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Henry Glassford Bell (1803—1874)
Scottish
lawyer and man of letters, was born at Glasgow on the 8th of November
1803. He received his education at the Glasgow high school and
at Edinburgh University. FIe became intimate with "Delta"
Moir, James Hogg, John Wilson (Christopher North), and others
of the brilliant staff of Blackwood’s Magazine, to which he was
drawn by his political sympathies. In 1828 he became editor of
the Edinburgh Literary Journal, which was eventually incorporated
in the Edinburgh Weekly Chronicle. He was admitted to the bar
in 1832. In 1839 he was appointed sheriff-substitute of Lanarkshire,
and in 1867 he succeeded Sir Archibald Alison in the post of sheriff-principal
of the county, an office which he filled with distinguished success.
In
1831 he published Summer and Winter Hours, a volume of poems,
of which the best known is that on Mary, queen of Scots. He further
defended the cause of the unfortunate queen in a prose Life (2
vols., 1828-1831). Among his other works may be mentioned a preface
which he wrote to Bell and Bains's edition (1865) of the works
of Shakespeare, and Romances and Minor Poems (1866). He figures
in the society of the Nodes Ambrosianae as "Tallboys." He died
on the 7th of January 1874.
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