127- ) English Literature
William Hazlitt – Summary
William
Hazlitt, (born April 10, 1778, Maidstone, Kent, Eng.—died Sept. 18, 1830, Soho,
London), English writer best known for his humanistic essays. Lacking conscious
artistry or literary pretention, his writing is noted for the brilliant
intellect it reveals.
Hazlitt’s
childhood was spent in Ireland and North America, where his father, a Unitarian
preacher, supported the American rebels. The family returned to England when
William was nine, settling in Shropshire. At puberty the child became somewhat
sullen and unapproachable, tendencies that persisted throughout his life. He
read intensively, however, laying the foundation of his learning. Having some
difficulty in expressing himself either in conversation or in writing, he
turned to painting and in 1802 traveled to Paris to work in the Louvre, though
war between England and France compelled his return the following year. His
friends, who already included Charles Lamb, William Wordsworth, and Samuel
Taylor Coleridge, encouraged his ambitions as a painter; yet in 1805 he turned
to metaphysics and the study of philosophy that had attracted him earlier,
publishing his first book, On the Principles of Human Action. In 1808 he
married Sarah Stoddart, and the couple went to live at Winterslow on Salisbury
Plain, which was to become Hazlitt’s favourite retreat for thinking and
writing.
Although
he successfully completed several literary projects, by the end of 1811 Hazlitt
was penniless. He then gave a course of lectures in philosophy in London and
began reporting for the Morning Chronicle, quickly establishing himself as
critic, journalist, and essayist. His collected dramatic criticism appeared as
A View of the English Stage in 1818. He also contributed to a number of
journals, among them Leigh Hunt’s Examiner; this association led to the
publication of The Round Table, 2 vol. (1817), 52 essays of which 40 were by
Hazlitt. Also in 1817 Hazlitt published his Characters of Shakespeare’s Plays,
which met with immediate approval in most quarters. He had, however, become
involved in a number of quarrels, often with his friends, resulting from the
forcible expression of his views in the journals. At the same time, he made new
friends and admirers (among them Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Keats) and
consolidated his reputation as a lecturer, delivering courses On the English Poets
(published 1818) and On the English Comic Writers (published 1819), as well as
publishing a collection of political essays. His volume entitled Lectures on
the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth was prepared during 1819, but
thereafter he devoted himself to essays for various journals, notably John
Scott’s London Magazine.
Hazlitt
lived apart from his wife after the end of 1819, and they were divorced in
1822. He fell in love with the daughter of his London landlord, but the affair
ended disastrously, and Hazlitt described his suffering in the strange Liber
Amoris; or, The New Pygmalion (1823). Even so, many of his best essays were
written during this difficult period and were collected in his two most famous
books: Table Talk (1821) and The Plain Speaker (1826). Others were afterward
edited by his son, William, as Sketches and Essays (1829), Literary Remains
(1836), and Winterslow (1850) and by his biographer, P.P. Howe, as New Writings
(1925–27). Hazlitt’s other works during this period of prolific output included
Sketches of the Principal Picture Galleries in England (1824), with its
celebrated essay on the Dulwich gallery.
In
April 1824 Hazlitt married a widow named Bridgwater. But the new wife was
resented by his son, whom Hazlitt adored, and the couple separated after three
years. Part of this second marriage was spent abroad, an experience recorded in
Notes of a Journey in France and Italy (1826). In France he began an ambitious
but not very successful Life of Napoleon, 4 vol. (1828–30), and in 1825 he
published some of his most effective writing in The Spirit of the Age. His last
book, Conversations of James Northcote (1830), recorded his long friendship
with that eccentric painter.
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