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CHRISTOPHER See also: English poet, son of See also: Peter See also: Smart, of an old See also: north country See also: family, was See also: born at See also: Ship-See also: bourne, Kent, on the rth of See also: April 1722
.
His See also: father was steward for the Kentish estates of See also: William, Viscount
See also: Vane, younger son of See also: Lord See also: Barnard of Raby See also: Castle, Durham
.
Christopher Smart received his first schooling at See also: Maidstone, and then at the grammar school of Durham
.
He spent See also: part of his vacations at Raby Castle, and his gifts as a poet gained him the patronage of the Vane family
.
Henrietta, duchess of See also: Cleveland, allowed him a pension of X40 which was paid until her See also: death in 1742
.
See also: Thomas
See also: Gray, writing to his friend Thomas Wharton in 1747, warned him to keep silence about Smart's delinquencies lest they should
come to the ears of
See also: Henry Vane (afterwards
See also: earl of See also: Darlington), and endanger his allowance
.
At Cambridge, where he was entered at Pembroke See also: College in 1739, he spent much of his See also: time in taverns, and got badly into See also: debt, but in spite of his irregularities he became See also: fellow of his college, praelector in philosophy and keeper of the See also: common chest in 1745
.
In See also: November 1747 he was compelled to remain in his rooms for fear of his creditors
.
At Cambridge he won the See also: Seaton prize for a poem on " one of the attributes of the Supreme Being " in 1750 (he won the same prize in 1751, 1752, 1753 and 1955); and a See also: farce entitled A Trip to Cambridge, or The Grateful See also: Fair, acted in 1747 by the students of Pembroke, was from his See also: pen
.
In 1750 he contributed to The Student, or The See also: Oxford and Cambridge Monthly See also: Miscellany
.
During one of his visits to See also: London he had made the acquaintance of See also: John Newbery, the publisher, whose step-daughter, Anna Maria Carman, he married, with the result of forfeiting his fellow-ship in 1753
.
About 1752 he permanently
See also: left Cambridge for London, though he kept his name on the college books, as he had to do in See also: order to compete for the Seaton prize
.
He wrote in London under the pseudonym of " Mary Midnight " and " Pentweazle." He had edited The Midwife, or the Old Woman'sSee also: Magazine (1751–1753), and had a See also: hand in many other " See also: Grub Street " productions
.
Some criticisms made by " See also: Sir" John See also: Hill (1716 ?–1795) on his Poems on Several Occasions (1752) provoked his satire of the Hilliad (1753), noteworthy as providing the
See also: model for the Rolliad
.
In 1756 he finished a See also: prose See also: translation of Horace, which was widely used, but brought him little profit
.
He agreed in the same See also: year to produce a weekly paper entitled The Universal Visitor, for which See also: Samuel See also: Johnson wrote some numbers
.
In 1751 Smart had shown symptoms of
See also: mental aberration, which See also: developed into religious See also: mania, and between 1756 and 1758 he was in an See also: asylum
.
Dr Johnson visited him and thought that he ought to have been at large
.
During his confinement he conceived the idea of the single poem that has made him famous, " A See also: Song to See also: David," though the See also: story that it was indented with a See also: key on the panels of his cell, and shaded in with
See also: charcoal, may be received with caution
.
It shows no trace of morbid origin
.
After his See also: release Smart produced other religious poems, but none of them shows the same inspiration
.
His wife and See also: children had gone to live with See also: friends as he was unable to support them, and for some time before his death, which took place on the 21st of May 1771, he lived in the rules of See also: King's Bench, and was supported by small subscriptions raised by Dr
See also: Burney and other friends
.
Of all that he wrote, " A Song to David " will alone bear the test of time
.
Unlike in its See also: simple forceful treatment and impressive directness of expression, as has been said, to anything else in 18th-century See also: poetry, the poem on analysis is found to depend for its unique effect also upon a certain ingenuity of construction, and the novel way in which David's ideal qualities are enlarged upon
.
This will be more readily understood on reference to the following verse, the first twelve words of which become in turn the key-notes, so to speak, of the twelve succeeding verses: "See also: Great, valiant, pious, See also: good, and clean,
See also: Sublime, contemplative, serene,
Strong, See also: constant, pleasant, wise
!
Bright effluence of exceeding See also: grace;
Best See also: man !—the swiftness, and the See also: race,
The peril, and the prize."
The last See also: line is characteristic of another peculiarity in " A Song to David," the effective use of alliteration to See also: complete the initial energy of the stanza in many instances
.
But in the poem throughout is revealed a poetic quality which eludes critical analysis
.
From the Poems of the See also: late Christopher Smart (1791) the " Song to David " (pr
.
1763) was excluded as forming a proof of his mental aberration
.
It was reprinted in 1819, and has since received abundant praise
.
In an abridged See also: form it is included in T
.
H
.
See also: Ward's English Feels, vol. iii., and was reprinted in 1895, and in Igor with an introduction by R
.
A
.
Streatfeild
.
Smart's other poems are included in
See also: Anderson's
See also: British Poets
.
Christopher Smart is one of RobertSee also: Browning's subjects in The Parleyings with Certain See also: People (1887)
.
See also the contributions to Notes and Queries of See also: March 25th and May 6th, 1905, by the Rev
.
D
.
C
.
Tovey, who has read, and in some places revised, the above article
.
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