Richard Doddridge Blackmore
Richard Doddridge Blackmore (
1825 -
1900), one of the most famous
English novelists of the his generation, was born on
June 9,
1825, at Longworth,
Berkshire, of which parish his father was vicar. Like John Ridd, the hero of "
Lorna Doone," he was educated at Blundell's School, Tiverton. An early marriage with a beautiful Portuguese girl, and a long illness, forced him to live for some years in hard and narrow circumstances. Happily, in
1860, he came, unexpectedly, into a considerable fortune. Settling down at
Teddington, he divided his life between the delights of gardening and the pleasures of literature; cultivating his vines, peaches, nectarines, pears, and strawberries, and writing, first, sensational stories, and then historical romances. In
1869, with his third attempt in fiction, "Lorna Doone: A Romance of Exmoor," he suddenly became famous as a novelist, and acted as the pioneer of the new romantic movement in fiction which R. L. Stevenson and other brilliant writers afterwards carried on. Lorna Doone is the most famous of his heroines, but in "Cradock Nowell," a fine tale of the
New Forest, in "Alice Lorraine," a story of the
South Downs, and in "The Maid of Sker," he has depicted womanly types equal in charm to Lorna. He died at Teddington on
January 20,
1900.