Richard Jefferies (born November 6, 1848, near Swindon, Wiltshire, England—died August 14, 1887, Goring-by-Sea, Sussex) was an English naturalist, novelist, and essayist whose best work combines fictional invention with expert observation of the natural world.
The son of a yeoman farmer, Jefferies in 1866 became a reporter on the North Wilts Herald. In 1872 he became famous for a 4,000-word letter to The Times about the Wiltshire agricultural labourer and his lot. Soon periodicals and papers (notably the Pall Mall Gazette) were publishing his sketches and articles, collected in The Gamekeeper at Home (1878), Wild Life in a Southern County (1879), The Amateur Poacher (1879), and Hodge and His Masters (1880).
In 1874 Jefferies married and in 1877 moved nearer to London—by this time supporting his wife and two children by writing. The years 1882 to his death in 1887 were his most creative, though he was both ill and poor. Outstanding are Bevis: The Story of a Boy (1882), which includes memories of Coate Farm—his birthplace (now the Richard Jefferies House and Museum)—and its surrounding countryside; The Story of My Heart (1883), his spiritual autobiography; and the remarkable fantasy novel After London (1885), set in a future in which urban civilization has collapsed after an environmental crisis. In this late period also he wrote some moving essays in an introspective style, collected in The Life of the Fields (1884), The Open Air (1885), and Field and Hedgerow (1889). He also dictated a novel, Amaryllis at the Fair (1887), which is sometimes compared to Thomas Hardy’s regional novels. Earlier novels by Jefferies include the beautiful Dewy Morn, 2 vol. (1884), and Green Ferne Farm (1880).