Richard Barham Middleton

Richard Barham Middleton ca. 1909

Richard Barham Middleton (28 October 1882 1 December 1911) was an English poet and author, who is remembered mostly for his short ghost stories, in particular "The Ghost Ship".[1]

Biography

Born in Staines, Middlesex,[2] and educated at Cranbrook School, Kent, Middleton worked in London for the Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation bank, as a clerk, from 1901 to 1907. Unhappy in this, he affected a Bohemian life at night; he is mentioned, in disguised terms, in Arthur Ransome's Bohemia in London. He moved out of his parents' house and into rooms in Blackfriars, and he joined the club The New Bohemians, where he acquired literary contacts who included Arthur Machen, Louis McQuilland (1880–1946), and Christopher Wilson.

He became an editor at Vanity Fair under Edgar Jepson, where he confided to his fellow editor Frank Harris that what he really wanted to do was make a living as a poet. Shortly after, Harris published Middleton's poem "The Bathing Boy":[3]

I saw him standing idly on the brim
    Of the quick river, in his beauty clad,
So fair he was that Nature looked at him
        And touched him with her sunbeams here and there
        So that his cool flesh sparkled, and his hair
    Blazed like a crown above the naked lad.
 
And so I wept; I have seen lovely things,
    Maidens and stars and roses all a-nod
In moonlit seas, but Love without his wings
        Set in the azure of an August sky,
        Was all too fair for my mortality,
    And so I wept to see the little god.

Till with a sudden grace of silver skin
    And golden lock he dived, his song of joy
Broke with the bubbles as he bore them in;
        And lo, the fear of night was on that place,
        Till decked with new-found gems and flushed of face
    He rose again, a laughing, choking boy.

His work was also published by Austin Harrison in The English Review, and he wrote book reviews for The Academy.[4]

Middleton suffered from severe depression, known as melancholia at that time. He spent the last nine months of his life in Brussels, where in December 1911 he took his life by poisoning himself with chloroform, which had been prescribed as a remedy for his condition.[5] His literary reputation was kept alive by Edgar Jepson and Arthur Machen, the latter of whom wrote an introduction to Middleton's collection The Ghost Ship and Other Stories,[6] and later by John Gawsworth. His stories have appeared in several anthologies.

An encounter by Middleton with the young Raymond Chandler is said to have influenced the latter to postpone his career as writer. Chandler wrote, "Middleton struck me as having far more talent than I was ever likely to possess; and if he couldn't make a go of it, it wasn't very likely that I could."[7]

Works

References

  1. Darrell Schweitzer, Richard Middleton: Beauty, Sadness, and Terror. in: Schweitzer, Darrell, ed. Discovering Classic Horror Fiction I. Mercer Island, WA: Starmont, 1992.ISBN 1-55742-084-X (pp. 34–40).
  2. Hellnotes Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  3. Frank Harris (1915) Contemporary Portraits, Mitchell Kennerley, New York.
  4. Henry Savage (1922) Richard Middleton: The Man And His Work, Cecil Palmer, London.
  5. Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism, ©1995 Gale Cengage
  6. Mark Valentine, Arthur Machen. Seren, 1995. ISBN 185411123X, (p. 79).
  7. Raymond Chandler: Raymond Chandler Speaking, Dorothy Gardiner, Kathrine Sorley Walker (ed.), p. 24, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1962, ISBN 978-0-520-20835-3.

Sources

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