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About Author

Maurice Baring

Maurice Baring (Wikipedia) was a versatile English man of letters, known as a dramatist, poet, novelist, translator and essayist, and also as a travel writer and war correspondent. He was the eighth child, and fifth son, of Edward Charles Baring, first Baron Revelstoke, of the Baring banking family, and his wife Louisa Emily Charlotte Bulteel, granddaughter of the second Earl Grey. He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge. After an abortive start on a diplomatic career, he travelled widely, particularly in Russia. He reported as an eye-witness on the Russo-Japanese War for the London Morning Post. At the start of World War I he joined the Royal Flying Corps, where he served as assistant to Trenchard. In 1918 Baring served as a staff officer in the Royal Air Force and was appointed OBE. In 1925 Baring received an honorary commission as a wing commander in the Reserve of Air Force Officers. After the war he enjoyed a period of success as a dramatist, and began to write novels. He suffered from chronic illness in the last years of his life; for the final 15 years of his life he was debilitated by Parkinson's Disease. He was widely connected socially, to some of the Cambridge Apostles, to The Coterie, and to the literary group around G. K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc in particular. He was staunch in his anti-intellectualism with respect to the arts, and a convinced practical joker. He became a Roman Catholic convert in 1909, being received into the church by Fr. Bowden at the Brompton Oratory. He described his conversion as "the only action in my life which I am quite certain I have never regretted." Baring became a novelist late in his life, but went on to find success in that genre, as well as in playwriting. In France his novel Daphne Adene ran to over twenty printings.

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Books in this Series

King William IV

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Sketches the life of the British king and examines his attitudes towards political reform in the early nineteenth-century.

Felix Mendelssohn, a life in letters

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When Felix Mendelssohn's letters began to be published after his death, they were immediately recognized for their outstanding literary merit as well as the invaluable access they provide to the composer's life and thoughts. In their charm, humor and rich depiction of musical life in nineteenth century Europe they are unsurpassed. While notable English translations of selected Mendelssohn letters appears soon after the first German publications, Victorian custom necessitated the expurgation of much material deemed indiscreet, and often added an element of formality which robbed these letters of much of their freshness and vitality. The extraordinary letters contained in this volume, many of which have never before been published in English, span the composer's lifetime beginning when he was twelve years of age. They are filled with details about his musical life, evocative descriptions of his travels in Italy, Scotland, France and Germany, and of his many meetings with the musical, literary, and artistic luminaries of his age such as Giacomo Rossini and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Many of the letters to his family have come to light only recently and provide a particularly intimate and lively portrait of the composer. Accompanying these entertaining letters are some of his remarkable watercolors and drawings of the places he visited.