Francis Marion Crawford, the youngest of the four children of the well-known sculptor Thomas Crawford, was born in Rome, educated by a French governess; then at St Paul"s School, Concord, N.H.; in the quiet country village of Hatfield Regis, under an English tutor; at Trinity College, Cambridge, where they thought him a mathematician in those days; at Heidelberg and Karlsruhe, and at the University of Rome, where a special interest in Oriental languages sent him to India with the idea of preparing for a professorship.
At one time in India hard times nearly forced him into enlistment in the British army, but a chance opening sent him as editor of the _Indian Herald_ to Allahabad. It was during the next eighteen months that he met at Simla the hero of his first novel, "Mr. Isaacs." "If it had not been for him," Mr.
Crawford has been known to say, "I might at this moment be a professor of Sanskrit in some American college;" for that idea persisted after his return to the United States, where he entered Harvard for special study of the subject.
But from the May evening when the story of the interesting man at Simla was first told in a club smoking-room overlooking Madison Square, Mr. Crawford"s life has been one of hard literary work. He returned to Italy in 1883, spent most of the next year in Constantinople, where he was married to a daughter of General Berdan. From 1885 he has made his home in Sorrento, Italy, visiting America at intervals.
"Mr. Isaacs," published in 1882, was followed almost at once by "Dr. Claudius." Then _The Atlantic Monthly_ claimed a serial, "A Roman Singer," in 1883. Since that time the list of his novels has been increased to thirty-two, besides the historical and descriptive works ent.i.tled "Ave Roma Immortalis"
and "The Rulers of the South."
To Mr. Crawford, the development of a story and of the character which suggested it, is the preeminent thing. As the critics say:--
"He is an artist, a born story-teller and colourist, imaginative and dramatic, virile and vivid."
His wide range as a traveller has contributed doubtless to another characteristic quality:--
"... his strength in unexcelled portraits of odd characters and his magical skill in seeming to make his readers witnesses of the spectacles."
His intimate knowledge of many countries has resulted in an unequalled series of brilliant romances, including varied characters from the old families of Rome, the gla.s.sblowers of Venice, the silversmiths of Rome, the cigarette makers of Munich, the court of old Madrid, the Turks of Stamboul and the Bosphorus, simple sailors on the coast of Spain, Americans of modern New York and Bar Harbor, to Crusaders of the twelfth century. But whether the scene be in modern India, rural England, the Black Forest, or the palaces of Babylon, the story seizes on the imagination and fascinates the reader.
"The romantic reader will find here a tale of love pa.s.sionate and pure; the student of character, the subtle a.n.a.lysis and deft portrayal he loves; the historian will approve its conscientious historic accuracy; the lover of adventure will find his blood stir and pulses quicken as he reads."
THE NOVELS OF F. MARION CRAWFORD
NEW UNIFORM EDITION
Dr. Claudius A Roman Singer Zoroaster Don Orsino Marion Darche A Cigarette Maker"s Romance and Khaled Taquisara Via Crucis Sant" Ilario The Ralstons Adam Johnstone"s Son and A Rose of Yesterday Mr. Isaacs A Tale of a Lonely Parish Saracinesca Paul Patoff The Witch of Prague Pietro Ghisleri Corleone Children of the King Katherine Lauderdale To Leeward