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Horace Howard Furness

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Horace Howard Furness
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{{short description|American Shakespearean scholar}}{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2021}}







factoids
| death_place =Wallingford, Pennsylvania| death_cause =| resting_place =| resting_place_coordinates =| nationality =| other_names =| known_for =| education =| employer =| occupation =| title =| height =| term =| predecessor =| successor =| party =| boards =| spouse =Helen Kate (Rogers) Furness| partner =William Henry Furness IIICaroline Furness Jayne>Caroline Augusta (Furness) Jayne| parents =William Henry FurnessAnnis Pulling (Jenks) Furness| relatives =| signature = Signature of Horace Howard Furness (1833–1912).png| website =| footnotes = }}Horace Howard Furness (November 2, 1833 – August 13, 1912) was an American Shakespearean scholar of the 19th century.

Life and career

Horace Furness was the son of the Unitarian minister and abolitionist William Henry Furness (1802–1896), and brother of the architect Frank Furness (1839–1912). He graduated from Harvard University in 1854, embarked on a journey to Europe with Atherton Blight, and then studied in Germany.Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Harvard Memorial Biographies, Volume 1, p. 311. After returning to the United States, he was admitted to the Philadelphia Bar in 1858,WEB,weblink A Catalogue of Members of the Pennsylvania Bar Association; admitted Between June 1, 1855-1861, Law Association of Philadelphia, 1861, but his growing deafness interfered with the practice of law.BOOK, Lang, Harry, 1995, Deaf Persons in the Arts and Sciences: A Biographical Dictionary, Greenwood Publishing Group, 136, 0313291705, registration,weblink In 1860, he joined the Shakspere {{sic}} Society of Philadelphia, an amateur study group that took its scholarship seriously. As he later wrote:{{blockquote|Every member had a copy of the Variorum of 1821, which we fondly believed had gathered under each play all Shakespearian lore worth preserving down to that date. What had been added since that year was scattered in many different editions, and in numberless volumes dispersed over the whole domain of literature. To gather these stray items of criticism was real toil, real but necessary if we did not wish our labour over the text to be in vain.Horace Howard Furness, "How did you become a Shakespeare Student?" Shakespeariana, vol. 5 (October 1888), pp. 439-40.}}As editor of the "New Variorum" editions of Shakespeare—also called the "Furness Variorum"—he collected in a single source 300 years of references, antecedent works, influences and commentaries.Jean Jules Jusserand, "Horace Howard Furness," With Americans of Past and Present Days (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1916), pp. 322-323. He devoted more than forty years to the series, completing the annotation of sixteen plays.Jacob I. Kobrick, Furness-Bullitt Family Papers (Collection 1903), Historical Society of Pennsylvania, p. 2.(PDF) His son, Horace Howard Furness, Jr. (1865–1930), joined as co-editor of the Variorum's later volumes, and continued the project after the father's death, annotating three additional plays and revising two others.John Woolf Jordan, A History of Delaware County, Pennsylvania, and Its People, Volume 2 (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1914), pp. 670-671.weblink{{blockquote|Nowhere, perhaps, has more labor been devoted to the study of the works of the poet than that given by Mr. H. H. Furness, of Philadelphia, to the preparation of the new Variorum edition. — Sir Sidney LeeSir Sidney Lee, A Life of William Shakespeare (London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1899), p. 285.weblink}}He was a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania, a long-serving trustee (1880–1904), and chairman of the building committee for its library. Designed by his brother Frank, Horace selected the Shakepearean quotes for the 1891 building's leaded glass windows.Following a 6-year restoration, Frank Furness's University of Pennsylvania Library was rededicated in 1991, on the occasion of its centennial, as the Fisher Fine Arts Library. He was the advisor for doctoral student Emily Jordan Folger who, with her husband Henry Clay Folger, would co-found the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC.Joseph Quincy Adams and Paul Cret, The Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington (Amherst College, 1933).An 1890 review in Blackwood's Magazine may indicate the esteem in which British critics held Furness's scholarship:{{blockquote|In what is called 'The Variorum Edition of Shakespeare,' America has the honor of having produced the very best and most complete edition, so far as it has gone, of our great national poet. For text, illustration (happily, not pictorial), commentary and criticism, it leaves nothing to be desired. The editor combines with the patience and accuracy of the textural scholar, an industry which has overlooked nothing of value that has been written about Shakespeare by the best German and French, as well as English commentators and critics; and what is of no less moment he possesses in himself a rare delicacy of literary appreciation and breadth of judgment, disciplined by familiarity with all that is best in the literature of antiquity as well as of modern times, which he brings to bear on his notes with great effect.Quoted in "Horace Howard Furness," Dictionary of Literary Biography (Thomson Gale, 2005-06)}}

New Variorum

(File:HHFurness.jpg|thumb|Horace Howard Furness in his brick library at "Lindenshade," c. 1910Historic American Buildings Survey PA.23-WALF.2A-5, Library of Congress.weblink)File:Our Philadelphia (Pennell, 1914) p333.jpg|thumb|"Dr. Furness's House, West Washington Square, just before it was torn down." (1914), Joseph PennellJoseph Pennell

Volumes edited by Horace Howard Furness

These volumes went through a number of reprints: the external links connect to the last online edition available.

Volumes edited by H. H. Furness, Jr.

  • Julius Caesar (Google books preview only) (1913)WEB, The New Variorum Shakespeare: The Tragedy of Julius Caesar,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160303184509weblink">weblink 3 March 2016, 26 January 2017, dead,  (Online version of the full text)
  • Macbeth (revised) (1903, 2nd ed. 1915)
  • Merchant of Venice (revised) (1916)
  • King John (1919)
  • Coriolanus (1928)
The Modern Language Association of America continues the "New Variorum" project with the goal of definitively annotating all 38 of Shakespeare's plays.Shakespeare Variorum Handbook: A Manual of Editorial Practice.

Other works

  • F. R. (1903). Philadelphia: privately printed. (A memorial of brother-in-law Fairman Rogers, signed H. H. F.)
  • BOOK


, The Letters of Horace Howard Furness
, 1922
, Jayne
, Horace H. F.
, Horace H. F. Jayne
, Boston
, Houghton Mifflin,  Volume 1 · Volume 2
  • BOOK


, none
, Haupt
, Paul
, Paul Haupt
, Furness
, H. H.
, The Sacred Books of the Old and New Testaments. A New English Translation. With Explanatory Notes and Pictorial Illustrations. Prepared by eminent Biblical scholars of Europe and of America
, 1893–1904
, (Polychrome Bible)
, New York
, Dodd, Mead & Co.
,weblink
  • BOOK


, none
, Wellhausen
, Julius
, Julius Wellhausen
, 1898
, The Book of Psalms : a new English translation
, Translated by H. H. Furness (psalms); John Taylor (notes); J. A. Paterson (appendix)
, Polychrome Bible, part 14
, New York
, Dodd, Mead & Co.
,weblink

Honors

Furness was elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society on April 16, 1880.JOURNAL
, List of Members of the American Philosophical Society Elected Since the Publication of the Fourteenth Volume
, Front Matter
, Transactions of the American Philosophical Society
, American Philosophical Society
, 0065-9746
, 15
, 3
, 1881
, i-x
, 1005422
, He was the recipient of honorary degrees from Harvard University, University of Halle, University of Pennsylvania, Columbia University, and University of Cambridge.Horace Howard Furness from Historical Society of Pennsylvania. He was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1905.Deceased Members {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110726004624weblink |date=2011-07-26 }} from American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Personal

(File:Furness Helen Kate, 1880.jpg|thumb|Helen Kate Furness, ({{circa}} 1880))In 1860 Furness married Helen Kate Rogers (1837–1883), heir to an ironmaking fortune and sister of University of Pennsylvania instructor Fairman Rogers. She compiled a concordance to Shakespeare's poems, published in 1874."Mrs. Horace Howard Furness" (1874). A concordance to Shakespeare's poems. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott. They had four children:{{sfn|Jayne|1922|loc=Vol. 1, pp. xxiv-xxxv}}
  • Walter Rogers Furness (1861–February 7, 1914), an architect, who in 1896 became a partner in the firm of his uncle, Frank Furness. He built Furness Cottage at the Jekyll Island Club, Georgia, where his family vacationed from 1889 to 1895. He was permanently blinded in one eye in 1898, after a ball hit him during a game of racquets. From then on his life became worse and worse, descending into raging alcoholism. His wife, Helen Key Bullitt, died at age 47 in January 1914, and he died a month later at age 53, following a heart attack.BOOK


, McCash
, June Hall
, The Jekyll Island Cottage Colony
, illustrated
, University of Georgia Press
, 1998
, 9780820319285
, 79–88
,weblink
Horace and Kate Furness inherited her family's Philadelphia city house, at the SW corner of Locust Street & West Washington Square. Frank Furness altered the house in 1873, and designed the 1909 office building that replaced it.700 Locust Street, from Philadelphia Architects and Buildings. He also designed their country house, "Lindenshade" ({{circa|1873}}, demolished 1940) and its many expansions, including the 1903 fireproof brick library.

Legacy

File:Lindenshade circa 1873.jpg|"Lindenshade" (built c. 1873, demolished 1940), Wallingford, Pennsylvania, designed by Frank FurnessFile:Lindenshade Philadelphia Suburban Homes 1889.jpg|"Lindenshade," circa 1888File:HH Furness Library Lindenshade 2.jpg|Brick library at "Lindenshade" (1903), in 2017Image:FisherLibrary.JPG|The University of Pennsylvania Library (1891), now the Fisher Fine Arts LibraryFile:Fisher Fine Arts Library - IMG 6615.JPG|Leaded glass fanlight over the main entrance to the University of Pennsylvania LibraryFile:Furness School Philly.JPG|Horace Howard Furness High School in South PhiladelphiaFile:HK Furness Library.JPG|Helen Kate Furness Free Library (1916), Providence Road & Furness Lane, Wallingford, PAFile:Horace Howard Furness, Horace and Catherine Furness Jayne tombstone.jpg|Horace Howard Furness tombstone in Laurel Hill Cemetery

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

External links

{{wikisource author}}{{commons category}}{{library resources box|by=yes|onlinebooksby=yes|viaf=42617947}} {{Authority control}}

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