a painter, and devoted himself specially to portraiture,
but though so good a judge as his friend, J. Northcote,
R.A., believed he had the talent requisite for success,
he could not satisfy himself, and gave up the idea,
though always retaining his love of art. He then
definitely turned to literature, and in 1805 pub.
his first book, Essay on the Principles of Human
Action, which was followed by various other philosophical
and political essays. About 1812 he became parliamentary
and dramatic reporter to the Morning Chronicle;
in 1814 a contributor to the Edinburgh Review;
and in 1817 he pub. a vol. of literary sketches,
The Round Table. In the last named year
appeared his Characters of Shakespeare’s
Plays, which was severely attacked in the Quarterly
Review and Blackwood’s Magazine, to
which his democratic views made him obnoxious.
He defended himself in a cutting Letter to William
Gifford, the ed. of the former. The best of
H.’s critical work—his three courses
of Lectures, On the English Poets, On the
English Comic Writers, and On the Dramatic
Literature of the Age of Queen Elizabeth—appeared
successively in 1818, 1819, and 1820. His next
works were Table Talk, in which he attacked
Shelley (1821-22), and The Spirit of the Age
(1825), in which he criticised some of his contemporaries.
He then commenced what he intended to be his chief
literary undertaking, a life of Napoleon Buonaparte,
in 4 vols. (1828-30). Though written with great
literary ability, its views and sympathies were unpopular,
and it failed in attaining success. His last
work was a Life of Titian, in which he collaborated
with Northcote. H. is one of the most subtle
and acute of English critics, though, when contemporaries
came under review, he sometimes allowed himself to
be unduly swayed by personal or political feeling,
from which he had himself often suffered at the hands
of others. His chief principle of criticism as
avowed by himself was that “a genuine criticism
should reflect the colour, the light and shade, the
soul and body of a work.” In his private
life he was not happy. His first marriage, entered
into in 1807, ended in a divorce in 1822, and was
followed by an amour with his landlady’s dau.,
which he celebrated in Liber Amoris, a work
which exposed him to severe censure. A second
marriage with a Mrs. Bridgewater ended by the lady
leaving him shortly after. The fact is that H.
was possessed of a peculiar temper, which led to his
quarrelling with most of his friends. He was,
however, a man of honest and sincere convictions.
There is a coll. ed. of his works, the “Winterslow,”
by A.R. Waller and A. Glover, 12 vols., with
introduction by W.E. Henley, etc.


