See: Battiscombe George Gunn for the rest of his oeuvre.
Battiscombe "Jack" George Gunn was an English Egyptologist. Gunn was educated at Bedales School, Westminster School and Allhallows School, Honiton. After trying banking, engineering and journalism, he was the private secretary to Pinero from 1908 to 1911. In 1913 he became an assistant to the noted Egyptologist Flinders Petrie. He was invalided out of the army after the start of WWI, and then became assistant to Alan Gardiner. Gunn was a brilliant young scholar and their discussions spurred them on to produce some of the most important works in modern egyptology: Gardiner his "Egyptian Grammar" and Gunn his "Studies in Egyptian Syntax". From 1921 to 1922 he assisted Leonard Woolley in the excavations of Amarna. He also worked with Cecil Firth in the investigations of the pyramid of Teti. He became assistant conservator of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo in 1928. He moved to the University Museum at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia in 1931 as curator of the Egyptian section. In 1934 he was appointed Professor of Egyptology at the University of Oxford, a chair he held until his death. Unfortunately Gunn devoted his later years to teaching and published relatively little. He was given an honorary M.A. at Oxford and was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1943.
“In these days [1908], when all things and memories of the past are at length become not only subservient to, but submerged by, the matters and needs of the immediate present, those paths of knowledge that lead into regions seemingly remote from such needs are somewhat discredited; and the aims of those that follow them whither they lead are regarded as quite out of touch with the real interests of life. Very greatly is this so with archaeology, and the study of ancient and curious tongues, and searchings into old thoughts on high and ever-insistent questions; a public which has hardly time to read more than its daily newspaper and its weekly novel has denounced - almost dismissed - them, with many other noble and wonderful things, as 'unpractical,' whatever that vague and hollow word may mean.”