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William Watkiss LloydWilliam Watkiss Lloyd (March 11, 1813 - December 22, 1893), was an English writer. He was born at Homerton, Middlesex, and educated at Newcastle-under-Lyme grammar school. At the age of fifteen he entered a family business in London, with which he was connected for thirty-five years. He devoted his leisure to the study of art, architecture, archaeology, Shakespeare, classical and modern languages and literature. He died in London. The work for which he is best known is The Age of Pericles (1875), a work notable for its scholarship and thorough appreciation of the period with which it deals, but rendered unattractive by a difficult and at times obscure style. He wrote also:
A number of manuscripts still remain unpublished, the most important of which have been bequeathed to the British Museum, amongst them being:
See Memoir by Sophia Beale prefixed to Lloyd's (posthumously published) Elijah Fenton: his Poetry and Friends (1894), containing a list of published and unpublished works. The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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