John Henry Jones

John Henry Jones abandoned an academic career in chemistry to become a writer. His edition of William Empson’s Posthumous Faustus and the Censor appeared in 1987. He has recently been awarded a Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship to work on the Faust legend.

Diary: At Home with the Empsons

John Henry Jones, 17 August 1989

One Saturday morning as I lay in bed, dying of flu, William Empson burst into my room, very sprightly, saying: ‘Now come along Jones, you must get up and come to Stonehenge.’ I croaked an apology and claimed an imminent, prior appointment with the Lord God Almighty. ‘Oh dear. I am sorry,’ he said. ‘But you would do much better to come to Stonehenge.’

What Marlowe would have wanted

Charles Nicholl, 26 November 1987

The best, perhaps, has survived, but a great deal of Elizabethan drama has not. The number of titles mentioned in contemporary documents – the account books of the impresario Philip...

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