", whose life and adventures should be known to all who know his writings, must be held to have succeeded in nothing that his friends would have had him succeed in. He was intended for a clergyman, and was rejected when he applied for orders; he practiced as a physician, and never made what would have paid for a degree; what he was not asked or expected to do, was to write, but he wrote and paid the penalty. His existence was a continued privation. The days were few, in which he had resources for the night, or dared to look forward to the morrow."
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Literary criticsUniversity of Cambridge alumniBiographers from EnglandTheatre criticsUniversity College London alumni
Original Language: English
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|year=1855|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2wQ6AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA1|pages=1–4}} (quote from pp. 1–2; 1st edition 1848)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Forster_(biographer)
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John Forster (biographer)
(2 April 1812 – 2 February 1876) was an English biographer, essayist, historian, literary and drama critic, and newspaper editor. Forster, a close friend of Charles Dickens, is mainly remembered for his 3-volume, Dickens biography, published by from 1872 to 1874.
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