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Contents

   



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1 Early life  





2 Early work  





3 Literature  





4 Dramatic work  





5 Adult life  





6 Bibliography  



6.1  Short stories  







7 Film adaptations  





8 See also  





9 References  





10 External links  














W. W. Jacobs






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from W.W. Jacobs)

W. W. Jacobs
Portrait of Jacobs by Elliott & Fry
Portrait of Jacobs by Elliott & Fry
BornWilliam Wymark Jacobs
(1863-09-08)8 September 1863
London, England
Died1 September 1943(1943-09-01) (aged 79)
Islington, London, England
OccupationShort story writer, novelist
Period1885–1943

William Wymark Jacobs (8 September 1863 – 1 September 1943) was an English author of short fiction and drama. He is best known for his story "The Monkey's Paw".

Early life[edit]

He was born in 1863 at 5, Crombie’s Row, Mile End Old Town (not Wapping, as is often stated),[1] London, to William Gage Jacobs, wharf manager, and his wife Sophia.[2] His father managed the South Devon wharf in Lower East Smithfield, by the St Katherine Docks and, according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, "the young Jacobs spent much time on Thames-side, growing familiar with the life of the neighbourhood" and "ran wild in Wapping".[3] Jacobs and his siblings were still young when their mother died. Their father then married his housekeeper and had seven more children.[4] Jacobs attended a private London school before Birkbeck College (Birkbeck Literary and Scientific Institution, now part of the University of London),[5] where he befriended William Pett Ridgcap.

Jacobs' baptism record

Early work[edit]

In 1879, Jacobs began work as a clerk in the Post Office Savings Bank. By 1885 he had his first short story published, but success came slowly. Yet Arnold Bennett in 1898 was astonished to hear that Jacobs had turned down £50 for six short stories. He was financially secure enough to be able to leave the post office in 1899.

Literature[edit]

Jacobs is remembered for a macabre tale, "The Monkey's Paw", (published 1902 in a short-story collection, The Lady of the Barge)[6] and several other ghost stories, including "The Toll House" (from the 1909 collection Sailors' Knots) and "Jerry Bundler" (from the 1901 Light Freights).[6][7] Most of his work was humorous. His favourite subject was marine life – "men who go down to the sea in ships of moderate tonnage," said Punch, reviewing his first collection, Many Cargoes,[8] which gained popular success on publication in 1896.

Michael Sadleir has said of Jacobs's fiction, "He wrote stories of three kinds: describing the misadventures of sailor-men ashore; celebrating the artful dodger of a slow-witted village; and tales of the macabre."[9]

W. W. Jacobs

Many Cargoes was followed by the novel The Skipper's Wooing in 1897, and another collection of short stories, Sea Urchins (1898), confirmed his popularity. Other titles included Captains All, Sailors' Knots, and Night Watches. The title of the last reflects the popularity of an enduring character: the night-watchman on the wharf in Wapping, recounting the preposterous adventures of his acquaintances Ginger Dick, Sam Small, and Peter Russet. These three characters, pockets full after a long voyage, took lodgings together, set on enjoying a long spell ashore, but the crafty inhabitants of dockland London soon relieved them of their funds, assisted by their own fecklessness and credulity. Jacobs showed a delicacy of touch in his use of the coarse vernacular of the East End of London, which attracted the respect of such writers as P. G. Wodehouse, who mentions Jacobs in his autobiographical work Bring on the Girls!, written with Guy Bolton and published in 1954.

The stories in Many Cargoes had varied previous serial publication, while those in Sea Urchins were for the most part published in Jerome K. Jerome's Idler. From October 1898, Jacobs's stories appeared in the Strand, which provided him with financial security almost up to his death.

John Drinkwater described Jacobs's fiction as "in the Dickens tradition".[5]

Dramatic work[edit]

Jacobs's short-story output declined somewhat around the time of the First World War. His literary efforts thereafter were mainly adaptations of his own short stories for the stage. His first stage work, The Ghost of Jerry Bundler, opened in London in 1899, was revived in 1902, and was eventually published in 1908. He wrote 18 plays altogether, some in collaboration with other writers.

Adult life[edit]

Jacobs married Agnes Eleanor Williams in 1900 at West Ham, Essex. Agnes was later a noted suffragette. The 1901 Census records their living with a first child, a three-month-old daughter, at Kings Place Road, Buckhurst Hill, Essex. Also recorded in the household were his journalist sister Amy, his sister-in-law, Nancy Williams, a cook, and an additional domestic servant. Altogether the Jacobs had two sons and three daughters.[10]

Jacobs went on to set up home in Loughton, Essex, first at the Outlook in Park Hill, and then at Feltham House in Goldings Hill, which bears a blue plaque to him. Loughton is the "Claybury" of some of the stories; Jacobs's love for the local forest scenery features in "Land Of Cockaigne". Another blue plaque appears on Jacobs's central London residence at 15 Gloucester Gate, Regents Park (later held by the Prince of Wales's Institute of Architecture).

Jacobs stated that after his youthful left-wing opinions, his political position in later years was "Conservative and Individualistic".[5]

On 7 January 1914, in King's Hall, Covent Garden, Jacobs was a member of the jury in the mock trial of John Jasper for the murder of Edwin Drood. At this all-star event G. K. Chesterton was Judge and George Bernard Shaw appeared as foreman of the jury.[11]

In 1928 he was involved in the creation of films of his works. The first film made was titled "The Bravo". Fifty actresses were auditioned and Jacob was said to be impressed by Paddy Naismith who was chosen to play the lead role.[12]

W. W. Jacobs died on 1 September 1943 at Hornsey Lane, Islington, London, at the age of 79. An obituary in The Times (2 September 1943) described him as "quiet, gentle and modest... not fond of large functions and crowds." Ian Hay remarked, "He invented an entirely new form of humorous narrative. Its outstanding characteristics were compression and understatement."[13]

Bibliography[edit]

Short stories[edit]

Film adaptations[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Crombie’s Row was north of the Commercial Road, in Mile End Old Town, between present-day Sidney Street and Jubilee Street. Jacobs was baptised at Christchurch, Watney Street, which was just across the Commercial Road in Shadwell. Those places have been demolished, but can be located in Stanford, Edward (1872). Stanford's Library Map of London and Its Suburbs (Map). London: Stanford. Retrieved 13 April 2023. and Edward Weller's map of 1868. Jacobs himself accurately gave his birthplace as "Middlesex, Mile End E" in the 1911 census, and it is so recorded in the England and Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915 (General Register Office. England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes. London, England). The "Wapping" version, though stated in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, is unsupported, and may derive from his childhood play in the docks of east London.
  • ^ Baptisms Solemnised in the Parish of Christ Church, St George in the East, County of Middlesex, in the year 1863, page 22 (London Metropolitan Archives).
  • ^ Sadleir, Michael; Basu, Sayoni (2011). "Jacobs, William Wymark". In Basu, Sayoni (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34145. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • ^ Loughton and District Historical Society Newsletter, No. 186. September/October 2010, p. 6. [1]
  • ^ a b c "Jacobs, William", in Stanley J. Kunitz and Howard Haycraft, Twentieth Century Authors, A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Literature, (Third Edition). New York, The H. W. Wilson Company, 1950, pp. 721–723.
  • ^ a b Norman Donaldson, "W. W. Jacobs", E. F. Bleiler, ed. Supernatural Fiction Writers. New York: Scribner's, 1985, pp. 383–388. ISBN 0684178087
  • ^ Mike Ashley, Who's Who in Horror and Fantasy Fiction. Elm Tree Books, 1977, ISBN 0-241-89528-6, p. 102.
  • ^ Lemon, Mark; Mayhew, Henry; Taylor, Tom; Brooks, Shirley; Burnand, F. C. (Francis Cowley); Seaman, Owen. "Punch". [London, Punch Publications Ltd., etc.] Retrieved 11 May 2021 – via Internet Archive.
  • ^ John Sutherland, The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Stanford University Press, 1990. ISBN 0804718423, pp. 324–325.
  • ^ Michael Sadleir "Jacobs, William Wymark (1863–1943)", rev. Sayoni Basu, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004 Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  • ^ Programme, The Trial of John Jasper for the Murder of Edwin Drood, at King's Hall, Covent Garden, January 7th 1914. Copy in a private collection, annotated by the original owner.)
  • ^ "A full life". issuu. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  • ^ Sandra Kemp, Charlotte Mitchell and David Trotter, eds., "Jacobs, W. W.", The Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction, Oxford: OUP, 1997, ISBN 9780191727382
  • External links[edit]


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