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Frederick William Rolfe (surname pronounced ), better known as Baron Corvo (Italian for "Crow"), and also calling himself Frederick William Serafino Austin Lewis Mary Rolfe (22 July 1860 – 25 October 1913), was an English writer, artist, photographer and eccentric.


Life

Rolfe was born in
Cheapside Cheapside is a street in the City of London, the historic and modern financial centre of London, which forms part of the A40 London to Fishguard road. It links St. Martin's Le Grand with Poultry. Near its eastern end at Bank junction, whe ...
, London, the son of piano maker and tuner James Rolfe (c. 1827-1902) and Ellen Elizabeth, née Pilcher. He left school at the age of fourteen and became a teacher. He taught briefly at The King's School, Grantham, where the then headmaster, Ernest Hardy, later principal of
Jesus College, Oxford Jesus College (in full: Jesus College in the University of Oxford of Queen Elizabeth's Foundation) is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. It is in the centre of the city, on a site between Turl Street, Ship ...
, became a lifelong friend. He converted to
Roman Catholicism The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with 1.3 billion baptized Catholics worldwide . It is among the world's oldest and largest international institutions, and has played a ...
in 1886 and was confirmed by Cardinal Manning. With his conversion came a strongly-felt vocation to the priesthood, which persisted throughout his life despite being constantly frustrated and never realised. In 1887 he was sponsored to train at St Mary's College, Oscott, near
Birmingham Birmingham ( ) is a city and metropolitan borough in the metropolitan county of West Midlands in England. It is the second-largest city in the United Kingdom with a population of 1.145 million in the city proper, 2.92 million in the We ...
and in 1889 was a student at the Pontifical Scots College in Rome, but was thrown out by both due to his inability to concentrate on priestly studies and his erratic behaviour. At this stage he entered the circle of the Duchess Sforza Cesarini, who, he claimed, adopted him as a grandson and gave him the use of the title of "Baron Corvo". This became his best-known pseudonym; he also called himself "Frank English", "Frederick Austin" and "A. Crab Maid", among others. More often he abbreviated his own name to "Fr. Rolfe" (an ambiguous usage, suggesting he was the priest he had hoped to become). Rolfe spent most of his life as a freelance writer, mainly in England but eventually in
Venice Venice ( ; it, Venezia ; vec, Venesia or ) is a city in northeastern Italy and the capital of the Veneto Regions of Italy, region. It is built on a group of 118 small islands that are separated by canals and linked by over 400  ...
. He lived in the era before the welfare state, and relied on benefactors for support but he had an argumentative nature and a tendency to fall out spectacularly with most of the people who tried to help him and offer him room and board. Eventually, out of money and out of luck, he died in Venice from a stroke on 25 October 1913. He was buried on the
Isola di San Michele The Island of San Michele ( it, isola di San Michele, ; vec, ìxoła de San Michièl) is an island in the Venetian Lagoon, Veneto, northern Italy. It is associated with the sestiere of Cannaregio, from which it lies a short distance northeas ...
, Venice. Rolfe's life provided the basis for ''The Quest for Corvo'' by A. J. A. Symons, an "experiment in biography" regarded as a minor classic in the field. This same work reveals that Rolfe had an unlikely enthusiast in the person of Maundy Gregory.


Homosexuality

Rolfe was entirely comfortable with his homosexuality and associated and corresponded with a number of other homosexual Englishmen. Early in his life he wrote a fair amount of idealistic but mawkish poetry about boy martyrs and the like. These and his Toto stories contain pederastic elements, but the young male pupils he was teaching at the time unanimously recalled in later life that there had never been any hint of impropriety in his relations with them. As he himself matured, Rolfe's settled sexual preference was for late adolescents. Towards the end of his life he made his only explicit reference to his specific sexual age preference, in one of the Venice letters to Charles Masson Fox, in which he declared: "My preference was for the 16, 17, 18 and large." Grant Richards, in his ''Memories of a Misspent Youth'' (1932), recalls "Frederick Baron Corvo" at Parson's Pleasure in Oxford – where scholars could bathe naked – "surveying the yellow flesh tints of youth with unbecoming satisfaction". Those of whom it is either speculated or surmised that they had sexual relations with Rolfe – Aubrey Thurstans, Sholto Osborne Gordon Douglas, John 'Markoleone', Ermenegildo Vianello and the other Venetian gondoliers – were all sexually mature young men between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one (with the exception of Douglas, who was considerably older). The idealised young men in his fiction were of a similar age. In 1904, soon after his ordination as a Roman Catholic priest, the convert Robert Hugh Benson formed a chaste but passionate friendship with Rolfe. For two years this relationship involved letters "not only weekly, but at times daily, and of an intimate character, exhaustingly charged with emotion." There was a falling out in 1906. For some time previously, Benson had made plans to write jointly with Rolfe a book on
St Thomas Becket Thomas Becket (), also known as Saint Thomas of Canterbury, Thomas of London and later Thomas à Becket (21 December 1119 or 1120 – 29 December 1170), was an English nobleman who served as Lord Chancellor from 1155 to 1162, and then ...
- but Benson decided that he should not be associated (according to writer Brian Masters) "with a Venetian pimp and procurer of boys". Afterwards, Benson satirised Rolfe in his novel ''The Sentimentalists''. Rolfe returned the favour a few years later, putting a caricature of Benson named "Bobugo Bonsen" in a book named ''Nicholas Crabbe''. Their letters were subsequently destroyed, probably by Benson's brother. Rolfe sought to characterise the relationships in his fiction as examples of '
Greek love ''Greek love'' is a term originally used by classicists to describe the primarily homoerotic customs, practices, and attitudes of the ancient Greeks. It was frequently used as a euphemism for homosexuality and pederasty. The phrase is a produc ...
' between an older man and an
ephebe ''Ephebe'' (from the Greek ''ephebos'' ἔφηβος (plural: ''epheboi'' ἔφηβοι), anglicised as ephebe (plural: ephebes), or Latinate ''ephebus'' (plural: ''ephebi'') is the term for an adolescent male. In ancient Greek society and myth ...
, and thus endow them with the sanction of the ancient Hellenic tradition familiar to all Edwardians with a classical education.


Work


Principal works of fiction

Rolfe's most important and enduring works are the stories and novels in which he himself is the thinly-disguised protagonist: *''Stories Toto Told Me'' (1898), a collection of six stories, later expanded to thirty-two and republished as ''In His Own Image'' (1901), in which ‘Don Friderico’ and his teenage acolytes embark on long walking tours in the Italian countryside, even as far from Rome as the eastern coast of Italy. The youths’ leader, the sixteen-year-old Toto, recounts tales of saints behaving like pagan gods. The stories are richly Catholic and unashamedly superstitious, and the saints who figure in them are hedonistic, vengeful and (though not licentious) entirely comfortable with nudity, diametrically opposite to any Protestant ideal of sainthood. *''
Hadrian the Seventh ''Hadrian the Seventh: A Romance'' (sometimes called ''Hadrian VII'') is a 1904 novel by the English novelist Frederick Rolfe, who wrote under the pseudonym "Baron Corvo". Rolfe's best-known work, this novel of extreme wish-fulfilment developed o ...
'' (1904), with an original and compelling plot, is Rolfe's most famous novel. Rolfe portrays himself as an Englishman with a quintessentially English name, 'George Arthur Rose,' (after
Saint George Saint George ( Greek: Γεώργιος (Geórgios), Latin: Georgius, Arabic: القديس جرجس; died 23 April 303), also George of Lydda, was a Christian who is venerated as a saint in Christianity. According to tradition he was a soldie ...
,
King Arthur King Arthur ( cy, Brenin Arthur, kw, Arthur Gernow, br, Roue Arzhur) is a legendary king of Britain, and a central figure in the medieval literary tradition known as the Matter of Britain. In the earliest traditions, Arthur appears as ...
, and England's national flower) who, having originally been rejected for the priesthood, finds himself the object of a spectacular and highly improbable change of mind on the part of the church hierarchy, who then elect him to the papacy. Rose takes the name Hadrian VII and embarks upon a programme of ecclesiastical and geopolitical reform; the only English pope was Hadrian IV, and the last non-Italian pope had been Hadrian VI. More self-indulgently, he takes the opportunity to review his past life and to reward or punish his friends and acquaintances according to what he believes to be their just deserts. ''Hadrian'' is thus essentially an exercise in wish-fulfilment. *''Nicholas Crabbe'' (written 1900–1904, published 1958) tells the story of Rolfe's first attempts to achieve publication, with starring roles for Henry Harland, John Lane and Grant Richards. In this novel Rolfe has given himself a new fictional name, 'Nicholas Crabbe,' and its plot is a blow-by-blow chronicle of events, reproducing many of the publishers' letters and Rolfe's replies to them. ''Nicholas Crabbe'' is an undistinguished novel, but it is rich in autobiographical detail. *''The Desire and Pursuit of the Whole'' (written 1910–1913, thought lost, found in
Chatto & Windus Chatto & Windus is an imprint of Penguin Random House that was formerly an independent book publishing company founded in London in 1855 by John Camden Hotten. Following Hotten's death, the firm would reorganize under the names of his business ...
's safe, published 1934) is set in Venice and reintroduces the reader to 'Nicholas Crabbe.' It has three interlocking plots: Crabbe’s efforts to get his books published, in the face of obstacles placed in their way by his friends and agents in England, and his consequent economic difficulties; his rescue of a sixteen-year-old girl from the Messina earthquake and employment of her as his assistant and gondolier, dressed in male garments to avoid scandal; and the transcendent beauty of Venice itself and the role it plays in the lives of its votaries. Extracts from the novel’s beautiful descriptions of Venice appear regularly in guidebooks and modern anthologies. Unlike Rolfe’s other novels, this one ends happily, with a lucrative book contract and a declaration of love. "The desire and pursuit of the whole" is the definition of love, according to
Aristophanes Aristophanes (; grc, Ἀριστοφάνης, ; c. 446 – c. 386 BC), son of Philippus, of the deme Kydathenaion ( la, Cydathenaeum), was a comic playwright or comedy-writer of ancient Athens and a poet of Old Attic Comedy. Eleven of his ...
in
Plato Plato ( ; grc-gre, Πλάτων ; 428/427 or 424/423 – 348/347 BC) was a Greek philosopher born in Athens during the Classical period in Ancient Greece. He founded the Platonist school of thought and the Academy, the first institution ...
's ''Symposium''. In 1912, the year before his death, Rolfe began to write another autobiographical novel, ''The Freeing of the Soul, or The Seven Degrees'' (written 1912–1913, published 1995), of which only a few pages have survived. Set in the fifth century, the novel was to have as its protagonist a middle-aged Byzantine bishop named Septimius, preoccupied with the likelihood of another of the barbarian attacks which had been terrifying his Venetian flock. The novel was a departure for Rolfe, as his four previous autobiographical works had been set in his own time.


Other writings

Rolfe wrote four other novels: ''Don Tarquinio'' (1905), ''Don Renato'' (1909), ''The Weird of the Wanderer'' (1912), and ''Hubert’s Arthur'' (published posthumously in 1935). Both ''The Weird'' and ''Hubert’s Arthur'' were collaborations with Harry Pirie-Gordon. These works differ from the autobiographical novels in two respects: they are set in previous centuries, and the principal protagonist in each is not Rolfe’s ''alter ego'', although there is a strong degree of identification. (In ''The Weird of the Wanderer'' the hero, Nicholas Crabbe, becomes a time traveller and discovers that he is
Odysseus Odysseus ( ; grc-gre, Ὀδυσσεύς, Ὀδυσεύς, OdysseúsOdyseús, ), also known by the Latin variant Ulysses ( , ; lat, UlyssesUlixes), is a legendary Greek king of Ithaca and the hero of Homer's epic poem the ''Odyssey''. Odys ...
.) Rolfe also wrote shorter fiction, published in contemporary periodicals and collected after his death in ''Three Tales of Venice'' (1950), ''Amico di Sandro'' (1951), ''The Cardinal Prefect of Propaganda'' (1957) and ''The Armed Hands'' (1974). He also published an entertaining but unreliable work of history, ''Chronicles of the House of Borgia'' (1901), translations of ''The Rubáiyát of 'Umar Khaiyám'' (1903) and ''The Songs of Meleager'' (published posthumously in 1937), and a little poetry, later gathered into one volume, ''Collected Poems'' (1974).


Letters

Rolfe was an enthusiastic letter writer. John Holden recalled that "Corvo was one of those men who never speak a word if they can write it. We lived in the same house, a very little one, yet he would always communicate with me by note if I was not in the same room with him. He had dozens of letter books. He seized upon every opportunity for writing a letter, and every letter, whether to a publisher or to a cobbler, was written with the same care." About a thousand of his letters have survived, and several sequences of them have been published in limited editions. The letters reveal a lively, intelligent and absorbent mind, but because of Rolfe’s paranoiac tendencies they are often disputatious and recriminatory. Among the commentators who rated Rolfe’s letters more highly than his fiction was the poet W H Auden, who wrote that Rolfe "had every right to be proud of his verbal claws … A large vocabulary is essential to the invective style, and Rolfe by study and constant practice became one of the great masters of vituperation." The letters have yet to be collected into a single scholarly edition.


Photography and painting


Photography

Rolfe took an interest in photography throughout his life, but never achieved any more than basic competence. While he began to experiment with photography when he was a schoolmaster, it was his time in Rome in 1889–90 that introduced him to the work of the 'Arcadian' photographers
Wilhelm von Gloeden Wilhelm Iwan Friederich August von Gloeden (September 16, 1856 – February 16, 1931), commonly known as Baron von Gloeden, was a German photographer who worked mainly in Italy. He is mostly known for his pastoral nude studies of Sicilian boy ...
and
Guglielmo Plüschow Guglielmo Plüschow (born Wilhelm Plüschow; August 18, 1852 – January 3, 1930) was a German photographer who moved to Italy and became known for his nude photos of local youths, predominantly males. Plüschow was a cousin of Wilhelm von Gl ...
. His seminary, the Scots College, was quite close to Plüschow's studio in via Sardegna, just off the via Veneto, and when Rolfe was expelled from the College and came under the benevolent patronage of the Duchess Sforza Cesarini, he began his own photographic efforts in imitation of von Gloeden and Plüschow. His models were the local ''ragazzi'' from the streets of
Genzano di Roma Genzano di Roma is a town and ''comune'' in the Metropolitan City of Rome, in the Lazio region of central Italy. It is one of the Castelli Romani, at a distance of from Rome, in the Alban Hills. History The origin of the name ''Genzano'' is sti ...
, a town dominated by the Duchess's ''palazzo''. These youths were later to become the principal characters in Rolfe's Toto stories, published first in ''
The Yellow Book ''The Yellow Book'' was a British quarterly literary periodical that was published in London from 1894 to 1897. It was published at The Bodley Head Publishing House by Elkin Mathews and John Lane, and later by John Lane alone, and edited by th ...
'' in 1895–96 and later collected in ''Stories Toto Told Me'' in 1898 and ''In His Own Image'' in 1901. Rolfe continued to indulge his interest in photography in
Christchurch Christchurch ( ; mi, Ōtautahi) is the largest city in the South Island of New Zealand and the seat of the Canterbury Region. Christchurch lies on the South Island's east coast, just north of Banks Peninsula on Pegasus Bay. The Avon Rive ...
in
Dorset Dorset ( ; archaically: Dorsetshire , ) is a county in South West England on the English Channel coast. The ceremonial county comprises the unitary authority areas of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole and Dorset. Covering an area of , ...
in 1890–91, upon his return from Rome, and experimented with colour and underwater pictures. He began to lose interest, however, and really only took photography up again when he returned to Italy in 1908. His photographic career has been fully documented in Donald Rosenthal's book ''The Photographs of Frederick Rolfe Baron Corvo 1860–1913'', which was published in 2008.


Painting

Rolfe never lost his conviction that he had been called to the Catholic priesthood. When he worked in his late teens and early twenties as a schoolmaster, and later when he tried his hand at painting and photography, he saw these as stop-gap occupations, means of earning an income until the Church authorities came to their senses and agreed with his own firm view that he had a priestly vocation. It was for this reason that Rolfe never undertook any formal training in either painting or photography. His paintings and designs, including several for the covers of his own books, were bold and surprisingly accomplished amateur efforts. He executed some of the most impressive of them when he was living in Christchurch in 1890 and 1891, including a small but striking oil painting of St Michael. From 1895 to 1899 he lived in Holywell in
Flintshire , settlement_type = County , image_skyline = , image_alt = , image_caption = , image_flag = , image_shield = Arms of Flint ...
in North Wales, where he painted some fourteen processional banners, commissioned by the parish priest there, Fr
Charles Sidney Beauclerk Fr Charles Sidney de Vere Beauclerk SJ (1 January 1855 – 22 November 1934) was a Jesuit priest who attempted to turn the town of Holywell into the "Lourdes of Wales".Eric Rowan & Carolyn Stewart, ''An Elusive Tradition: Art and Society in ...
. Rolfe painted the figures of the saints and John Holden assisted with the lettering on the borders. Only five of the banners have survived, and may still be seen in the Holywell Well Museum; they are colourful representations, in a naive style, of Saints Winefride, George, Ignatius, Gregory the Great and Augustine of Canterbury. Rolfe produced no further paintings after he became a full-time writer.


Posthumous literary reputation

Rolfe's early books were politely reviewed but none of them was enough of a success to secure an income for its author, whose posthumous reputation began to dim. Within a very few years, however, coteries of readers began to discover a common interest in his work, and a resilient literary cult began to form. In 1934 A. J. A. Symons published ''The Quest for Corvo'', one of the century's iconic biographies, and this brought Rolfe's life and work to the attention of a wider public. In the 1950s and 1960s, there was a further surge of interest in him which became known as "the Corvo revival", including a successful adaptation of ''Hadrian'' for the London stage. Two biographies of Rolfe appeared in the 1970s. These led to his inclusion in all the major works of reference and engendered a stream of academic theses on him. Although his books have remained in print, no substantial monograph has ever appeared in English on his work. With the growing academic interest in the history of literary modernism and acknowledgement of the central importance of life writing in its genesis, the true importance of Rolfe’s autobiographical fictions has come into focus. His influence has been discerned in novels written by
Henry Harland Henry Harland (March 1, 1861 – December 20, 1905) was an American novelist and editor. Biography Harland was born in Norwich, Connecticut, in 1861, the son of Fourierist Thomas Harland, who had been a one-time roommate of editor and author Edm ...
,
Ronald Firbank Arthur Annesley Ronald Firbank (17 January 1886 – 21 May 1926) was an innovative English novelist. His eight short novels, partly inspired by the London aesthetes of the 1890s, especially Oscar Wilde, consist largely of dialogue, with referen ...
,
Graham Greene Henry Graham Greene (2 October 1904 – 3 April 1991) was an English writer and journalist regarded by many as one of the leading English novelists of the 20th century. Combining literary acclaim with widespread popularity, Greene acquir ...
, and
Alexander Theroux Alexander Louis Theroux (born 1939) is an American novelist and poet. He is known for his novel '' Darconville's Cat'' (1981), which was selected by Anthony Burgess for his book-length essay '' Ninety-Nine Novels: The Best in English Since 1939 ...
, and in his coinage of neologisms and use of the Ulysses story there is some perhaps coincidental prefiguring of the work of
James Joyce James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (2 February 1882 – 13 January 1941) was an Irish novelist, poet, and literary critic. He contributed to the Modernism, modernist avant-garde movement and is regarded as one of the most influential and important ...
.The similarities between the work of Rolfe and Joyce were first remarked upon by Stuart Gilbert: ‘Had the Fates been kinder, that unhappy genius might have moved parallel, if on a somewhat lower plane, to Joyce’s. Nicolas Crabbe…had a good deal in common with Stephen Dedalus.' (''James Joyce's Ulysses: A Study'', Faber, 1952, p.95).


Bibliography

Rolfe's works include: *''Tarcissus the Boy Martyr of Rome in the Diocletian Persecution'' .1880*''Stories Toto Told Me'' (John Lane: The Bodley Head, London, 1898) *''The Attack on St Winefrede's Well'' (Hochheimer, Holywell, 1898; only two copies extant) *''In His Own Image'' (John Lane: The Bodley Head, London, 1901. 2nd Impression 1924) *''Chronicles of the House of Borgia'' (Grant Richards, London: E. P. Dutton, New York, 1901) *''Nicholas Crabbe'' (1903-4, posthumously published 1958, a limited edition of 215 numbered copies in slipcase were to have been issued with the trade edition but industrial action and other factors meant the trade edition ended up with precedence) *''
Hadrian the Seventh ''Hadrian the Seventh: A Romance'' (sometimes called ''Hadrian VII'') is a 1904 novel by the English novelist Frederick Rolfe, who wrote under the pseudonym "Baron Corvo". Rolfe's best-known work, this novel of extreme wish-fulfilment developed o ...
'' (Chatto & Windus, London, 1904) *''Don Tarquinio'' (Chatto & Windus, London, 1905) *''Don Renato'' (1907-8, printed 1909 but not published, posthumously published Chatto & Windus, London, 1963, a limited edition of 200 numbered copies in slipcase were issued at the same time as the trade edition) *''Hubert's Arthur'' (1909–11, posthumously published 1935) *''The Weird of the Wanderer'' (1912) *''The Desire and Pursuit of the Whole'' (1909, published Cassell, London, 1934) *''The Bull against the Enemy of the Anglican race'' (Privately printed, London, 1929) (an attack on Lord Northcliffe) *''Three Tales of Venice'' (The Corvine Press, 1950) *''Letters to Grant Richards'' (The Peacocks Press, 1952) *''The Cardinal Prefect of Propaganda'' (Nicholas Vane, London, 1957) *''A Letter from Baron Corvo to John Lane'' (The Peacocks Press, 1958) *''Letters to C. H. C. Pirie-Gordon'' (Nicholas Vane, London, 1959) *''A Letter to Father Beauclerk'' (The Tragara Press, Edinburgh, 1960) *''Letters to Leonard Moore'' (Nicholas Vane, London, 1960) *''The Letters of Baron Corvo to Kenneth Grahame'' (The Peacocks Press, 1962) *''Letters to R. M. Dawkins'' (Nicholas Vane, London, 1962) *''The Architecture of Aberdeen'' (Privately Printed, Detroit, 1963) *''Without Prejudice. One Hundred Letters From Frederick William Rolfe to John Lane'' (Privately printed for Allen Lane, London, 1963) *''A Letter to Claud'' (University of Iowa School of Journalism, Iowa City, 1964) *''The Venice Letters A Selection'' (Cecil Woolf, London, 1966 ctually 1967 *''The Armed Hands'' (Cecil Woolf, London, 1974) *''Collected Poems'' (Cecil Woolf, London, 1974) *''The Venice Letters'' (Cecil Woolf, London, 1974)


References


Further reading

* Benkovitz, Miriam. ''Frederick Rolfe: Baron Corvo''. Putnam, New York, 1977. SBN: 399-12009-2. * Benson, R. H., ''The Sentimentalists'' (1906), where the central figure is closely modelled on Rolfe (who in turn pillories the novel as "The Sensiblist" in ''The Desire and Pursuit of the Whole'') * Bradshaw, David. "Rolfe, Frederick William" in the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography The ''Dictionary of National Biography'' (''DNB'') is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history, published since 1885. The updated ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (''ODNB'') was published on 23 September ...
(consulted online). * Connell, Brendan. ''The Translation of Father Torturo''. Prime Books, 2005. Dedicated to Rolfe, this book is a clear homage to Hadrian the Seventh. * Fumagalli, Luca. ''Baron Corvo. Il viaggio sentimentale di Frederick Rolfe''. Edizioni Radio Spada, Cermenate, 2017, ISBN 9788898766345 * Miernik, Mirosław Aleksander. ''Rolfe, Rose, Corvo, Crabbe: The Literary Images of Frederick Rolfe''. Peter Lang Verlag, 2015. * Johnson, Pamela Hansford. '' The Unspeakable Skipton''. Macmillan, 1959; Penguin Books (No.1529) 1961. Rolfe's life as source for the characterisation of Daniel Skipton. * Norwich, John Julius. ''Paradise of Cities: Venice and its Nineteenth Century Visitors''. Penguin, 2004. * Reade, Brian (ed.). ''Sexual Heretics; Male Homosexuality in English literature from 1850–1900 – an anthology''. London, Routledge, Keegan and Paul, 1970. * Rosenthal, Donald, ''The Photographs of Frederick Rolfe Baron Corvo 1860–1913'', Asphodel Editions, 2008. * Scoble, Robert. ''The Corvo Cult: The History of An Obsession'', Strange Attractor, London, 2014; * Scoble, Robert. ''Raven: The Turbulent World of Baron Corvo'', Strange Attractor, London, 2013, ISBN 9788898766345 * Symons, A.J.A. ''The Quest for Corvo''. Cassell, London, 1934. * Donald Weeks. ''Corvo''. Michael Joseph, London, 1971. * Woolf, Cecil. ''A Bibliography of Frederick Rolfe Baron Corvo'' The Soho Bibliographies, Rupert Hart-Davis, London, 1972 (Second Edition) * Woolf, Cecil and Sewell, Brocard (eds). ''New Quests for Corvo''. Icon books, London, 1965.


External links

* * * * Archival material at
Finding aid to David Roth Martyr Worthy collection of Frederick William Rolfe papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

Finding aid to Stuart B. Schimmel collection of Frederick Rolfe papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

Finding aid to Columbia University collection of Frederick Rolfe papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rolfe, Frederick 1860 births 1913 deaths Burials at Isola di San Michele Translators of Omar Khayyám 19th-century English novelists 20th-century English novelists English short story writers 19th-century English historians English historical novelists Photographers from London 19th-century English painters English male painters 20th-century English painters English Roman Catholics English Roman Catholic writers English gay writers Gay artists Writers from Venice Impostors Converts to Roman Catholicism Alumni of St Mary's College, Oscott English LGBT novelists LGBT Roman Catholics English male short story writers English male novelists 19th-century British short story writers British emigrants to Italy