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SIR HERBERT CROFT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 480 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SIR HERBERT CROFT  , Bart . (1751–1816),
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English author, was born at
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Dunster Park, Berkshire, on the 1st of November 1751, son of Herbert Croft (see below) of Stifford, Essex . He matriculated at University College, Oxford, in March 1771, and was subsequently entered at Lincoln's
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Inn . He was called to the bar, but in 1782 returned to Oxford with a view to preparing for
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holy orders . In 1786 he received the vicarage of
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Prittlewell, Essex, but he remained at Oxford for some years accumulating materials for a proposed English
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dictionary . He was twice married, and on the day after his second
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wedding day he was imprisoned at Exeter for debt . He then retired to
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Hamburg, and two years later his library was sold . He had succeeded in 1797 to the title, but not to the estates, of a distant cousin,
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Sir John Croft, the
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fourth
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baronet . He returned to England in 1800, but went abroad once more in 1802 . He lived near
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Amiens at a house owned by Lady Mary Hamilton, said to have been a daughter of the
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earl of Leven and Melville . Later he removed to Paris, where he died on the 26th of
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April 1816 . In some of his numerous
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literary enterprises he had the help of Charles Nodier .

Croft wrote the

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Life of
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Edward Young inserted in Johnson's Lives of the Poets . In 178o he published Love and Madness, a Story too true, in a series of letters between Parties whose names could perhaps be mentioned were they less known or less lamented . , This
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book, which passed through seven
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editions, narrates the passion of a clergyman named James Hackman for Martha Ray,
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mistress of the earl of Sandwich, who was shot by her lover as she was leaving Covent Garden in 1779 (see the Case and
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Memoirs of the
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late Rev . Mr James Hackman, 1779) . Love and Madness has permanent
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interest because Croft inserted, among other
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miscellaneous
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matter, information about Thomas Chatterton gained from letters which he obtained from the poet's
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sister, Mrs Newton, under false pretences, and used without payment . Robert Southey, when about to publish an edition of Chatterton's
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works for the benefit of his
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family, published (November 1799) details of Croft's proceedings in the Monthly ' This is probably a Greek legend (cf. the Attic vase of about 500 B.C. in Journ. of Hell .
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Stud., 1898, p . 268) . Review . To this attack Croft wrote a reply addressed to John Nichols in the Gentleman's
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Magazine, and afterwards printed separately as Chatterton and Love and Madness . . . (1800) .

This

tract evades the main accusation, and contains much abuse of Southey . Croft, however, supplied the material for the exhaustive account of Chatterton in A . Kippis's Biographia Britannica (vol. iv., 1789) . In 1788 he addressed a letter to William Pitt on the subject of a new dictionary . He criticized
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Samuel Johnson's efforts, and in 1790 he claimed to have collected 11,000 words used by excellent authorities but omitted by Johnson . Two years later he issued proposals for a revised edition of Johnson's Dictionary, but subscribers were lacking and his 200 vols. of MS. remained unused . Croft was a good scholar and linguist, and the author of some curious books in French . The Love Letters of Mr H. and
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Miss R . 1775–1779 were edited from Croft's book by Mr Gilbert Burgess (1895) . See also John Nichols's Illustrations . . . (1828), v .

202-218 .

End of Article: SIR HERBERT CROFT
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CROFT (or CROFTS), WILLIAM (1678–1727)
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