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Encyclopedia > E. H. Visiak

Edward Harold Physick (July 20, 1878 - 30 August 1972) was an English writer, known chiefly as a critic and authority on John Milton; also a poet and fantasy writer. He used the pseudonym E. H. Visiak from 1910.


He was born in Ealing, London on July 20 1878; his father E.J. Physick was a sculptor. He went to Hitchin Grammar school, and became a clerical worker. During World War I he was a conscientious objector. After a short time teaching he became an independent scholar, living very quietly. During the 1930s he collaborated on some short stories, with John Gawsworth in particular.


Works

  • Buccaneer Ballads (1910) poetry
  • The Haunted Island (1910) novel
  • Flints and Flashes (1911) poetry
  • The Phantom Ship (1912) poetry
  • The Battle Fiends (1916) poetry
  • Milton Agonistes: a metaphysical criticism (1923)
  • Medusa: A Story of Mystery (1929) novel
  • Milton's Lament for Damon and his other Latin poems (1935) with Walter W. Skeat
  • In Richards' Shilling Selections from Edwardian Poets (1936)
  • The Shadow (1936) novel
  • The Mask of Comus (1937) editor
  • Milton: Complete Poetry and Selected Prose, with English Metrical Translations of the Latin, Greek and Italian Poems (1938)
  • Mirror of Conrad (1956) criticism
  • Life's Morning Hour (1969) autobiography
  • Portent of Milton: Some Aspects of His Genius (1968) criticism
  • The Strange Genius of David Lindsay (1970) with J. B. Pick and Colin Wilson

  Results from FactBites:
 
Papers of E.H. Visiak (486 words)
Edward Harold Physick was born in Ealing on July 20 1878, the son of E.J. Physick the sculptor.
The sea was very important to Visiak as it reminded him of happy childhood visits to Lowestoft and continued to influence his writings.
Material related to Visiak can be found in the Bodley Head archive [MS 2606], the Macmillan archive [MS 1089]and the George Bell and Sons archive [MS 1640].
  More results at FactBites »

 

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