Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- Dedication
- MEMOIR BY MRS. NETTLESHIP
- I JOHAN NICOLAI MADVIG
- II THE ORIGINAL FORM OF THE ROMAN SATURA
- III LITERARY CRITICISM IN LATIN ANTIQUITY
- IV THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF CLASSICAL LATIN PROSE
- V LIFE AND POEMS OF JUVENAL
- VI THE STUDY OF LATIN GRAMMAR AMONG THE ROMANS IN THE FIRST CENTURY A. D.
- VII ON THE PRESENT RELATIONS BETWEEN CLASSICAL RESEARCH AND CLASSICAL EDUCATION IN ENGLAND
- VIII THE MORAL INFLUENCE OF LITERATURE
- IX CLASSICAL EDUCATION IN THE PAST AND AT PRESENT
- X AUTHORITY IN THE SPHERE OF CONDUCT AND INTELLECT
- XI THE RELATIONS BETWEEN NATURAL SCIENCE AND LITERATURE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
MEMOIR BY MRS. NETTLESHIP
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- Dedication
- MEMOIR BY MRS. NETTLESHIP
- I JOHAN NICOLAI MADVIG
- II THE ORIGINAL FORM OF THE ROMAN SATURA
- III LITERARY CRITICISM IN LATIN ANTIQUITY
- IV THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF CLASSICAL LATIN PROSE
- V LIFE AND POEMS OF JUVENAL
- VI THE STUDY OF LATIN GRAMMAR AMONG THE ROMANS IN THE FIRST CENTURY A. D.
- VII ON THE PRESENT RELATIONS BETWEEN CLASSICAL RESEARCH AND CLASSICAL EDUCATION IN ENGLAND
- VIII THE MORAL INFLUENCE OF LITERATURE
- IX CLASSICAL EDUCATION IN THE PAST AND AT PRESENT
- X AUTHORITY IN THE SPHERE OF CONDUCT AND INTELLECT
- XI THE RELATIONS BETWEEN NATURAL SCIENCE AND LITERATURE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
Summary
Henry Nettleship was born at Kettering in Northamptonshire on May 5, 1839. His father, Henry John Nettleship, a solicitor practising in that town, married Isabella Ann, daughter of the Rev. James Hogg, Vicar of Geddington, and master of Kettering Grammar School. They had seven children, of whom five boys lived to maturity. The youngest of these, Richard Lewis, Fellow and Tutor of Balliol College, Oxford, perished in a snowstorm on Mont Blanc, August 25, 1892. Of the other brothers, one became an artist, another an oculist, a third a schoolmaster; while the eldest is the subject of this memoir.
His grandfather, John Nettleship, of Tickhill, Yorkshire, married Ann Hunt (first cousin of George Waddington, Dean of Durham), whose brother, J. H. Hunt, was the editor of the Critical Review and the translator of Tasso. John Nettleship's mother, the Mrs. Nettleship of Gainsborough spoken of with admiration by Mr. Mozley in his Reminiscences of Towns, Villages and Schools, was a remarkable woman, cultivated and musical, pious and charitable. The mother of the late Prof. George Rolleston was one of her daughters.
His grandmother's connexion with Dean Waddington was the cause of his being eventually sent to school at Durham, and this, by bringing him under the influence of Dr. Elder, the Headmaster, determined his future career as a Scholar.
His feeling for music and poetry seems to have been derived from his father's family, who were all musical, an aunt being an accomplished pianist.
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- Lectures and EssaysSecond Series, pp. ix - xlivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1895