Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Roscoe, Thomas
ROSCOE, THOMAS (1791–1871), author and translator, fifth son of William Roscoe [q. v.], was born at Toxteth Park, Liverpool, on 23 June 1791, and educated by Dr. W. Shepherd and by Mr. Lloyd, a private tutor. Soon after his father's pecuniary embarrassments, in 1816, he began to write in local magazines and journals, and he continued to follow literature as a profession until a few years before his death, which took place in his eighty-first year, on 24 Sept. 1871, at Acacia Road, St. John's Wood, London. He married Elizabeth Edwards, and had seven children.
The following are his principal original works:
- ‘Gonzalo, the Traitor: a Tragedy,’ 1820.
- ‘The King of the Peak’ [anon.], 1823, 3 vols.
- ‘Owain Goch: a Tale of the Revolution’ [anon.], 1827, 3 vols.
- ‘The Tourist in Switzerland and Italy,’ 1830 (being the first volume of the ‘Landscape Annual,’ followed in eight succeeding years by similar volumes on Italy, France, and Spain).
- ‘Wanderings and Excursions in North Wales,’ 1836.
- ‘Wanderings in South Wales’ (partly written by Louisa A. Twamley, afterwards Mrs. Meredith), 1837.
- ‘The London and Birmingham Railway,’ 1839.
- ‘Book of the Grand Junction Railway,’ 1839 (the last two were afterwards issued together as the ‘Illustrated History of the London and North-Western Railway’).
- ‘Legends of Venice,’ 1841.
- ‘Belgium in a Picturesque Tour,’ 1841.
- ‘A Summer Tour in the Isle of Wight,’ 1843.
- ‘Life of William the Conqueror,’ 1846.
- ‘The Last of the Abencerages, and other Poems,’ 1850.
- ‘The Fall of Granada.’
Roscoe's translations comprise:
- ‘Memoirs of Benvenuto Cellini,’ 1822.
- Sismondi's ‘Literature of the South of Europe,’ 1823, 4 vols.
- ‘Italian Novelists,’ 1825, 4 vols.
- ‘German Novelists,’ 1826, 4 vols.
- ‘Spanish Novelists,’ 1832, 3 vols.
- ‘Potter's Memoirs of Scipio de Ricci,’ &c., 1828, 2 vols.
- Lanzi's ‘History of Painting in Italy,’ 1828, 6 vols.
- Silvio Pellico's ‘Imprisonments,’ 1833.
- Pellico's ‘Duties of Men,’ 1834.
- Navarrete's ‘Life of Cervantes,’ 1839 (in Murray's ‘Family Library’).
- Kohl's ‘Travels in England,’ 1845.
Roscoe edited ‘The Juvenile Keepsake,’ 1828–30; ‘The Novelists' Library, with Biographical and Critical Notices,’ 1831–3, 17 vols. 12mo; the works of Fielding, Smollett, and Swift (1840–9, 3 vols. royal 8vo), and new issues of his father's ‘Lorenzo de' Medici’ and ‘Leo the Tenth.’
[Men of the Time, 7th edit.; Allibone's Dict. of Authors; British Museum and Advocates' Library Catalogues; information supplied by James Thornely, esq., of Woolton, Liverpool. Symonds, in the Introduction to his translation of Cellini's Autobiography, criticises his predecessor's translation in severe terms.]