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WARD, MARY AUGUSTA, (Mrs Humphrey Ward), (1851-1920),
novelist, |
was born at Hobart, on 11 June 1851. Her father, Thomas Arnold (1823-1900),
the second son of Arnold of Rugby, came to Tasmania early in 1850 and organized
its primary education. There he met and married in June 1850 Julia Sorell,
daughter of William Sorell, registrar of deeds at Hobart, and grand-daughter of
William
Sorell (q.v.), the third governor of Tasmania. Thomas Arnold was received
into the Roman Catholic Church on 12 January 1856 and feeling ran so high
against him on this account that he resigned his appointment and returned to
England with his family. Mary Arnold had her fifth birthday about a month before
they left, and she had no further connexion with Tasmania. Thomas Arnold at
first could earn but a precarious livelihood, and his eldest child spent much of
her time with her grandmother. She was educated at various boarding schools, and
at 16 returned to live with her parents at Oxford where her father had a history
lectureship. He had returned to the Church of England about two years before,
though he was to change his mind again some years later. His daughter continued
to study, met many interesting men belonging to the university, and on 6 April
1872 was married to T. Humphrey Ward, a fellow and tutor of Brasenose College.
For the next nine years she lived at Oxford. She had by now made herself
familiar with French, German, Italian, Latin and Greek, and was also an
excellent pianoforte player. She was developing an interest in social and
educational service and making tentative efforts at literature. She added
Spanish to her languages, and in 1877 undertook the writing of a large number of
the lives of early Spanish ecclesiastics for the Dictionary of Christian
Biography. It was a piece of hard conscientious work, and was admirably
done. In 1881 her Milly and Olly, a children's story, was published, and
three years later her first novel, Miss Bretherton, appeared. Her husband
had joined the staff of The Times in 1881, and they removed to London in
that year where Mrs Ward also contributed to the journals of the day. In 1888
she caused a sensation with the publication of Robert Elsmere, which
turned much on questions of religious belief. It had an enormous circulation
both in Great Britain and in the United States. In spite of this success it was
four years before her next book, David Grieve, was published, which also
had immense sales. For over 20 years after this Mrs Ward had a leading place
among the English novelists of the day, and some 15 novels appeared at regular
intervals during this period. During the 1914-18 war Mrs Ward wrote some volumes
designed to help in the prosecution of the war, and England's Effort,
which appeared in 1916, is considered to have had much effect on American
feeling. Towards the Goal followed in June 1917. Her interesting book of
reminiscences, A Writer's Recollections, appeared in October 1918, and
her last novel, Harvest, in April 1920, a few days after her death on 24
March. Her husband survived her with a son and two daughters. Her son, Arnold
Ward, after a brilliant career at Eton and Oxford, became Unionist M.P. for West
Herts, 1910-18, her younger daughter, afterwards her biographer, married George
Macaulay Trevelyan. A list of Mrs Ward's books will be found at the end of her
biography.
Mrs Ward had a many-sided and charming personality. She was a fine scholar, a
good novelist and a leading social worker. The great reputation of her novels
has faded very much in the years since her death. Her characters do not always
completely come alive, and she is lacking in humour, but possibly the fact that
her books are based so often on the problems of her time, make them somewhat
alien from the generations faced with the even more difficult problems that have
arisen since.
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