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Charles Morgan letter to unidentified recipient
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Held at: University of Delaware Library Special Collections [Contact Us]181 South College Avenue, Newark, DE 19717-5267
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Delaware Library Special Collections. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
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British writer Charles Langbridge Morgan wrote several plays, eleven novels, and numerous essays.
Charles Langbridge Morgan was born on January 22, 1894, in Bromley, Kent. He was a cadet in the Royal Navy and later attended naval colleges at Osborne and Dartmouth. From 1911-1913, he served in the Atlantic and China before resigning to pursue a literary career. However, at the outbreak of World War I, Morgan volunteered for reenlistment in the Royal Navy, joining the Naval Brigade forces at Antwerp. In the fall of 1914, Morgan was taken prisoner in Holland, where during his internment Morgan began writing his first novel,
The Gunroom (1919) in which he was critical of the British Navy. Though critical of the Royal Navy, Morgan again volunteered for service during World War II, and he served in the British Admiralty from 1939-1944.After studying at Oxford, beginning in 1921, Morgan worked as a drama critic for
The Times of London. In 1926, he became the paper’s principal drama critic, a post he held until 1939.In the 1930s and 1940s, when Morgan’s success as a writer was at its peak, he won three important literary prizes for his novels: the Prix Fémina-Vie Heureuse (1929); the Hawthornden Prize (1932); and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize (1940).
Morgan was one of the few foreigners to become an Académicien in the Institut de France. He also received honorary doctorates from St. Andrews University (LL.D., 1947), Université de Caen (1948), and Université de Toulouse (1948). Morgan died in London, on February 6, 1958.
Morgan, Charles.Selected Letters. Ed. Eiluned Lewis. London: Macmillan, 1967. "Charles Morgan." Contemporary Authors Online (reproduced in Biography Resource Center). http://www.galenet.com/servlet/BioRC (accessed June 2011).
Charles Morgan wrote this two-page letter to an unidentified woman to decline a lecture request.
Morgan explained that his lectures were not suitable for an audience of the general public and gave as an example a lecture titled "On the Nature of Dramatic Illusion," he read to the Royal Society of Literature. He further mentioned two current projects which required his full attention, namely his work at
The London Times and work on a new book.Box 61, F0889: Shelved in SPEC MSS 0099 manuscript boxes.
Purchase, February 2011.
Processed and encoded by Anita Wellner, June 2011. Further encoded by George Apodaca, October 2015.
People
Subject
- Authors, English--20th century--Correspondence
- Lectures and lecturing--History--20th century--Correspondence
Occupation
- Publisher
- University of Delaware Library Special Collections
- Finding Aid Author
- University of Delaware Library, Special Collections
- Finding Aid Date
- 2011 June 1
- Access Restrictions
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The collection is open for research.
- Use Restrictions
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Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, http://library.udel.edu/spec/askspec/