Arthur St John Adcock


Arthur St John Adcock was an English novelist and poet, known as A. St John Adcock or St John Adcock. He is remembered for his discovery of the then-unknown poet W. H. Davies. His daughters, Marion St John Webb and Almey St John Adcock, were also writers.

Biography

Arthur St John Adcock was born on 17 January 1864 in London. He was a Fleet Street journalist for half a century, as an assiduous freelance writer. He worked initially as a law office clerk, becoming a full-time writer in 1893. Adcock built up a literary career by unrelenting efforts in circulating his manuscripts, initially also working part-time as an assistant editor on a trade journal.
He was a founder member in 1901 of Paul Henry's literary and performing club, with Robert Lynd, Frank Rutter and others. The acting editor of The Bookman from 1908, Adcock, according to A. E. Waite who knew him, did all the work of the Bookman, nominally under its founder William Robertson Nicoll. In 1923, he became its official editor.
As an influential critic, Adcock has been classed with conservatives such as Hilaire Belloc, Edmund Gosse, Henry Newbolt, E. B. Osborn and Arthur Waugh.
Adcock was a friend of the weird fiction writer William Hope Hodgson and wrote an introduction to Hodgson's posthumously published book, The Calling of the Sea.
Adcock married Marion Taylor in 1887, and they settled in Hampstead. Their daughters Marion St John Webb and Almey St John Adcock, became writers.
He died on 9 June 1930 in Richmond. Adcock's papers are held by the Bodleian Library.

Works

Adcock is considered one of the "Cockney school novelists", a group influenced by Charles Dickens and including also Henry Nevinson, Edwin Pugh, and William Pett Ridge. East End Idylls, about the London slums, began an early trilogy, and had an introduction by the Christian Socialist James Granville Adderley, a friend. It drew on Arthur Morrison.
Adcock published:
  • Beyond Atonement
  • East End Idylls
  • The Consecration of Hetty Fleet
  • In The Image of God
  • In The Wake of the War
  • Songs of the War
  • The Luck of Private Foster: A Romance of Love and War
  • More Than Money
  • In Fear of Man
  • Admissions And Asides
  • Love in London
  • London From The Top of A 'Bus
  • The World that Never Was. A London Fantasy
  • Billicks
  • Two to Nowhere
  • A Man with a Past
  • The Booklover's London
  • Modern Grub Street and other essays
  • as editor, a war reportage anthology, part of the Daily Telegraph War Books series
  • Songs of The World War
  • The ANZAC Pilgrim's Progress: Ballads of Australia's Army Lance-Corporal Cobber, editor
  • Tod MacMammon Sees His Soul
  • Exit Homo
  • The Divine Tragedy
  • on Jeffery Farnol, W. B. Maxwell, W. W. Jacobs et al.
  • Robert Louis Stevenson: His Work and His Personality editor
  • The Bookman Treasury of Living Poets
  • editor, poetry anthology
  • Wonderful London editor, three volumes; a shorter version was reissued in one volume, with preface by Almey St John Adcock, his daughter.
  • The Glory that was Grub Street – Impressions of Contemporary Authors
  • Collected Poems of St. John Adcock
  • Hyde Park
Adcock was the last editor of The Odd Volume, an annual that folded during World War I.