Ernest Edwin Speight (6 December 1871 – 17 September 1949), usually known as E E Speight, was an Englishman who travelled in Japan and India and was a professor of English for twenty years at the Imperial University, Tokyo, Japan and also at the Fourth Higher School, Kanazawa,[4] then for a further twenty years at the Osmania University, Hyderabad, India.
In India he made a study of the Nilgiri hill tribes and was working on a Toda grammar at his death[1][5] In Speight's youth he was a friend of W. B. Yeats, A. E. Housman and George Bernard Shaw, in his latter years of Tagore, Aurobindo, Mohandas K Gandhi, and Prince Peter of Greece and Denmark for whom he reviewed some of his writings.
[6] Speight also wrote fiction, poetry, music, and edited anthologies.
With his business partner R. H. Walpole, Speight issued The Saracen's Head Library (Mary Kingsley Travel Books) book series published by the E. E. Speight & R. H. Walpole publishing house based in Teignmouth, in Devon.
Speight was awarded the Fifth Class of the Order of the Rising Sun by the Emperor of Japan for services to teaching, and was allowed this honour by the King.