he knew he was to face the ordeal of an operation. In less than two weeks “the largest heart in literary London was still.” Three years ago, in his last auto— biographicalsketch,1 E. V. wrote: “We ought to go on being well and strong and fit until three score years and ten, and then vanish.” It was two weeks after his 70th birthday that he himself “van— ished.” On the same day his last piece of writing, “The Wanderer’s Notebook,” appeared in the Lon— don Sunday Times. Lucas’ love of writing was a life—long passion. It conquered the arduous duties of publisher when, as the head of the London firm of Methuen for I4. years, he remained true to his creative work. As he said, he loved writing and could give precedence to nothing else. In fact his will leaves, subject to various life in— 1 The Old Contemporaries. terests, the residue of his property “one—fourth to the Royal Literary Fund, and three—fourths to the Authors’ Pension Fund.” E. V. Lucas’ own literary out— put was colossal—33 pages of the British Museum catalogue are re— quired to list his more than 100 books. If, as some authority re— marked recently, genius is excess of energy, E. V. was richly en— dowed. Much of what he wrote was of the transient nature of daily journalism, but for his contribu— tion in two fields he may lay claim to immortality, if one may be so bold as to risk prophecy: he was a born essayist and a natural scholar. Of his essays and sketches, a small but substantial quantity—- rare and individual in its essence—- will remain. He had the keenly observing eye of the essayist, who is essentially the poet of prose. Out of the familiar stuff of everyday experience he picked the matter of his essays, indicating its significance in comment rich in literary con— tent and alive with the pleasure of recognition. He wrote always with a certain felicity, but in his best work there is the final mark of genius in the cunningly turned phrase, the adroit use of familiar Reprinted from THE AMERICAN SCHOLAR, Autumn 1938, Volume 7, Number 4 4-99 The American Scholar words. There is not only the sud— den illumination of meaning that captures the reader’s attention but the richness of implication that stirs endless associative currents in imagination and memory. His prose, singularly pure in quality, unmarked by mannerisms or tricks of style, carries less risk of being “dated” than the work of many of his more popular contemporaries. Its effects are produced mainly by directness, concentration and un— derstatement. E. V. could be as unsparingly analytical of an idea or a person— ality as the most forceful of our modern realists, for he had a cer— tain quality which Mr. Frank Swinnerton calls, in his brief but brilliant tribute,2 “harsh justice.” E. V.’s record of his first impres— sion of the poet Swinburne illus— trates this dynamic realism: This, my first sight of Swinburne, I am not likely to forget, since various other preconceptions instantly crumbled away. For one thing, though he was as short as I had supposed, his body was by no means the inconsiderable affair that, from many testimonies, one had thought it. On the contrary, it was marked by solidity, and below the waistline was not less ethereal than that of many a trencherman who had never written at all or anything but prose. His face, too, which was highly colored, bore further signs that materialis- tic interests were not outside his scheme of life. The eyes were fixed and mirthless. Above the eyes, however, all was different and magnificent—a dome, lofty and aloof as one could ask, curiously like Shake- speare’s. His hair, a ruddy grey, was thin; I'In the (London) Observer, July 3, 1938. his heard, the same color, was fuller than I had expected. But his whole person was informed by prandial intentness. It had neither vivacity nor spiritual suggestion. Again, E. V. could be finely meditative and philosophical, as well as direct and intense—as in his comment upon the funeral of W. J. Craig, the English Shake— spearian scholar, whom Lucas memorialized and immortalized in his essay, “The Funeral.” I found myself meditating . . . how melancholy it was that all that storied brain, with its thousands of exquisite phrases, . . . should have ceased to be. For such a cessation, at any rate, say what one will of immortality, is part of the sting of death, part of the victory of the grave, which St. Paul denied with such magnificent irony. The words might have been spoken of himself. The firmness and strength of his own prose de— rived from the scholar in the es— sayist. His was a “natural” scholar— ship, the product of years of con— centrated reading: at the British Museum (“my real Alma Ma- ter”) while he was still a reporter for the London Gloée and, for a few short terms, at London Uni— versity where he came under the influence of its professor of Eng- lish, W. P. Ker. E. V. sometimes deplored his own lack of a classical education but many a university professor might well have envied him his richly stored mind. His knowledge was encyclopedic in its range and amazingly exact and de— 500 “IE.\/3’ tailed. Yet he was never pedantic. His was humanized erudition. When commissioned by Me— thuen & Co. (in 1900) to edit an edition and write a new biography of Charles Lamb, E. V. in his in— vestigations instinctively employed the scientific methods of a modern research scholar. He visited in per— son every place in England known to be associated with Lamb’s life and history, interviewed those who owned letters or manuscripts of Elia, read all that had been writ— ten by and about Lamb and, so far as possible, what Lamb had read. Consequently he had a knowledge and understanding of his subject such as no previous editor of Lamb had possessed. Yet such was his characteristic modesty that even today the full significance of E. V. Lucas as a scholar is far from being recognized. This work in nine volumes, pub— lished over a period of years from 1902 and running into more than one edition, established Lucas’ reputation as the preeminent au— thority on Charles Lamb. It was the first climax of a long literary devotion, originating in his early youth and persisting as the domi— nant motif 1n his life. But a second and more dramatic climax came in I9 3 5 when, through the joint ef— forts of the houses of Dent and Methuen the letters of Charles Lamb, collected and edited by Lucas, were published in three volumes. This triumphant edition, the result of years of effort to Is I)ead overcome the obstacles of copy— right ownership and costs of pub— lication, was the consummation of E. V. Lucas’ scholarly achieve— ment. In recognition of this work Oxford University conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Let— ters in June 1936. Other notable honors had come to him: election to the select group—never more than 50-——known as Companions of Honor, the degree of Doctor of Laws f1 om St. Andrews Uni— versity, appointment to the Royal Commission on Historical Monu— ments. But the Oxford distinction was E. V.’s greatest academic triumph. . The three—volume opus contains I,022 of Lamb’s letters, some 50 or more never before published. As a result of E. V.’s further in— vestigation of manuscripts in Eng— land and the United States—— which he canvassed from north to south and east to west in a special Visit for that purpose early in 19 34—the editors’ notes from previous editions were carefully revised and coriected. The chrono— logical arrangement of the letters, and the expansion of the notes by the addition of more detailed ref— erences to many of the personali— ties who formed the Elian circle, are in accordance with the editor’s aim to make these volumes con— stitute a new biography of Lamb, definitive and intimate because re- corded by Elia himself. His life—long association with the writings of that earlier essayist 501 The American Scholar earned for Lucas the affectionate titles, “the modern Lamb” and “the reincarnation of Elia.” He himself was embarrassed by the comparison, for no one more thor— oughly appreciated Lamb’s genius. Most similarities between the two writers are merely superficial, but it is interesting to note that each expressed himself by choice through two closely related forms, the essay and the letter. E. V.’s own publishers will soon give the reading public an opportunity to catch that more intimate and com— plete portrait which his letters af— ford. Unique in form as well as content“, they are concrete evidence of the debt we owe him for having preserved for our generation in— comparable examples of “the gentlest art.” CURRENT LITERATURE MARCH, 1934 REVUE AND REVIEWS BY TRAGOS WITH SKETCHES BY BATT CHARLES LAMB E are close on another centenary of a celebrated literary figure, that of Charles Lamb, who died in December, 1834, and already have had Mr. A. C. 5,1, Ward’s EVERYBODY’S LAMB, done by George ' Bell in an illustrated edition at 105. 6d, which we reviewed in our Christmas number: a handsome selection made of his life/and works in 554 pages. A further Ward volume is now issued by Methuen at 63. called THE FROLIC AND THE GENTLE: A STUDYgOF CHARLES LAMB, more of a life and a general estimate and summary of his living, without the letters or extracts; and also a smaller volume done by E. V. Lucas with Mdthuen as?" publishers (5s), AT THE SHRINE OF ST. CHARLES, stray papers collected for the purpose also of estima- tion, Lucas having written a‘ full two—volume biography in 1905 as 'wiell'jas?having—published books on Lamb’s friends. _ _ 1/“ Both of the new volume; are as good as expected. Ward’s FROLIé is greally a condensed life for the man in the street, ifwho can get all he wants to know from this yogume and'form his own opinion on it without fpedantic direction. Whether influenced by Carlyle, who thought Lamb “ a pitiful, ricketty, gasping, staggering, stuttering Tomfool,” or not, there is material here for a saner and more free judgment. If one is nof attracted by Lamb’s writing, no opinion of him is worth forming, since he was in fact all that Carlyle left on record, though he visited him at Enfield as a gueét and should have shown. better taste in putting it down. In addition to that, \Charles had been for a short time in his youth in an asyléim, I796—which is better than ending in. one like Nietzsche, Comte, Dean Swift and others; but it is a blow for the eugenists l His sister”: murdered their mother with a carving knife, wouq’ded her father badly with a fork, and when at intervals of her life she had also to return to the asylum, Charles, walking cheerfully off with her and being aware that the institution provided no comfortable strait-jacket, carried one under his arm. Neither married and both lived very happily, Charles dying before his sister, though they had arranged it the other way round. Mary survived him for 13 years, and was ‘ My * * amwcnew hunuugg ,(Dent, 7s. Eda), illus—_ twenty-two years older, not 12 as appears by a slip here, when she died. As it happened, both Charles and Mary were particularly gifted. While the former made the immortal ESSAYS OF ELIA, his sister manufactured the equally lasting TALES FROM SHAKESPEARE, and all the time Coleridge of the Ancient Mariner, Wordsworth, Leigh Hunt, George Dyer, Moxon, the publisher, Barry Cornwall, Hazlitt, and others noted and far less noted-people, were in and out of the house. All but Dyer, who actually as mad as a hatter and as} blind as a bat, had walked into the New River from Lamb’s house in Colebrook Row, ,Islington, thought it worth whild to write his flife or to continue talking about him. We do not suppose any man with a love of literature cares?" in the least what others think of Lamb, but this is a recommendation to cultivate further the acquaintance of one who when De Quineeyerealled for him at the office climbed down circularly from his exceptionally high stool, re rking that he would b round in a minute, . greeted his senior ‘director who admoniihed him for being ate by crying stammeringly, “ but see how early I go,” and who could hiss his own play, “ Mr. H.” harder and more meaningly than any of the audience disliking it. He may be worthy of more notice in their spare tim' e. am *. :1?” _‘ w... ose recent appraise- me ts off!” Modern Ger ny,/France, and Italy§f>fh ave b C en valuable,\\now writes MODERNERUSMA REMARKING THAT HE \VOULD BE ROUND IN A MINUTE . . . trated by photographs. MARCH, 1934 CURRENT LITERATURE O ‘lo'o'o colon. ‘. .§ ‘1 | . e: > § ‘ U ‘0 .. . .; Q Q l a a l’o‘o.a‘. '.'." ‘o' o I a o o o a .,C_ o-v.o_ c n'n'.'.'.’,’ " ' o o ' O C :0 :0: ‘4 '0 '1 .p '.'.l 1.’ ’0r1‘.'. ', '. O. o‘c’q’a'. ‘r' . ' .. . v. "a,“ o'o'a'o'o'.'.’.' ':’o'.‘.".' .'.'.o_'.'.f.f.'f.'.o:.f.‘.gnu; .0.0.-..°.-,n‘.'4'.',:.o_3‘. ‘ ' 0 .0094. ‘ "ou‘ ' o0 . u'c'u‘u '.'.'.' 0...».‘""""""'.0'§"."'.' f... . . ...... DENT’S NOVELS flesign for a Staircase GUY POCOCK ‘What a pleasure it is . . . A really delightful book. Thousands will enjoy every word of it.’-—Compton Mackenzie in the Daily Mail. ‘ A sheer delight . . . A most delicate design, at moments diverting, at others pathetic. l enjoyed the book greatly.’——Ralph Straus in the Sunday Times. Second Impression 7/6 net Scandal of Spring MARTIN BOYD ‘Here we are up against reality. The painful passion of romantic youth, its extreme and lofty folly, its sad and bitter disappointment, are presented in a moving tale. This book has a true element of beauty.’—Gerald Gould in the News-Chronicle. 7/6 net Corner Shop PHILIP KEELEY ‘ I liked it very much indeed. It is a fine and solid piece of work, the many characters clearly seen and vividly created. Mrs. firemen is a superb figure.’—Storm Jameson. 7/6 net Render Unto Caesar MARGOT ADAMSON ‘ Miss Adamson touches the dying Middle Ages into life.’ —G. Macintyre Little in the Scots Observer. ‘ Her colour is rich and true.'—Helen Simpson In the Morning Post. 7/6 net Coming in April Parable tor Lovers By LEWIS GIBBS WRAPPER BY REX WHISTLER O IIIIII . . . _ . . ‘ . . ' 3 "'0 '0'... '0'. ’0 'o‘o’o'05;‘;':. '0'.‘.' 5...... 0.1.0.. '0 ‘o' ' '0 '. '. "'0 'v'o‘ 'v'a '0 o. [Kindly mention “ Current Literature " when ordering] ’ I . , . 5“. o o'a'a'o‘o't'. ’ o . ' O 0 . a o O '0’... 9.0.“;- .‘ .o. "-o < '0‘... ' ’0‘“. o . ‘ .0 o 0 o o .' ' - o 07"}! O o'o'o’ ' ‘ 'o' a'o'o ... .n.¥‘. 0. -".'o;. , ' '. O‘O'O;'.'O;I"n’$;¢;l.I.O_.D'I'I ‘1 0.0 O. . I. . 5"“). ' ‘g'v";’.':. V.o.¢:o:' 0." o..’:.';'0‘ . 1’. .., ..- .Ill - .WHAT SHALL WE DO NOW? A Book of Suggestions for Children's Games and Employmcnts BY EDWARD VE RRALL LUCAS ELIZABETH LUCAS NEW EDITION LONDON GRANT RICHARDS 1901 1-‘1‘ixlfii'1'11ftn', :Ilgq'uxl‘ 1900. {fr A'iufc‘c/ /):'tu.1n’rr')‘ a 7/1: .mmt "tar. ) What Shall We Do Now? PUBLISHERS ANNOUNCEMENT TWO ANTHOLOIEES COMPILED BY E. V. LUCAS I. THE OPEN ROAD: A. LITTLE BOOK FOR \VAVIMKL‘RS. With End Papers by William Hyde. l“cap. 8vo, Cloth, 55.; India Paper, Lambskin, 7s. 6d. Second Edition. 2. A {00K OF VERSES FOR CHILDREN. \Vith End Papers, Title-page, and Cover, by F. D. BEDFORI). Cloth, Crown SW), 65. Fourth Edition. THREE PICTURE BOOKS WITH VERSES BY E. V. LUCAS I. ALL THE \VORI.D OVER. Illustrated in colours by EDITH FARMILOE. Oblong Folio, Picture Boards, 65. 2. THE BOOK OF SHOPS. Illustrated in colours. by F. D. BEDFOKD. Oblong Folio, Picture Boards, 65. 3. FOUR AND TWENTY TOILEks. Illus- trated in colours by F. D. BEDFORD. Oblong li'olio, Picture Boards, 65. THE DUMPY BOOKS FOR CHILDREN EDITED BY E. V. LUCAS 181110, C lot/z, 15. 6d. eac/L r. THE FLAMP, THE AMELIORATOR, and THE SCHOOLDOY'S AI'I‘RENTICE. By the EDITOR. Fourth Edition. 2. MRS. TURNER'S CAUTIONARY STORIES. Fourth Edition. 3. THE BAD FAMILY. By Mrs. FENWICK. S ccond Edition. 4. THE STORY OF LITTLE BLACK SAMBO. Illustrated in colours by HELEN BANNERMAN. Twenty-first Thousand. 5. THE BOUNTIFUL LADY. By THOMAS . Conn. Second Edition. 6. A CAT BOOK. Portraits by H. OFFICER SMITH. Characteristics by the EDITOR. Second Edition. LONDON : GRANT RICHARDS 9 HENRIETTA ST., COVENT GARDEN, W.C. W 2 %/¢./ THO ‘ fwd! .1 v " Obituary / i MR. E. v. LUCAS ! §GRACEFUL ESSAYIST OFl GREAT VERSATILITY i l l AUTHOR OF NEARLY 1dr BOOKS l Mr. E. V. Lucas. long famous as one oil the world’s most graceful essayists. die l in London yesterday at the age of TO. l A prolific writer. whose books num—j bered nearly ltlt). he was above all a‘ disciple of Charles Lamb. Yet: it was as no mere imitator that he gained the affection of his readers. V His style. natural. quite unt.'orced,j polished. clear. confidential. erudite. wast that of a master. It gained for him the: unstinted admiration of great critics andl= it remained as fresh to the end as it'hadl been at: the beginning. l He was extraordinarily informative; in his writings. but never diadactic, andi his versatility was astonishing. With itl went delightful humour. l -The tedium of writing never affected:1 him. Smoothly and without; apparent effort or exhaustion he used his pen and never dictated. for. as he confessed. he j" liked writing. MANY HONOURS Oxford honoured him with a D.Litt. and St. Andrews with an LLD. In 1932 he was made a Companion of Honour. ‘ For ten years he had been a member off 'the Royal Commission on Historic Monu— l“ Mr. l3. V. LUCAS. lments. and in 1.03:: he became a member" of t he Crown Lands Advisory Committeeu He was also chairman of Methnen andi Co. the publishers. f Edward \r’errall Lucas was born .ifl Quaker stock and when he was 16 bea came an api'n‘entice to a Brighton book-l seller. There he took every opportunity he could of l'an‘iiliarising himselt with; the contents of a big circulating: liln‘aryf It. was this interest in literziiture which. inducml an uncle to leave him .L‘Ztitl \‘Jltli which he was enjoined to attend lectures at University College. London, for as long as the money lasted. 1 “ E. \v’. I had just exhausted his funds; in this way when he went on the staff of the “Globe." He had previously had; some experience as a reporter on the‘i "Sussex Daily News" and his engage— ment on the " Globe " lasted for several years. “SUNDAY TIMES ” ARTICLES 1 Later he went on the Academy,” after which he joined “ Punch.” Then began his long association with the‘ “ Sunday Times." wherein appeared his widely read column. “ A Wanderer":- Notebook. His article in yesterday‘s issue an 'Compleat .-\nglers ” was characteristic- ally charming. Nearly 4t) years have passed since he published “The Open Road.” and in 1903 appeared his extremely popular skit—~— in coniunction with C. L. Graves—~en— titled. "Wisdom While You Wait." The next year there followed " High-l ways and Byways of Sussex." which fill 19236 be revised and enlarged. l “Listener‘s Lure" followed. and at the same time he began his “Wan-l derer‘s ” books. which as the years went} by c‘*inl>raced London. Holland. Paris.l li‘lorcnce. Venice and Rome. PROLIFIC OUTPUT But, “E. \7. L.'s“' output was so pro- lific that it was difficult. to keep pace with ‘him. Year after year fresh volumes were turned Olll‘—SOlTlGilnlCS three or four in a twelve—month. Notwithstand- ing this he carried out his duties as lliterary adviser and a director of the l Methuen firm. < When in l924 he succeeded to the chairmanship on the death of Sir; Algernon l\ilethuen. he went on writingi with only slightly diminished vigour. He' produced " The, Colvins and their Friends in 1928 at the express wish (,f his friend. the late Sir Sidney Colvin. and in steady succession came books cf essays. In .1932 he wrote a highly entertaining volume of reminiscences. “ Reading. Writing and Remembering." and among many other books he produced after“ much labour the first complete edition oft the letters of Charles and Mary Lamb} which added considerably to the famcl he had already gained as a Lamb? authority. ‘ Mr. Lucas lczivcs a wife and one daughter. Mrs. Audrey Scott. who is married to Mr. Harold Scott. the actor and producer. l\lrs. Scott is a playwright and an authority on the cinema. She has just written a novel. " Old Motley”; which is shortly to be published. 7 Y.‘ A Modern Lamb V. LUCAS’S death will be .0 regretted throughout the English-reading world because he was the master of a literary form , in which few writers excel. There are so many good English novelists that it can truly be said about many of them “They never would be missed.” There are, however, not so many great English essayists that E. V, Lucas can be easily spared. Like Lamb, whom he so ably edited, he possessed a dry and delicate humour; and his place in English letters is assured along with Lamb. His writings told of his wander- ings in many cities. What a pity that on this final adventure he cannot take his pen with him to sketch the by-ways of the New Jerusalem ! MEMORIES OF OLD CRICKETERS E.V.’s “A Hundred Years of Trent Bridge.” LAST BOOK Edited by E. V. Lucas. With a Coloured Frontispiece by Sir William Nicholson and twenty-eight other illustrations. (Privately printed for Sir Julien Cahn, Bart.) BY A. R. V. BARKER Barely a week ago an American guest of mine told me that 'he had just come across the writing of an English— man which delighted him above every— thing he had previously met. I was t surprised to find the writer was E. V. Lucas, not because of his enjoyment, but because he had not met him before. I envied him the feast that he was promising himself, for he had read but little. day I should be reading what must be the last work of that brilliant pen. Although this little book he has edited. and to which he has contributed his own and cricket, is only privately printed. and therefore limited in its circulation, one could Wish for no better place to say farewell. *** It is hard to quarrel or to remember bitterness when the sound of ball on bat is in our ears. Memories of old cricketers revived in this little book are of their pleasant idiosyncrasies or of their great and happy feats, and if we can chuckle over the habits of Old Clarke, so, too, must E. V. have chuckled when he wrote of him: “ His Surely I did not think that to—i li’aulty correspondence course! eating habits were also idiosyncratic- or so I hope. When playing, he had for i lunch only a bottle of soda—water l and a cigar, but in. the evening he ate Ea whole goose.” What a hullabaloo such a diet would cause to—day in those strange columns which thrive on‘ creating trouble out of the very dust [I on the ground and whose writers- have often. it would seem, acquired their knowledge of the game from a %_X_* Soda-water and/or goose Old Clarke knew his stuff and, though ever to be . . . . _ 7 . ‘remembered for his bowling, he had ai writing and hls own enjoyment of lli‘C‘ shrewd word, to say about batting: “ Lay your bat on top of the ball, and don’t pull your bat from the ground up to it. That is not cricket. The bat was ' made to play the ball.” What would he or Alfred Shaw have had to say but a few days back—for surely their spirits must have been there won- dering at the triumph of the bat over, the ball? One can imagine the snorts of him who once said: “If I were to think every ball the other side wouldn’t make a run.” Or the con- tempt with which that master of length mag / ’ I a _ Obituaryflfi MR. E. V. LUCAS ESSAYIST AND MAN OE LETTERS Mr. E. V. Lucas. essayist. man of letters. and ultimately a publisher, died in a London nursing home yesterday at the age of 70. Edward Verrall Lucas came of Sussex Quaker stock, quiet, if not drab, personalities. as he said himself, who eithe‘ banked brewed. Perhaps he was proudest of his relationship to Lord Lister. the great: surgeon; but it was from A. W. Verrall, the classical scholar. and from Jeremiah Whitlen. the translator of Tasso. that Lucas inherited his love of; literature and his devotion and triumphant patience. Lucas. who was educated at private schools, had the bright and elusive type of mind that does not flourish under a schoolmaster. In his reminiscences, “ Reacting. \Vriting. and Remembering,” he spoke with. regret of having left school at 16 to be apprenticed to a Brighton bookseller. This. however, was a most fortunate circumstance, for that book- shop had a circulating library with an enormous stock of: books no longer in circulation. many of them dating from the eighteenth century, and there he laid Of the foundation of his extraordinarily wide and profound knowledge ot things out ot the way in literature. After serving his apprenticeship for two years, he joined the staff of: the Sussex Daily News. then edited by Mr. Ha y Bone. He was happy in his work; he loved Brighton as it. was in those days. and he would probably have remained there had not one of his uncles " acquired a concern,” as the Quakers say. for his nephew’s future. This uncle gave Lucas £200 in order that he might: go to London and attend lectures at University College as long as the money lasted. Lucas ame to London in 1892. and from the first he was a devoted admirer of W. P. Ker. Professor of English literature at University College. in " London Beginnings.” a fascinating chapter in his book of reminis— cences. the remarkable list of his friends includes, in addition to Ker, persons like the Colvins and Sir Walter Raleigh. it is easy to un erstand how they were attracted by a young man so modest yet so witty. so unassum— ing yet so serenely self-confident. Editors such as Harry Cust‘. of the Pall Mall Gazette. and Algernon Locker. of the Globe. thought well of him. and in 1893 he joined the staff of the latter paper. Among his earliest publica- tions was a little book of verse. called I " Sparks from a Flin which bore no author’s name; About this time also he received his first commission for a book from the Society of Friends. it was to write a memoir of Bernard Barton. the Quaker poet and friend of Charles Lamb. it led a few years later to a commission from Reginald Smith. of Smith. Elder. to edit some newly discovered letters from Lamb to the Lloyd family. Then came an invitation from Methuen and C0. to write a new life of Lamb. and to bring out a new edition of his works. Lucas may perhaps be best remem the greatest authority on Elia: but his work was as manifold in kind as it was great in quantity. His insatiable interest in all kinds of life and is never dulled power of enjoy— ment poured out of him weekly. almost daily. in the Press. and in books of many kinds. He was a regular contributor to Punch. and used to take the editorial chair when Owen Seaman was away on holiday. Wide reading and definite tastes made him '1 master of the anthology. His travel ks combine the keenness of the explorer 1 the le ' i the historian. With or without Gravzs he produced a series of brilli satires. beginning in 1903 with " Wisdom While You Wait." a mock at the advertising methods adopted to sell t e “ clopaedia Britan tea." and culminating in Quoth the Raven." in which the bitter exposure of shams and pretences of War and post-War, is a con— trast to the mellow, genial tone that pervades his work as a rule. in 1909 Lucas brought out Anne‘s Terrible Good Nature ” and other stories for children, and “ Over Bemer- ton‘s." still the most popular of all his novels. Two ye 1': later Lucas published “ Mr. lngleside." but wl ‘n " London Lavender” appeared in 1912 it was clear that he had discovered a new medium for his exquisite and graceful genius. It is not one sto ,. but a dozen stories. and in them appear old friends from “Over Bemerton's" and " l\ lngleside.” “ Landmarks " t191 ) is not a novel. nor is it an autobiography. \et there are touches in it that suggest a real life; we feel that it was not the hero. Rudd Sergison. but E. V. himself who was taken to the great cricket match and had the glory of a conversa- tion with Mr. A. N. Hornby. But the book has neither the beauty nor the wise sympathy! of "Rose and Rose." with the two adorablel women. and Dr. Greville with his calm brain and warm heart. There is a beautiful quality in " Rose and Rose " that makes it perhaps the best of all Lucas's work. and more to be . treasured than those already mentioned or “ Advisory Ben." “ Windfall's Eve.” and Verena in the l\ st.” Lucas next became a playwright. and The King's va’isir was played at the Palace Theatre in 1912, and some years . later The Same Smr was produced by‘ the Leeds Art Theatre. He entered on a new phase. and proved most successful in it. when, after having been long conne ted with the firm of Methuen. he became its chairmt‘tn. Lucas was an enthusiast for cricket. and compiled a record of early cricket called “ The Hambledon Men.” He was a member of Sir James Barrie‘s team. the Allahakbaris (God Help Us). with J. C. S