As a literary critic he wrote twelve books and many reviews in literary journals. He was assistant editor of The Quarterly Review, and chairman (later president) of the English Association.
Life and career
Bailey was born in Wymondham, Norfolk, the third son of Elijah Crosier Bailey, a solicitor, and his wife, Jane Sarah née Cann.[1] He was educated at Haileybury College and, from 1882 to 1886, at New College, Oxford, where he obtained a second class degree in classics.[2] He made many friends in the literary and artistic circles of Oxford, and developed his love of fine arts and Greek and Latin classics.[2]
He was called to the bar by the Inner Temple in 1892, but never practised law;[2] he had a private income adequate to sustain him.[1] He made an unsuccessful attempt to enter politics as a Conservative candidate, losing at parliamentary elections in 1895 and 1900.[1] Among those elected to parliament at the first of these elections was Alfred Lyttelton, to whom Bailey was for a time assistant private secretary.[2] In April 1900 he married Lyttelton's half-sister, Sarah Kathleen (1879–1941), the eldest daughter of the second marriage of George Lyttelton, 4th Baron Lyttelton. They had three daughters, the youngest of whom predeceased Bailey.[1]
Bailey was a prominent member of the Literary Society, of which he eventually became president. He was also active in the affairs of the Johnson Society. His principal activity in public affairs was with the National Trust, of which he was chairman from 1923 until his death. The Times commented in 1931, "The strong position which the National Trust now occupies is largely due to him, and it will perhaps never be known how many generous gifts of rural beauty and historic interest the nation owes, directly or indirectly, to his persuasive enthusiasm."[2]
Of Bailey's output as a literary critic, his biographer Algernon Cecil wrote:
Bailey's intense pleasure in good talk may possibly have restricted his literary output, but his literary ambition was always circumscribed. He related that when people asked him to write a magnum opus he used to counter by enquiring: "If I write it, will you buy it and will you read it?" It is arguable that his best work was, in fact, slight in compass. He himself may have rated highest his Milton (1915), a little book, but many of his contemporaries felt that Dr Johnson and his Circle (1913) gave his particular powers their fullest scope.[1]
During the First World War Bailey worked for British intelligence, where he was responsible for propaganda in France, Spain, and Italy. In 1918, transferred to the Foreign Office he was involved in the planning for the Paris peace conference.[1] After the war he was a candidate for the chair of poetry at Oxford, but the election was won by H. W. Garrod.[2]
Bailey died at his house in South Kensington, London, aged 67. He was buried at Wramplingham, Norfolk, near his birthplace.[2]
Publications
Articles
Gifford, William; Coleridge, Sir John Taylor; Lockhart, John Gibson; Elwin, Whitwell; MacPherson, William; Smith, William; (Iv), Sir John Murray (January 1906). "Fanny Burney". The Quarterly Review. 204: 89–110.
"John Evelyn". The Quarterly Review. 206: 516–535. April 1907.
^ ab"Bailey, John Cann", Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 23 April 2013 (subscription required)