James Payn

James Payn (/peɪn/; 28 February 1830 – 25 March 1898), was an English novelist.Payn's father, William Payn (1774/5–1840), was clerk to the Thames Commissioners and at one time treasurer to the county of Berkshire. Payn was educated at Eton, and afterwards entered the Military Academy at Woolwich; but his health was not equal to the demands of a military career, and he proceeded in 1847 to Trinity College, Cambridge.[2] He was among the most popular men of his time, and served as president of the Union. Before going to Cambridge he had published some verses in Leigh Hunt's Journal, and while still an undergraduate put forth a volume of Stories from Boccaccio in 1852, and in 1853 a volume of Poems.In the same year he left Cambridge, he met and shortly afterwards married Miss Louisa Adelaide Edlin (b. 1830 or 1831),[3] sister of Judge Sir Peter Edlin, later chairman of the London Quarter Sessions.[4] They had nine children, the third of whom, Alicia Isabel (died 1898), married The Times editor George Earle Buckle.[5]
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