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Thomas Campbell (1777-1844)
Scottish
poet, eighth son of Alexander Campbell, was born at Glasgow on
the 27th of July 1777. His father, who was a cadet of the family
of Campbell of Kirnan, Argyllshire, belonged to a Glasgow firm
trading in Virginia, and lost his money in consequence of the
American war. Campbell was educated at the grammar school and
university of his native town. He won prizes for classics and
for verse-writing, and the vacations he spent as a tutor in the
western Highlands. His poem “ Glenara “ and the ballad of “Lord
Ullin’s Daughter” owe their origin to a visit to Mull. In May
1797 he went to Edinburgh to attend lectures on law. He supported
himself by private teaching and by writing, towards which he was
helped by Dr Robert Anderson, the editor of the British Poets.
Among
his contemporaries in Edinburgh were Sir Walter Scott, Henry Brougham,
Francis Jeffrey, Dr Thomas Brown, John Leyden and James Grahame.
To these early days in Edinburgh may be referred “The Wounded
Hussar,” “The Dirge of Wallace” and the “Epistle to Three Ladies.”
In 1799, six months after the publication of the Lyrical Ballads
of Wordsworth and Coleridge, The Pleasures of Hope was published.
It is a rhetorical and didactic poem in the taste of his time,
and owed much to the fact that it dealt with topics near to men’s
hearts, with the French Revolution, the partition of Poland and
with negro slavery. Its success was instantaneous, but Campbell
was deficient in energy and perseverance and did not follow it
up.
He
went abroad in June 1800 without any very definite aim, visited
Klopstock at Hamburg, and made his way to Regensburg, which was
taken by the French three days after his arrival. He found refuge
in a Scottish monastery. Some of his best lyrics, “Hohenlinden,”
“Ye Mariners of England” and “The Soldier’s Dream,” belong to
his German tour. He spent the winter in Altona, where he met an
Irish exile, Anthony McCann, whose history suggested “The Exile
of Erin.”
He had at that time the intention of writing an epic on Edinburgh
to be entitled “The Queen of the North.” On the outbreak of war
between Denmark and England he hurried home, the “Battle of the
Baltic” being drafted soon after. At Edinburgh he was introduced
to the first Lord Minto, who took him in the next year to London
as occasional secretary. In June 1803 appeared a new edition of
the Pleasures of Hope, to which some lyrics were added.
In
1803 Campbell married his second cousin, Matilda Sinclair, and
settled in London. He was well received in Whig society, especially
at Holland House. His prospects, however, were slight when in
1805 he received a government pension of 200 pounds. In that year
the Campbells removed to Sydenham. Campbell was at this time regularly
employed on the Star newspaper, for which he translated the foreign
news.
In
1809 he published a narrative poem in the Spenserian stanza,”
Gertrude of Wyoming,” with which were printed some of his best
lyrics. He was slow and fastidious in composition, and the poem
suffered from over elaboration. Francis Jeffrey wrote to the author:
“Your timidity or fastidiousness, or some other knavish quality,
will not let you give your conceptions glowing, and bold, and
powerful, as they present themselves; but you must chasten, and
refine, and soften them, forsooth, till half their nature and
grandeur is chiselled away from them. Believe me, the world will
never know how truly you are a great and original poet till you
venture to cast before it some of the rough pearls of your fancy.”
In
1812 he delivered a series of lectures on poetry in London at
the Royal Institution; and he was urged by Sir Walter Scott to
become a candidate for the chair of literature at Edinburgh University.
In 1814 he went to Paris, making there the acquaintance of the
elder Schlegel, of Baron Cuvier and others. His pecuniary anxieties
were relieved in 1815 by a legacy of 4000 pounds. He continued
to occupy himself with his Specimens of the British Poets, the
design of which had been projected years before. The work was
published in 1819. It contains on the whole an admirable selection
with short lives of the poets, and prefixed to it an essay on
poetry containing much valuable criticism.
In
1820 he accepted the editorship of the New Monthly Magazine, The
original authorship of this poem was by many people assigned to
G: Nugent Reynolds. Campbell’s claim is established in by R. R.
Madden (1887). In the same year made another tour in Germany.
Four rears later appeared his “ Theodric,” a not very successful
poem of domestic life. He took an active share in the foundation
of the university of London, visiting Berlin to inquire into the
German system of education, and making recommendations which were
adopted by Lord Brougham. He was elected lord Rector of Glasgow
University three times (1826—1829).
In
the last election he had Sir Walter Scott for a rival. Campbell
retired from the editorship of the New Monthly Magazine in 1830,
and a year later made an unsuccessful venture with the Metropolitan
Magazine. He had championed the cause of the Poles in The Pleasures
of Hope, and the news of the capture of Warsaw by the Russians
in 1831 affected him as if it had been the deepest of personal
calamities. “Poland preys on my heart night and lay,” he wrote
in one of his letters, and his sympathy found a real expression
in the foundation in London of the Associaion of the Friends of
Poland.
In.
1834 he travelled to Paris and Algiers, where he wrote his Letters
from the South (printed 1837). The small production of Campbell
may be partly explained iy his domestic calamities. His wife died
in 1828. Of his two sons, one died in infancy and the other became
insane. His own health suffered, and he gradually withdrew from
public life. He died at Boulogne on the 15th of June 1844, and
was buried in Westminster Abbey.
Thomas
Campbell’s other works include a Life of Mrs Siddons (1842), and
,narrative poem, “The Pilgrim of Glencoe”(1842). The Life and
Letters of Thomas Campbell (3 vols., 1849), edited by William
Beattie, M.D. Literary Reminiscences and Memoirs of Thomas Campbell
(1860), by Cyrus Redding.
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