Clement Shorter was born on 19 July 1857 in Southwark, in London, the youngest of three boys.[1] The son of Richard and Elizabeth (née Clemenson) Shorter, young Clement attended school from 1863 to 1871 in Downham Market, Norfolk. He was still quite young when his father died in Melbourne, Australia, where he had gone in an attempt to make a better life for his young family.[2]
Once finished with his schooling, Shorter spent four years working for several booksellers and publishers on Paternoster Row in London. In 1877, he found himself working in the Exchequer and Audit Department at Somerset House, as a low-level clerk.[2]
Shorter married twice, first to Dora Sigerson, an Irish poet. He married her in 1896, and she died in 1918. In 1920, he remarried, to a woman from Penzance, named Annie Doris Banfield. Shorter, survived by his wife and daughter, died on 19 November 1926, in his home at Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire.[2]
Career
In journalism
Shorter's career in journalism began in 1888, when he began working as a sub-editor for the Penny Illustrated Paper. At that time, he was also writing for The Star, a weekly column about books. By 1890, he had resigned his clerical position at Somerset House, to focus solely on his journalistic endeavours.[2]
An important influence on the English pictorial press, in 1891 he became editor of the Illustrated London News. By 1893, he had founded and edited Sketch. In 1900, he founded Sphere, which he edited up until his death in 1926.[3] During this time, Shorter maintained writing his controversial weekly column, "A Literary Letter." He described the content of the two papers he edited during this time (first, The Sphere, and shortly thereafter, The Tatler) as "on more frivolous lines."[2]
In addition to founding Sketch and The Sphere, he was also the founder of The Tatler.[2]
Shorter's works of literary criticism include The Brontës and their Circle (1896), Immortal Memories (1907), The Brontës: Life and Letters (1908), and George Borrow and his Circle (1913).[3][4] He also wrote books about Napoleon, two about George Borrow, and a volume of addresses and essays. His last published work was C. K. S.: an Autobiography, which was edited by John Malcolm Bulloch, and published posthumously, in 1927.[2]
References
^Shorter, Aylward (2003). The Shorter Family. Bowie: Heritage Books. ISBN0-7884-2293-6.
^ abcdefghi"Biographical Note", in the Clement King Shorter Papers. Housed at the University of Delaware Library.