Online Encyclopedia

THOMAS HOOD (1799-1845)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 667 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

THOMAS HOOD (1799-1845)  ,
See also:
British humorist and poet, the son of Thomas Hood, bookseller, was born in
See also:
London on the 23rd of May 1799 . " Next to being a citizen of the
See also:
world," writes Thomas Hood in his
See also:
Literary Reminiscences, " it must be the best thing to be born a citizen of the world's greatest city." On the
See also:
death of her
See also:
husband in 1811 Mrs Hood removed to Islington, where Thomas Hood had a schoolmaster who appreciated his talents, and, as he says, " made him feel it impossible not to take an
See also:
interest in learning while he seemed so interested in teaching." Under the care of this " decayed dominie, whom he has so affectionately recorded, he earned a few guineas—his first literary fee—by revising for the press a new edition of Paul and Virginia . Admitted soon after into the counting-house of a friend of his
See also:
family, he " turned his
See also:
stool into a Pegasus on three legs, every
See also:
foot, of course, being a dactyl or a spondee "; but the uncongenial profession affected his
See also:
health, which was never strong, and he was transferred to the care of his
See also:
father's relations at Dundee . There he led a healthy outdoor
See also:
life, and also became a large and indiscriminate reader, and before long contributed humorous and poetical articles to the provincial
See also:
newspapers and magazines . As a proof of the seriousness with which he regarded the literary vocation, it may be mentioned that he used to write out his poems in printed characters, believing that that
See also:
process best enabled him to under-stand his own peculiarities and faults, and probably unconscious-that Coleridge had recommended some such method of criticism when he said he thought "
See also:
print settles it." On his return to London in 1818 he applied himself assiduously to the
See also:
art of
See also:
engraving, in which he acquired a skill that in after years became a most valuable assistant to his literary labours, and enabled him to illustrate his various humours and fancies by a
See also:
pro-
See also:
fusion of quaint devices, which not only repeated to the eye the impressions of the text, but, by suggesting amusing analogies and contrasts, added considerably to the sense and effect of the
See also:
work . In 1821 Mr John Scott, the editor of the London
See also:
Magazine, was killed in a duel, and that periodical passed into the hands of some friends of Hood, who proposed to make him sub-editor . His
See also:
installation into this congenial
See also:
post at once introduced him to the best literary society of the time; and in becoming the associate of Charles Lamb, Cary, de Quincey, Allan Cunningham, Proctor, Talfourd, Hartley Coleridge, the peasant-poet Clare and other contributors to the magazine, he gradually
See also:
developed his own intellectual powers, and enjoyed that happy intercourse with
See also:
superior minds for which his cordial and genial character was so well adapted, and which he has described in his best manner in several chapters of Hood's Own . He had married in 1825, and Odes and Addresses—his first work—was written in conjunction with his
See also:
brother-in-law Mr J . H . Reynolds, the friend of Keats . S . T .

Coleridge wrote to Charles Lamb averring that the

See also:
book must be his work . The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies (1827) and a dramatic
See also:
romance,
See also:
Lamia, published later, belong to this time . The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies was a
See also:
volume of serious verse, in which Hood showed himself a by no means despicable follower of Keats . But he was known as a humorist, and the public, which had learned to expect jokes from him, rejected this little book almost entirely . There was much true
See also:
poetry in the verse, and much sound sense and keen observation in the
See also:
prose of these
See also:
works; but the poetical feeling and lyrical facility of the one, and the more solid qualities of the other, seemed best employed when they were subservient to his rapid wit, and to the ingenious coruscations of his fancy . This impression was confirmed by the series of the Comic
See also:
Annual, dating from 1830, a kind of publication at that time popular, which Hood undertook and continued, almost unassisted, for several years . Under that somewhat frivolous title he treated all the leading events of the day in a
See also:
fine spirit of caricature, entirely
See also:
free from grossness and vulgarity, without a trait of
See also:
personal malice, and with an under-current of true sympathy and honest purpose that will preserve these papers, like the sketches of Hogarth, long after the events and manners they illustrate have passed from the minds of men . But just as the agreeable
See also:
jester rose into the earnest satirist, one of the most striking peculiarities of his style became a more manifest defect . The attention of the reader was distracted, and his good taste annoyed, by the incessant use of puns, of which Hood had written in his own vindication: " However critics may take offence, A double meaning has double sense." Now it is true that the critic must be unconscious of some of the subtlest charms and nicest delicacies of language who would exclude from humorous writing all those impressions and surprises which depend on the use of the diverse sense of words . The
See also:
history, indeed, of many a word lies hid in its equivocal uses; and it in no way derogates from the dignity of the highest poetry to gain strength and variety from the ingenious application of the same sounds to different senses, any, more than from the contrivances of rhythm or the accompaniment of imitative sounds . But when this habit becomes the characteristic of any wit, it is impossible to prevent it from degenerating into occasional buffoonery, and from supplying a cheap and ready resource, whenever the true vein of humour becomes thin or rare . Artists have been known to use the
See also:
left hand in the hope of checking the fatal facility which practice had conferred on the right; and if Hood had been able to place under some restraint the curious and complex machinery of words and syllables which his fancy was incessantly producing, his style would have been a
See also:
great gainer, and much real earnestness of
See also:
object, which now lies confused by the brilliant kaleidoscope of language, would have remained definite and clear .

He was probably not unconscious of this danger; for, as he gained experience as a writer, his diction became more

See also:
simple, and his ludicrous illustrations less frequent . In another annual called the Gem appeared the poem on the story of "
See also:
Eugene Aram," which first manifested the full extent of that poetical vigour which seemed to advance just in proportion as his
See also:
physical health declined . He started a magazine in his own name, for which he secured the assistance of many literary men of reputation and authority, but which was mainly sustained by his own intellectual activity . From a sick-bed, from which he never rose, he conducted this work with surprising energy, and there composed those poems, too few in number, but immortal in the
See also:
English language, such as the "
See also:
Song of the
See also:
Shirt " (which appeared anonymously in the Christmas number of
See also:
Punch, 1843), the "
See also:
Bridge of Sighs " and the " Song of .the Labourer," which seized the deep human interests of the time, and transported them from the ground of social philosophy into the loftier domain of the
See also:
imagination . They are no clamorous expressions of anger at the discrepancies and contrasts of humanity, but plain, solemn pictures of conditions of life, which neither the politician nor the moralist can deny to exist, and which they are imperatively called upon to remedy . Woman, in her wasted life, in her hurried death, here stands appealing to the society that degrades her, with a combination of eloquence and poetry, of forms of art at once instantaneous and permanent, and with great metrical energy and variety . Hood was associated with the
See also:
Athenaeum, started in 1828 by J .
See also:
Silk Buckingham, and he was a
See also:
regular contributor for the rest of his life . Prolonged illness brought on straitened circumstances; and application was made to
See also:
Sir Robert Peel to place Hood's name on the pension list with which the British state so moderately rewards the
See also:
national services of literary men . This was done without delay, and the pension was continued to his wife and family after his death, which occurred on the 3rd of May 1845 . Nine years after a monument, raised by public subscription, in the cemetery of Kensal Green, was inaugurated by Monckton 1blilnes (Lord Houghton) with a concourse of spectators that showed how well the memory of the poet stood the test of time . Artisans came from a great distance to view and honour the image of the popular writer whose best efforts had been dedicated to the cause and the sufferings of the workers of the world; and literary men of all opinions gathered round the
See also:
grave of one of their brethren whose writings were at once the delight of every boy and the instruction of every man who read them .

Happy the humorist whose works and life are an

See also:
illustration of the great moral truth that the sense of humour is the just balance of all the faculties of man, the best security against the pride of knowledge and the conceits of the imagination, the strongest inducement to submit with a wise and pious
See also:
patience to the vicissitudes of human existence . This was the lesson that Thomas Hood left behind him . (H.) The chief
See also:
sources of his biography are: Memorials of Thomas Hood, collected, arranged and edited by his daughter (186o); his " Literary Reminiscences " in Hood's Own ; Alexander Elliot, Hood in Scotland (1885) . See also the memoir of Hood's friend C . W . Dilke, by his grandson Sir Charles Dilke, prefixed to Papers of a Critic; and M . H . Spielmann's History of Punch . There is an excellent edition of the Poems of Thomas Hood (2 vols., 1897), with a
See also:
biographical introduction of great interest by
See also:
Canon
See also:
Alfred Ainger .

End of Article: THOMAS HOOD (1799-1845)
[back]
SIR SAMUEL HOOD (1762-1814)
[next]
TOM HOOD (1835–1874)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.