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John Edward Courtenay Bodley : ウィキペディア英語版 | John Edward Courtenay Bodley John Edward Courtenay Bodley (1853 – 1925) was an English civil servant, known for his writings on France. ==Life==
He was educated at Mill Hill School and studied at Balliol College, Oxford from 1873 to 1876.〔(Balliol College Library: Jowett Papers - Appendix )〕 An active Freemason, he approached Oscar Wilde, then also an undergraduate, and introduced him to a Masonic Lodge in Oxford.〔(OSCAR WILDE Freemasons )〕〔Jonathan Fryer, ''Wilde'' (2004), p. 16.〕 Richard Ellmann〔''Oscar Wilde'' (1987), p. 169.〕 attributes to Bodley a long, spiteful ''New York Times'' article that appeared on Wilde, on 21 January 1882. He was secretary to Charles Dilke, from 1880. Initially Dilke thought him frivolous, but he came to play a major part in Dilke's official work and private life.〔Roy Jenkins, ''Dilke'' (1965 edition), p. 147.〕 He was a witness in the divorce case that broke Dilke's career.〔Jenkins, p. 287.〕 He subsequently believed that Dilke's downfall was caused by Joseph Chamberlain.〔Jenkins, p. 355.〕 A personal friend of Cardinal Manning ("almost certainly his most intimate non-Catholic friend", and Manning's preferred choice as biographer〔Jenkins, p. 367.〕), he was his biographer only in a short work.
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