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HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON (184o- )

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 353 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON (184o- )  ,
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English poet and man of letters, was born at Plymouth on the 18th, of
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January 184o, being the eldest son of George Clarisse Dobson, a
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civil engineer, and on his grandmother's side of French descent . When he was about eight years old the
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family moved to Holyhead, and his first school was at
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Beaumaris, in the Isle of Anglesea . He was afterwards educated at Coventry, and the Gymnase, Strassburg, whence he returned at the age of sixteen with the intention of becoming a civil engineer . He had a taste for
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art, and in his earlier years at the office continued to study it at South
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Kensington, at his leisure, but without definite ambition . In December 1856 he entered the Board of Trade, gradually rising to a principalship in the harbour department, from which he with-drew in the autumn of 1901 . He married in 1868 Frances Mary, daughter of Nathaniel Beardmore of Broxbourne, Herts, and settled at
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Ealing . His official career was industrious though uneventful, but as poet and biographer he stands among the most distinguished of his time . The student of Mr Austin Dobson's
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work will be struck at once by the fact that it contains nothing immature: there are no juvenilia to criticize or excuse . It was about 1864 that Mr Dobson first turned his attention to composition in
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prose and verse, and some of his earliest known pieces remain among his best . It was not until 1868 that the appearance of St Paul's, a
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magazine edited by Anthony Troliope, afforded Mr Dobson an opportunity and an audience; and during the next six years he contributed to its pages some of his favourite poems, including " Tu Quoque," " A Gentleman of the Old School," " A
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Dialogue from
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Plato," and " Une Marquise." Many of his poems in their
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original form were illustrated—some, indeed, actually written to support illustrations . By the autumn of 1873 Mr Dobson had produced sufficient verse for a
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volume, and put forth his Vignettes in
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Rhyme, which quickly passed through three
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editions . During the period of their appearance in the magazine the poems had received unusual attention, George Eliot, among others, extending generous encouragement to the
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anonymous author .

The little

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book at once introduced him to a larger public . The period was an interesting one for a first appearance, since the air was full of metrical experiment . Swinburne's bold and dithyrambic excursions into classical metre had given the
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clue for an enlargement of the
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borders of English prosody; and, since it was hopeless to follow him in his own
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line without necessary loss of vigour, the poets of the day were looking about for fresh forms and variations . It was early in 1876 that a small
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body of English poets lit upon the French forms of Theodore de Banville, Marot and Villon, and determined to introduce them into English verse . Mr Austin Dobson, who had already made successful use of the
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triolet, was at the head of this
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movement, and in May 1876 he published in The Prodigals the first original
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ballade written in English . This he followed by English versions of the
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rondel, rondeau and
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villanelle . An article in the Cornhill Magazine by Mr Edmund Gosse, " A Plea for Certain Exotic Forms of Verse," appearing in Ju1y1877, simultaneously with Mr Dobson's second volume, Proverbs in
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Porcelain, drew the general eye to the possibilities and achievements of the movement . The experiment was extremely fortunate in its introduction . Mr Dobson is above all things natural, spontaneous and unaffected in poetic method; and in his hands a sheaf of metrical forms, essentially artificial and laborious, was made to assume the colour and bright profusion of a natural product . An air of pensive charm, of delicate sensibility, pervades the whole of these fresh revivals; and it is perhaps this
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personal touch of humanity which has given something like stability to one side of a movement other-wise transitory in influence . The fashion has faded, but the flowers of Mr Dobson's French garden remain bright and scented . In 1883 Mr Dobson published Old-
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World Idylls, a volume which contains some of his most characteristic work .

By this time his taste was gradually settling upon the period with which it has since become almost exclusively associated; and the spirit of the 18th

century is revived in " The Ballad of Beau
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Brocade " and in " The Story of Rosina," as nowhere else in
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modern English
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poetry . In " Beau Brocade," indeed, the pictorial quality of his work, the dainty
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economy of eloquent touches, is at its very best: every
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couplet has its picture, and every picture is true and vivacious . The touch has often been likened to that of Randolph Caldecott, with which it has much in
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common; but Mr Dobson's humour is not so " rollicking," his
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portraiture not so broad, as that of the illustrator of " John Gilpin." The
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appeal is rather to the intellect, and the touches of subdued pathos in the " Gentleman " and " Gentlewoman of the Old School " are addressed directly to the heart . We are in the 18th century, but see it through the glasses of to-day; and the soft intercepting sense of change which hangs like a haze between ourselves and the subject is altogether due to the poet's sympathy and sensibility . At the Sign of the Lyre (1885) was the next of Mr Dobson's
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separate volumes of verse, although he has added to the body of his work in a volume of Collected Poems (1897) . At the Sign of the Lyre contains examples of all his various moods . The admirably fresh and breezy " Ladies of St James's " has precisely the qualities we have traced in his other 18th-century poems; there are ballades and rondeaus, with all the earlier charm; and in " A Revolutionary Relic," as in " The Child Musician " of the Old-World Idylls, the poet reaches a
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depth of true pathos which he does not often attempt, but in which, when he seeks it, he never fails . At the pole opposite to these are the
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light occasional verses, not untouched by the influence of Praed, but also quite individual, buoyant and happy . But the chief novelty in At the Sign of the Lyre was the series of " Fables of Literature and Art," founded in manner upon Gay, and exquisitely finished in scholarship, taste and criticism . It is in these perhaps, more than in any other of his poems, that we see how with much felicity Mr Dobson interpenetrates the literature of fancy with the literature of
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judgment . After 1885 Mr Dobson was engaged principally upon critical and
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biographical prose, by which he has added very greatly to the general knowledge of his favourite 18th century . His
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biographies of Fielding (1883), Bewick (1884), Steele (1886), Goldsmith (1888), Walpole (189o) and Hogarth (1879-1898) are studies marked alike by assiduous research, sympathetic presentation and sound criticism .

It is particularly noticeable that Mr Dobson in his prose has always added something, and often a

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great
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deal, to our positive knowledge of the subject in question, his work as a critic never being solely aesthetic . In Four French-
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women (189o), in the three series of Eighteenth-Century Vignettes (1892-1894-1896), and in The Paladin of Philanthropy (1899), which contain unquestionably his most delicate prose work, the accurate detail of each study is relieved by a charm of expression which could only be attained by a poet . In 1901 he collected his hitherto unpublished poems in a volume en-titled Carmina Votiva . Possessing an exquisite talent of defined range, Mr Austin Dobson may be said in his own words to have " held his pen in
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trust for Art " with a service sincere and distinguished .

End of Article: HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON (184o- )
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