x

Folder Sign In:

Incorrect Username / Password

Email Address:

 

Password:

 

Create New Account      Password Reminder

x

Folder Sign In:

You've Successfully Logged In!

x

Create New Account:

You do not need to sign in to use this database. However, signing in gains you access to a personal folder that you can use to save items. These items will be archived and made available to you during future database sessions.

Email Address:

 

Password:

 

Already Have Account      Password Reminder

x

Folder Sign In:

You've Successfully Created a New Account!

x

Password Reminder:

Enter your email address and we will send you your password for your Saved Items Folder Account Sign In.

E-mail Address:

 

x

Password Reminder:

Reminder Email sent!

x

E-mail Article:

Send this article to the following E-mail address. Use commas to separate multiple addresses.

E-mail Address:

 

x

E-mail Article:

Article sent!

x
Citation Information
Hendrickson, Robert. "the Admirable Crichton." Writer's Reference Center. Facts On File, Inc. Web. 18 Apr. 2025. <http://fofweb.infobase.com/wrc/Detail.aspx?iPin=EWPO00112>.
x
Record URL
To refer to this page or share this page with others, copy and paste this link:
http://fofweb.infobase.com/wrc/Detail.aspx?iPin=EWPO00112

the Admirable Crichton

Definition 
The perfect man, the perfect servant. James Crichton, born in 1560, was an English prodigy who while still in his teens earned his Master of Arts degree, mastered over a dozen languages, all the sciences, and achieved some fame as a poet and theologian. The fabled prodigy was also said to be handsome and without peer as a swordsman—"All perfect, finish'd to the fingernail," Tennyson wrote of him. Unfortunately, this ideal man proved either unwise or human enough to steal the heart of a prince's lady while traveling in Italy and was assassinated by three men in the prince's hire. Crichton was only 25 or so when he died. His name, in the form of The Admirable Crichton, was long used as a synonym for the perfect man, and when playwright James M. Barrie used it as the name of his butler hero in The Admirable Crichton (1902) it became synonymous with a perfect servant.

Return to Top Return to Top