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WILLIAM MASON (1725—1797)

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 841 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM MASON (1725—1797)  ,
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English poet, son of William Mason, vicar of
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Holy Trinity, Hull, was born on the 12th of
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February 1725, was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, and took holy orders . In 1744 he wrote
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Musaeus, a lament for Pope in imitation of Lycidas, and in 1749 through the . influence of Thomas Gray he was elected a
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fellow of Pembroke College . He became a devoted friend and admirer of Gray, who addressed him as " Skroddles," and corrected the worst solecisms in his verses . In 1748 he published Isis, a poem directed against the supposed Jacobitism of the university of Oxford, which provoked Thomas Warton's Triumph of Isis . Mason conceived the ambition of reconciling
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modern drama with ancient forms by strict observance of the unities and the restoration of the chorus . These ideas were exemplified in Elfrida (1752) and
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Caractacus (1759), two frigid performances no doubt intended to be read rather than acted, but produced with some alterations at Covent Garden in 1772 and 1776 respectively . Horace Walpole described Caractacus as " laboured, uninteresting, and no more resembling the manners of Britons than of
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Japanese "; while Gray declared he had read the
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manuscript " not with pleasure only, but with emotion." In 1754 Mason was presented to the rectory of Aston, near Rotherham,
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Yorkshire, and in 1757 through the influence of the duke of Devonshire he became one of the king's chaplains . He also received the prebend of Holme in York Minster (1756), was made
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canon residentiary in 1762, and in 1763 became precentor and prebendary of Driffield . He married in 1764 Mary Sherman, who died three years later . When Gray died in 1771 he made Mason his
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literary executor . In the preparation of the
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Life and Letters of Gray, which appeared in 1774, he had much help from Horace Walpole, with whom he corresponded regularly until 1784 when Mason opposed Fox's India
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Bill, and offended Walpole by thrusting on him
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political advice unasked .

Twelve years of silence followed, but in the

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year before his
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death the correspondence was renewed on friendly terms . Mason died at Aston on the 7th of
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April 1797 . His correspondence with Gray and Walpole shows him to have been a man of cultivated tastes . He was something of an antiquarian, a good musician, and an amateur of
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painting . He is said to have invented an instrument called the
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celestina, a modified pianoforte . Gray rewarded his faithful admiration with good-humoured kindness . He warned him against confounding
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Mona with the Isle of Man, or the Goths with the Celts, corrected his grammar, pointed out his plagiarisms, and laughed gently at his superficial learning . His powers show to better
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advantage in the unacknowledged satirical poems which he produced under the pseudonym of Malcolm Macgregor . In editing Gray's letters he took considerable liberties with his originals, and did not
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print all that related to himself . Mason's other
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works included Odes (1756); The English Garden, a didactic poem in blank verse, the four books of which appeared in 1772, 1777, 1779 and 1782; An Heroic
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Epistle to
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Sir William Chambers (1774); an Ode to Mr Pinchbeck (1776) and an Epistle to Dr Shebbeare (1777)—all these by " Malcolm Macgregor "; Essay,
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Historical and Critical, of Church
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Music (1795), and a lyrical drama, Sappho (1797) . His poems were collected in 1764 and 1774, and an edition of his Works appeared in 1811 . His poems with a Life are included in Alexander Chalmers's English Poets .

His correspondence with Walpole was edited by J .

Mitford in 1851; and his correspondence with Gray by the same editor in 1853 . See also the standard
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editions of the letters of Gray and of Walpole . There is a very pleasant picture of Mason's character in Southey's Doctor (ch. cxxvi.) .

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