Robert Barnabas Brough (10 April 1828 - 26 June 1860) was an English writer. He wrote poetry, novels and plays and was a contributor to many periodicals.
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Brough was born on April 10, 1828 in London, the son of Barnabas Brough (d. 1854), a brewer and wine merchant and Frances Whiteside, a poet. His brothers were William, also a playwright, John Cargill Brough (1834–1872), a science writer, and Lionel, a comic actor. The family moved to Pontypool in Monmouthshire, where his father ran a brewery and public house. His father was briefly kidnapped by the Chartists in 1839 and was a crown witness at the trial of the Chartist leader John Frost, which resulted in Frost's deportation to Australia. The family was ostracized and ruined financially as a result, and moved to Manchester in 1843, where Brough worked as a clerk in order to contribute to the family income.[1]
In 1847, Brough established the Liverpool Lion, a comic periodical, writing satiric articles and drawings. He worked with his brother William to write a Victorian burlesque play, The Enchanted Isle, which was produced in Liverpool in 1848 before transferring to London. Moving to London, he wrote other successful burlesques including Medea (1856) and Masaniello (1857), as well as other collaborative productions with his brother William including The Sphinx (1849) and The Last Edition of Ivanhoe (1850).
Brough also wrote essays and poems for journals and newspapers, including for a period being the Brussels correspondent of the Sunday Times. Songs of the Governing Classes (1855), a book of radical poems, is his best known work. In it, Brough critiqued the handling of the Crimean war and launched an attack on the upper classes through his satiric fictional portraits of aristocratic figures.
Brough also penned a parody of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven" called "The Vulture; An Ornithological Study" which was published in the December 1853 issue of Graham's Magazine, though he was not credited. The poem was later reprinted in William Evans Burton's "Cyclopedia of Wit and Humor" (1858), this time with his name attached. He also published much-praised translations of poetry, including those of Victor Hugo. In 1860 Robert Brough edited the magazine the "Welcome Guest" for John Maxwell, and was editor at the time of the first contribution by Mary Elizabeth Braddon.
In 1859 Brough published a short story entitled "Calmuck" in Charles Dickens' magazine Household Words. It was a thinly disguised account of William Holman Hunt's experience painting his picture The Hireling Shepherd and of his relations with his model Emma Watkins. Hunt wrote an outraged letter to Dickens, who claimed that to be unaware that the story was based on real events.[2]
Brough was a popular member of a ‘bohemian’ circle of journalists, writers and playwrights. He was a founder of the Savage Club in 1857, and helped support the families of deceased writers and numerous working-class causes through benefit performances.
He married actress Elizabeth Romer. They had three children including a daughter, Frances "Fanny" Whiteside Brough (1852–1914), an actress known for her portrayal of Kitty Warren in the 1905 staging of George Bernard Shaw's Mrs. Warren's Profession; and a son, Lionel Barnabas Brough (1857–1906), known professionally as Robert Brough, who became an actor-manager.[3] Robert Barnabas Brough was also related to Robert Brough Smyth.
On 26 June 1860, Robert Brough died at 8 Boundary Street, Hulme, near Manchester, leaving his widow and three children with little money to support them. The Savage Club, with the help of five leading London theatres, arranged a benefit performance to establish a fund to support them, with Charles Dickens as a trustee.
"Robert Barnabas Brough". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. 2004.
"John Cargill Brough". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. 2004.