| |
John Home (1722—2808)
Scottish
dramatic poet, was born on the 22nd of September 1722 at Leith,
where his father, Alexander Home, who was distantly related to
the earls of Home, filled the office of town-clerk. He was educated
at the grammar school of his native town, and at the university
of Edinburgh, where he graduated MA, in 1742. Though he showed
a fondness for the profession of arms, he studied divinity, and
was licensed by the presbytery of Edinburgh in 1745. In the same
year he joined as a volunteer against the Pretender, and was taken
prisoner at the battle of Falkirk (1746).
With
many others he was carried to the castle of Doune in Perthshire,
but soon effected his escape. In July 1746 Home was presented
to the parish of Athelstaneford, Haddingtonshire, vacant by the
death of Robert Blair, the author of The Grave. He had leisure
to visit his friends and became especially intimate with David
Home who belonged to the same family as himself.
His
first play, Agis: a tragedy, founded on Plutarch’s narrative,
was finished in 1747. He took it to London and submitted it to
Garrick for representation at Drury Lane, but it was rejected
as unsuitable for the stage. The tragedy of Douglas was suggested
to him by hearing a lady sing the ballad of Child Maurice (F.
J. Child, Popular Ballads, ii. 263). The ballad supplied him with
the outline of a simple and striking plot Alter five years’ labour
he completed his play, which he took to London for Garrick’s opinion.
It also was rejected, but on his return to Edinburgh his friends
resolved that it should be brought out in that city.
It
was produced in December 1756 with overwhelming success, in spite
of the opposition of the presbytery, who summoned Alexander Carlyle
to answer for having attended its representation. Home wisely
resigned his charge in 1757, after a visit to London, where Douglas
was brought out at Covent Garden on the 14th of March. Peg Woffington
played Lady Randolph, a part which found a later exponent in Mrs
Siddons.
David
Hume summed up his admiration for Douglas by saying that his friend
possessed “the true theatric genius of Shakespeare and Otway,
refined from the unhappy barbarism of the one and licentiousness
of the other.” Gray, writing to Horace Walpole, said that the
author “ seemed to have retrieved the true language of the stage,
which has been lost for these hundred years,” but Samuel Johnson
held aloof from the general enthusiasm, and averred that there
were not ten good lines in the whole play.
In
1758 Home became private secretary to Lord Bute, then secretary
of state, and was appointed tutor to the prince of Wales; and
in 1760 his patron’s influence procured him a pension of £300
per annum. Garrick produced, Agis at Drury Lane on the 21st of
February 1758. By dint of good acting and powerful support the
piece kept the stage for eleven days, but it was lamentably inferior
to Douglas.
In
1778 he joined a regiment formed by the duke of Buccleuch. He
sustained severe injuries in a fall from horseback which permanently
affected his brain, and was persuaded by his friends to retire.
From 1767 he resided either at Edinburgh or at villa which he
built at Kilduff near his former parish. It was at this time that
he wrote his History of the Rebellion of 1745, which appeared
in 1802. Home died at Merchiston Bank, near Edinburgh, on the
5th of September 1808, in his eighty-sixth year. The Works of
John Home were collected and published by Henry Mackenzie in 1822
with “An Account of the Life and Writings of Mr John House,” which
also appeared separately in the same year, but several of his
smaller poems seem to have escaped the editor’s observation. These
are, ”The Fate of Caesar,” “Verses upon Inveraray,” “ Epistle
to the Earl of Eglintoun,” “Prologue on the Birthday of the Prince
of Wales, 1759“ and several “Epigrams,” which are printed in vol.
ii. of Original Poems by Scottish Gentlemen (1762).
Return
to 50 Best Loved Scottish Books |
|