"At the latter end of 1849 Mrs. Gaskell, the author of ', wrote to , asking for an introduction to Tennyson, in connection with Samuel Bamford, the Lancashire weaver, and author of Life of a Radical. Mrs. Gaskell wished, I believe, to enlist the poet's interest on behalf of Bamford, who was now old, and greatly desirous of having a copy of Tennyson's poems for himself. With his usual kindness of heart, the author of ' writes at once to Forster that he will, as soon as maybe, instruct (his publisher) to forward the books—adding that he reckoned Bamford's admiration as the highest honour he had ever received."
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Poets from EnglandActivists from EnglandSocial criticsNon-fiction authors from EnglandVictorian poets
Original Language: English
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Richard Renton, Ltd|year=1913|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=54wOJYHd3HcC&pg=PA193|page=193}}
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Samuel_Bamford
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Samuel Bamford
(28 February 1788 – 13 April 1872) was an English weaver, poet, and radical reformer, who in 1819 was arrested and charged with treason at the . In 1872 thousands of people attended his funeral.
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