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Sabine Baring-gould




His education at The King's School, Warwick lasted just a few months in 1846 - he caught whooping-cough and was ordered to go abroad for the sake of his health.

He regarded as his principal achievement the collection of Folk Song s that he made with the help of the ordinary people of Devon and Cornwall . His first book of songs, '' Songs Of The West '' (1889–91), was the first collection published for the mass market, Though he had to modify the words of some songs which were too rude for Victorian ears, he left his original manuscripts for future students of folk song. His work preserved many beautiful pieces of music and their lyrics which otherwise might have been lost.

Baring-Gould produced a second collection called '' A Garland Of Country Songs ''. For a second edition of ''Songs of the West'' (1905) he collaborated with the collector Cecil Sharp . They also produced ''English Folk Songs for Schools'' in 1907. This collection of 53 songs was adopted for the UK schools curriculum, for the next 60 years.

Sharp dedicated his ''English Folk Song—Some Conclusions'' to Baring-Gould. The folk-song manuscripts from Baring-Gould's personal library and from public libraries have been published as a microfiche edition available for study in the main Devon Libraries and other places. In addition 30 boxes of unpublished manuscript material on other topics (the Killerton manuscripts) are kept in the Devon County Record Office.

Baring-Gould wrote many novels, a collection of ghost stories, a 16-volume ''Lives of the Saints'', and the biography of the eccentric poet-vicar of Morwenstow , Robert Stephen Hawker . His folkloric studies resulted in ''The Book of Were-Wolves'' (1865), one of the most frequently cited studies of Lycanthropy . Half-way through, the topic changes to crimes only vaguely connected to werewolves, including grave desecration and Cannibalism . Stories of his own eccentricity have been exaggerated. He did once, while teaching at Hurstpierpoint , have his pet Bat on his shoulder, and it is also said that, at one children's party, he called out to a young child: "And whose little girl are you?" Bursting into tears, the girl sobbed: "I'm yours, Daddy."

His obituary in Warwick School 's magazine ''The Portcullis'' of March 1924 states that not only did he "inherit the family estates of Lew Trenchard, which comprised 3,000 acres, and presented himself to the rectory of that place in 1880", but also that he had married a mill girl of 16, and "had her educated" for two years. The marriage lasted for 48 years, and the couple had 15 children. When he was 34, Baring-Gould, a curate in Horbury , Yorkshire at the time, had met Grace Taylor, an illiterate mill girl of 16, and had married her in 1868. This extraordinary liaison is said to be the basis of George Bernard Shaw 's " Pygmalion " and, subsequently, the musical " My Fair Lady ."

One grandson, William Stuart Baring-Gould , was a noted Sherlock Holmes scholar who wrote a fictional biography of the great detective—in which, to make up for the lack of information about Holmes's early life, he based his account on the childhood of Sabine Baring-Gould. Sabine himself makes an appearance in Laurie R. King's Sherlock Holmes novel ''The Moor''.


REFERENCES


Warwick School: A History (2004) by G N Frykman and E J Hadley ISBN 0946093469
http://www.lewtrenchard.co.uk URL accessed 23rd December 2005


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