The Literary Society

The Literary Society is a London dining club, founded by William Wordsworth and others in 1807.

[2] Past members include, in the nineteenth century Sir Walter Scott, George Crabbe and Matthew Arnold; in the early twentieth, J. M. Barrie, Hilaire Belloc, John Galsworthy, Henry James and John Bailey, and in more recent times, Anthony Powell, Siegfried Sassoon, A.

A. Milne, Kingsley Amis, John Gross, Antonia Fraser, Tom Stoppard, Patrick Leigh Fermor, Claire Tomalin, Charles Moore, Miriam Gross, V. S. Naipaul, Sebastian Faulks, Antony Beevor and P. D.

[1] The Literary Society has not obtruded on public notice, with the brief exception of its meetings and personalities in the middle of the twentieth century which were regularly documented in the Lyttelton/Hart-Davis Letters, in which are frequent vignettes of the members of the 1950s and 60s, including John Betjeman, T. S. Eliot, Malcolm Sargent, Alan Lascelles and Lord Dunsany.

[3] In a bicentennial article in The Spectator in April 2007, Charles Moore wrote, of the variety of the Society’s membership: There is a maximum of 60 members at any time.