Search Results - Lounsbury, Thomas Raynesford, 1838-1915
Thomas Lounsbury
![Thomas Lounsbury by [[George C. Cox]], {{circa|1895}}](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/Thomas_Lounsbury_by_George_Collins_Cox%2C_c._1895%2C_platinum_prinnt%2C_from_the_National_Portrait_Gallery_-_NPG-S-NPG_2007_267_%28cropped%29.jpg)
From 1871 until his retirement in 1906 he was professor of English language and literature in Yale. For 33 years he was also librarian at Sheffield Scientific School, Yale. He was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1898) and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1896).
His work is marked by sound scholarship and literary acumen. It is as a student of Chaucer, of Shakespeare, and of the English language from the point of view of its development that he especially distinguished himself. His editorial work includes: ''Chaucer's Parliament of Foules'' (1877); the ''Complete Works of Charles Dudley Warner'' (1904); and the ''Yale Book of American Verse'' (1912). Professor Lounsbury wrote other important publications which include:
* ''A History of the English Language'' (1879, 1894) * ''Life of James Fenimore Cooper'' (1882) * ''Studies in Chaucer'' (three volumes, 1891) * ''Shakespeare as a Dramatic Artist'' (1901) * ''Shakespeare and Voltaire'' (1902) * ''The Standard of Pronunciation in English'' (1904) * ''The Text of Shakespeare'' (1906) * ''The Standard of Usage in English'' (1908) * ''English Spelling and Spelling Reform'' (1909) * ''Shakespeare as a Dramatic Artist'' (1912)
Lounsbury was also the subject of some needling by Mark Twain, in his famous critique of James Fenimore Cooper ("Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offenses", written 1895). Lounsbury had written favorably of Cooper, which Twain took to mean that Lounsbury simply hadn't actually read Cooper. Provided by Wikipedia