Characters of Shakespeare's
Plays
Project Gutenberg's Characters of Shakespeare's Plays, by William
Hazlitt #3 in our series by William Hazlitt
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Title: Characters of Shakespeare's Plays
Author: William Hazlitt
Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5085] [Yes, we are more than
one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on April 22,
2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEARE'S ***
Produced by Steve Harris, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team.
CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS
By WILLIAM HAZLITT
With an Introduction by SIR ARTHUR QUILLER-COUCH
INTRODUCTION
The book here included among The World's Classics made its first
appearance as an octavo volume of xxiv + 352 pages, with the title-
page:
Characters of Shakespeare's Plays, By William Hazlitt. London: Printed
by C. H. Reynell, 21 Piccadilly, 1817.
William Hazlitt (1778-1830) came of an Irish Protestant stock, and of a
branch of it transplanted in the reign of George I from the county of
Antrim to Tipperary. His father migrated, at nineteen, to the University
of Glasgow (where he was contemporary with Adam Smith), graduated
in 1761 or thereabouts, embraced the principles of the Unitarians,
joined their ministry, and crossed over to England; being successively
pastor at Wisbech in Cambridgeshire, at Marshfield in Gloucestershire,
and at Maidstone. At Wisbech he married Grace Loftus, the daughter of
a neighbouring farmer. Of the many children granted to them but three
survived infancy. William, the youngest of these, was born in Mitre
Lane, Maidstone, on April 10, 1778. From Maidstone the family moved
in 1780 to Bandon, Co. Cork; and from Bandon in 1783 to America,
where Mr. Hazlitt preached before the new Assembly of the
States-General of New Jersey, lectured at Philadelphia on the
Evidences of Christianity, founded the First Unitarian Church at Boston,
and declined a proffered diploma of D.D. In 1786-7 he returned to
England and took up his abode at Wem, in Shropshire. His elder son,
John, was now old enough to choose a vocation, and chose that of a
miniature-painter. The second child, Peggy, had begun to paint also,
amateurishly in oils. William, aged eight--a child out of whose
recollection all memories of Bandon and of America (save the taste of
barberries) soon faded-- took his education at home and at a local
school. His father designed him for the Unitarian ministry.
The above dry recital contains a number of facts not to be overlooked
as predisposing causes in young Hazlitt's later career; as that he was
Irish by blood, intellectual by geniture, born into dissent, and a
minority of dissent, taught at home to value the things of the mind, in
early childhood a nomad, in later childhood 'privately educated'--a
process which (whatever its merits) is apt to develop the freak as
against the citizen, the eccentric and lop- sided as against what is
proportionate and disciplined. Young Hazlitt's cleverness and his
passion for individual liberty were alike precocious. In 1791, at the age
of thirteen, he composed and published in The Shrewsbury Chronicle a
letter of protest against the calumniators of Dr. Priestley: a performance
which, for the gravity of its thought as for the balance of its expression,
would do credit to ninety-nine grown men in a hundred. At fifteen, his
father designing that he should enter the ministry, he proceeded to the
Unitarian College, Hackney; where his master, a Mr. Corrie, found him
'rather backward in many of the ordinary points of learning and, in
general, of a dry, intractable understanding', the truth being that the lad
had set his heart against the ministry, aspiring rather to be a
philosopher--in particular a political philosopher. At fourteen he had
conceived ('in consequence of a dispute one day, after coming out of
Meeting, between my father and an old lady of the congregation,
respecting the repeal of the Corporation and Test Acts and the limits of
religious toleration') the
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