The square, blue
plaque reads:
|
The Corporation
of
In a house on this
site lived William Hazlitt 1829
the City of
London
|
|
The Spartacus
Educational website tells us about Hazlitt:
"William
Hazlitt, the son of an Irish Unitarian clergyman, was born in Maidstone, Kent,
on 10th April, 1778. His father was a friend of Joseph Priestley and Richard
Price. As a result of supporting the American Revolution, Rev. Hazlitt and his
family were forced to leave Kent and live in Ireland.
The family
returned to England in 1787 and settled at Wem in Shropshire. At the age of
fifteen William was sent to be trained for the ministry at New Unitarian College
at Hackney in London. The college had been founded by Joseph Priestley and had a
reputation for producing freethinkers. In 1797 Hazlitt lost his desire to become
a Unitarian minister and left the college.
While in
London Hazlitt became friends with a group of writers with radical political
ideas. The group included Percy Bysshe Shelley, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Charles
Lamb, William Wordsworth, Thomas Barnes, Henry Brougham, Leigh Hunt, Robert
Southey and Lord Byron. At first Hazlitt attempted to become a portrait painter
but after a lack of success he turned to writing.
Charles Lamb
introduced Hazlitt to William Godwin and other important literary figures in
London. In 1805 Joseph Johnson published Hazlitt's first book, An Essay on the
Principles of Human Action. The following year Hazlitt published Free Thoughts
on Public Affairs, an attack on William Pitt and his government's foreign
policy. Hazlitt opposed England's war with France and its consequent heavy
taxation. This was followed by a series of articles and pamphlets on political
corruption and the need to reform the voting system.
Hazlitt began
writing for The Times and in 1808 married the editor's sister, Sarah Stoddart.
His friend, Thomas Barnes, was the newspaper's parliamentary reporter. Later,
Barnes was to become the editor of the newspaper. In 1810 he published the New
and Improved Grammar of the English Language.
In 1813
Hazlitt was employed as the parliamentary reporter for the Morning Chronicle,
the country's leading Whig newspaper. However, in his articles, Hazlitt
criticized all political parties. Hazlitt also contributed to The Examiner, a
radical journal edited by Leigh Hunt. Later, Hazlitt wrote for the Edinburgh
Review, the Yellow Dwarf and the London Magazine. In these journals Hazlitt
produced a series of essays on art, drama, literature and politics. During this
period he established himself as England's leading expert on the writings of
William Shakespeare.
Hazlitt wrote
several books on literature including Characters of Shakespeare (1817), A View
of the English Stage (1818), English Poets (1818) and English Comic Writers
(1819). In these books he urged the artist to be aware of his social and
political responsibilities. Hazlitt continued to write about politics and his
most important books on this subject is Political Essays with Sketches of Public
Characters (1819). In the book Hazlitt explains how the admiration of power
turns many writers into "intellectual pimps and hirelings of the
press."
Hazlitt's
marriage to Sarah ended in 1823 as a result of an affair with a maid, Sarah
Walker. Hazlitt wrote an account of this relationship in his book Liber Amoris.
In 1824 Hazlitt married Isabella Bridgewater but this relationship only lasted a
year.
In theThe
Spirit of the Age: Contemporary Portraits (1825) Hazlitt provides a series of
contemporary portraits including Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Wordsworth,
Robert Southey, William Cobbett, William Godwin and William Wilberforce. This
was followed by The Plain Speaker (1826) and Life of Napoleon (4 volumes,
1828-30).
William
Hazlitt died in poverty of stomach cancer on 18th September
1830."