Thomas Seccombe
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Thomas Seccombe (1866–1923) was a miscellaneous English
writer A writer is a person who uses written words in different writing styles and techniques to communicate ideas. Writers produce different forms of literary art and creative writing such as novels, short stories, books, poetry, travelogues, p ...
and, from 1891 to 1901, assistant editor of the ''Dictionary of National Biography'', in which he wrote over 700 entries. A son of physician and episcopus vagans John Thomas Seccombe, he was educated at Felsted School, Felsted and Balliol College, Oxford, taking a first in Modern History in 1889.


Works

*(editor)
Twelve Bad Men: Original Studies of Eminent Scoundrels
' (1894) *''The Age of Johnson'' (1899)
''The Age of Shakespeare''
(with John William Allen (1865–1944), 1903)
''Bookman History of English Literature''
(with W. Robertson Nicoll, 1905–6)
''In Praise of Oxford''
(1910)
''Scott Centenary Articles''
(with W. P. Ker, George Gordon, W. H. Hutton, Arthur McDowall, and R. S. Rait, 1932) *''The Dictionary of National Biography'' (assistant editor)


References

* Cousin, John W.
A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature
'. 1910. * ;Attribution


External links

* * * *
A Guide to the Thomas Seccombe correspondence, NC829
Special Collections, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Reno. English non-fiction writers 1866 births 1923 deaths English male non-fiction writers {{UK-nonfiction-writer-stub