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WILLIAM BECKFORD (1760–1844)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 610 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM BECKFORD (1760–1844)  ,
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English author, son of Alderman William Beckford (17.o9–177o), was born on the 1st of
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October 176o . His
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father was lord mayor of
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London in 1762 and again in 1769; he was a famous supporter of John Wilkes, and on his monument in the
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Guildhall were afterwards inscribed the words of his manly and outspoken reproof to George III. on the occasion of the City of London address to the king in 1770 . At the age of eleven young Beckford inherited a princely fortune from his father . He married Lady Margaret Gordon in 1783, and spent his brief married
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life in
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Switzerland . After his wife's
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death (1786) he travelled in Spain and
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Portugal, and wrote his Portuguese Letters (published 1834, 1835), which rank with his best
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work . He afterwards returned to England, and after selling his old house, Fonthill Abbey, Wiltshire, began to build a magnificent residence there, on which he expended in about eighteen years the sum of £273,000 . His eccentricities, together with the strict seclusion in which he lived, gave rise tc
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scandal, probably unjustified . In 1822 he sold his house, together with its splendid library and pictures, to John Farquhar, and soon after one of the towers, 26o ft. high, fell, destroying
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part of the
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villa in the ruins . Beckford erected another lofty structure on Lansdowne Hill, near Bath, where he continued to reside till his death in 1844 . His first work,
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Biographical
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Memoirs of Extraordinary Painters (178o) was a slight, sarcastic jeu d'esprit . In 1782 he wrote in French his
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oriental
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romance, The
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History of the
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Caliph Vathek, which appeared in English, translated by the Rev .
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Samuel Henley, in 1786 and has taken its place as one of the finest productions of luxuriant
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imagination .

Beckford's

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wealth and large
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expenditure, his position as a
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collector and
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patron of letters (he bought Gibbon's library at
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Lausanne), his
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literary industry, and his reputation as author of Vathek, make him an interesting figure in literary history . He had a seat in parliament from 1784 to 1793, and again from 18o6 to 1820 . He
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left two daughters, the eldest of whom was married to the loth duke of Hamilton . Cyrus Redding's Memoir (1859) is the only full biography, but prolix; see Dr R . Garnett's introduction to his edition of Vathek (1893) .

End of Article: WILLIAM BECKFORD (1760–1844)
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