|
The Madras College Archive |
|
Former Pupil Biographies Victor Gustave Plarr (1863 - 1929)
In 1870, when he was 7 years of age, his parents came to England rather than pass under the German flag. Victor was sent to school, first at St. Andrews and afterwards to Tonbridge, passing to Worcester College. Oxford in 1882, at the age of 19. He obtained a second class in modern history in 1886, and then sought a livelihood in London. As an undergraduate at Oxford the gift of verse, which he had inherited from his mother became manifest, and he was received by the young poets of London who forgathered at the Rhymers' Club, with acclamation. He worked as a librarian, first (from 1890) at King's
College London, then at the Royal College of Surgeons of England from 1897
until his death. The following year, the first two volumes of Lives of the
Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons were published under the
editorship of D'Arcy Power. Often known as Plarr's Lives, the biographies
of the original 300 fellows are considered an early social history of
English medicine. Other Works include:
|
||