John Sampson (linguist)
John Sampson (1862–1931) was an Irish linguist. As a scholar he is best known for The Dialect of the Gypsies of Wales (1926), an authoritative grammar of the Welsh-Romany language.[1][2] It was written with the collaboration of Edward Wood, who died in 1902.[3] Sampson edited a collection the poetry of William Blake, Blake's "Poetical Works",[4] that restored the text from original works and annotated the published variants; Alfred Kazin described this as "the first accurate and completely trustworthy edition'.[5]
Life
He was born in Schull, County Cork, Ireland, and had to leave school at the age of 14 after his father died. Sampson became librarian at University College, Liverpool in 1892, largely self-taught.[6]
In 1901 he met the artist Augustus John, and they struck up a long friendship, leading to an emphasis in John’s works on Romany subjects.[7]
Sampson's grandson, the writer Anthony Sampson, published a biography of him in 1997 entitled The Scholar Gypsy: The Quest For A Family Secret.[8][9]
Notes
Wikisource has original works written by or about: John Sampson |
- ↑ http://romani.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/files/13_briefhistory.shtml
- ↑ http://sca.lib.liv.ac.uk/collections/gypsy/Yates.htm
- ↑ "Romany Wales Project - The Wood Tribe".
- ↑ Sampson, J. The Poetical Works of William Blake; a new and verbatim text from the manuscript engraved and letterpress originals (1905), OUP.
- ↑ Kazin, A. The Portable Blake, 1945, "Blake Chronology".
- ↑ http://sca.lib.liv.ac.uk/collections/gypsy/Sampson.htm
- ↑ Michael Holroyd, Augustus John (1996 single-volume edition), p. 100.
- ↑ Review http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3724/is_/ai_n8779071.
- ↑ John Thompson, "Anthony Sampson" (obituary), The Guardian, 21 December 2004.