Alfred Ainger | |
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![]() Portrait of Alfred Aigner by Hugh Goldwin Rivière
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Born | 9 February 1837 |
Died | 8 February 1904 | (aged 66)
Occupation | Biographer and critic |
Nationality | English |
Alfred Ainger (9 February 1837 – 8 February 1904) was an English biographer and critic.
The son of an architect in London, he was educated at University College School, King's College London and Trinity College, Cambridge, from where he subsequently entered the Church, and, after holding various minor preferments, became Master of the Temple in July 1894. He was appointed an Honorary Chaplain to Queen Victoria 28 January 1895, and a Chaplain-in-Ordinary to her Majesty 2 March 1896.
He wrote memoirs of Thomas Hood and George Crabbe, but is best known for his biography of Charles Lamb and his edition of Lamb's works in 6 volumes (1883–88). He was a contributor the Dictionary of National Biography, writing the entries on Lamb, Alfred Tennyson, Frederick Tennyson, Charles Tennyson Turner and George Louis Palmella Busson Du Maurier, under the initials "A.A.".