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  [q.v.] in accepting the Home Rule Bill of 1912, and on his death Redmond described him as ‘one of the purest patriots and best men he had ever known’. Ford’s death, which took place at Brooklyn 23 September 1913, provoked from numerous Irish municipal bodies and political organizations resolutions of admiration and gratitude. In private life he was a man of quiet and unassuming manners, and was a strict Roman Catholic in religion. He was the author of two books, The Criminal History of the British Empire (1881) and The Irish Question and American Statesmen (1885).

 FORMAN, HENRY BUXTON (1842–1917), man of letters, was born in Camberwell 11 July 1842, the third son of George Ellery Forman, a surgeon (retired from the royal navy), by his wife, Maria Courthope. The family removed to Teignmouth when Henry was ten months old, and there he was educated. He discarded his first Christian name, and habitually employed the name Harry in its stead. At the age of eighteen he entered the Post Office, St. Martin’s-le-Grand, and became a principal clerk in 1885, afterwards second secretary, and, in 1893, controller of the packet services. In 1897 he received the C.B., and in 1907 he retired at the age of sixty-five after forty-seven years’ service. He attended as a representative of the United Kingdom four postal union congresses—at Paris in 1880, at Lisbon in 1885, at Vienna in 1891, and at Washington in 1897. In 1883 he acted as surveyor of the British post offices in the Mediterranean, and he attended the international parcel post conference in Paris the same year. He was one of the earliest workers on behalf of the Post Office library and literary association, and was its secretary for several years.

Forman’s literary career began in 1869 with a series of articles in Tinsley’s Magazine, which were reprinted in 1871 as Our Living Poets. These brought him into touch with D. G. Rossetti, who was just then preparing the Poems of 1870 for the press. From 1872 to 1874 he was writing in the London Quarterly Review. In 1876 appeared his edition of the Poetical Works of Shelley, followed by the Prose Works in 1880, eight volumes in all. In 1878 he edited the Letters of John Keats to Fanny Brawne, and in 1883 the Poetical Works and other Writings of John Keats in four volumes. It is his work on Shelley and Keats which constitutes Forman’s chief claim to remembrance. He was scrupulously exact as a textual editor, but is open to criticism on the score of his inclusion of trivial matter. Among his other contributions to the study of Shelley were part i of the uncompleted ‘Shelley Library’: An Essay in Bibliography (1886), the Letters of Edward John Trelawny (1910), and Medwin’s Life of Shelley, enlarged and fully commented (1913). He followed up his edition of Keats with Three Essays by John Keats (1889), Poetry and Prose by John Keats: a Book of Fresh Verses and New Readings (1890), and a one-volume edition of the Poetical Works of John Keats (1906). He took an active interest in the purchase and establishment of the Keats and Shelley house in Rome, and presented to it a large number of his books.

Because of their associations with Shelley and Keats, Forman became interested in the poets [q.v.],  [q.v.], and  [q.v.]. When Wells’s Joseph and his Brethren was reissued in 1876, with an introduction by A. C. Swinburne, Forman saw it through the press; he also acquired the manuscript, and printed an additional passage in W. R. Nicoll and T. J. Wise’s Literary Anecdotes of the Nineteenth Century (1895–1896), to which also he contributed articles on Wade and Horne, besides verses of his own. He left unpublished a narrative volume in verse of some ten thousand lines, inspired by his love of Devon. For A. H. Miles’s Poets and Poetry of the Nineteenth Century Forman made and prefaced the selections from Wade, Wells, Horne, and William Morris. Another lifelong interest with him was the work of Mrs. Browning; he edited Aurora Leigh for the ‘Temple Classics’, and published Elizabeth Barrett Browning and her scarcer Books (1896) and Hitherto Unpublished Poems and Stories by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1914). For the ‘Temple Classics’ he also edited Sordello and two other volumes of Browning’s poems. He salved William Morris’s poem, The Pilgrims of Hope, from the pages of the Commonweal newspaper, and printed it in book form (1886). This he followed up in 1897 with The Books of William Morris, which contains an admirable essay The Life Poetic as lived by Morris.  192