At age 14, young Mr. Meredith was sent to school in Neuwied, Germany, where he stayed for two years.
Trained to be a lawyer, Mr. Meredith abandoned the profession in favor of literary pursuits. Mr. Meredith published a literary magazine called The Monthly Observer along with Edward Gryffydh Peacock, an East India Company official, poet and writer who was the son of Thomas Love Peacock an… East India Company official, poet and writer.
In 1856 he posed as the model for painter Henry Wallis for his painting The Death of Chatterton. George Meredith’s wife, Ellen, ran away with the painter.
In his 1851 poem Modern Love, Geroge Meredith writes “While the little bird upon the leafless branches / Tweets to its mate a tiny loving note”. This is the first time the word “tweet” has been used as a verb.
The Ordeal of Richard Feverel, Mr. Meredith’s first novel was so shocking that the order for 300 copies was canceled.
As a publisher’s reader, a job he took to supplement his income from writing, George Meredith became an influential member of the literary world. His friends included such luminaries as Robert Louis Stevenson, J. M. Barrie, Leslie Stephen (Virginia Woolf’s father), and George Gissing.
In The Boscombe Valley Mystery, a short Sherlock Holmes story by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Holmes tell Dr. Watson: “And now let us talk about George Meredith, if you please, and we shall leave all minor matters until to-morrow.”
Zohar — Man of la Book
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Man of la Book
A father, husband, avid reader, blogger, software engineer & wood worker who is known the world over as a man of many interests and to his wife as “an idiot”.