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Christopher Smart

Christopher Smart (11 April 1722 – 20 May 1771) was an English poet. He was a major contributor to two popular magazines, The Midwife and The Student, and a friend to influential cultural icons like Samuel Johnson and Henry Fielding. Smart, a high church Anglican, was widely known throughout London.[1]

Christopher Smart
Born(1722-04-11)11 April 1722
Shipbourne, England
Died20 May 1771(1771-05-20) (aged 49)
King's Bench Prison, London
Pen nameMrs Mary Midnight, Ebenezer Pentweazle
OccupationActor, Editor, Playwright, Poet, Translator
Literary movementThe Augustans
Spouse
Anna Maria Carnan
(m. 1752)
Children3; including Elizabeth

Smart was infamous as the pseudonymous midwife "Mrs. Mary Midnight" and for widespread accounts of his father-in-law, John Newbery, locking him away in a mental asylum for many years over Smart's supposed religious "mania". Even after Smart's eventual release, a negative reputation continued to pursue him as he was known for incurring more debt than he could repay; this ultimately led to his confinement in debtors' prison until his death.

His two most widely known works are A Song to David and Jubilate Agno, which are believed to have been written during his confinement in St. Luke's Asylum, although this is still debated by scholars as there is no record of when they were written. It is even more unclear when the works were written as Jubilate Agno was not published until 1939 when it was found in a library archive and A Song to David received mixed reviews until the 19th century. To his contemporaries, Smart was known mainly for his many contributions in the journals The Midwife and The Student, along with his famous Seaton Prize poems and his mock epic The Hilliad. Although he is recognized primarily as a religious poet, his poetry includes various other themes, such as his theories on nature and his promotion of English nationalism.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Christopher Smart was born in Shipbourne in Kent, England on the Fairlawne estate of William, Viscount Vane, younger son of Lord Barnard of Barnard Castle.[2] He was, according to his nephew, "of a delicate constitution having been born earlier than the natural period".[3] He was baptized in Wrotham parish on 11 May 1722. His father was Peter Smart, steward[4] or bailiff[2] of Fairlawne. His mother, Winifred (née Griffiths) was from Radnorshire, Wales.[5] Before giving birth to Christopher, Winifred had two daughters, Margaret and Mary Anne.[5]

During his younger years, Fairlawne was the residence of Christopher Vane, 1st Baron Barnard and Lady Barnard, who bequeathed £200 to Smart.[6] He supposedly received this sum due to his father's closeness to the Vane family, Smart being named after Christopher Vane, and the young boy being considered "the pride of Fairlawn".[6][7] In 1726, three years after Christopher Vane died, Peter Smart purchased Hall-Place in East Barming, which included a mansion house, fields, orchards, gardens, and woodland, a property that was influential throughout Smart's later life.[6] From the age of four until eleven, he spent much time around the farms, but did not participate, leading to speculation that he had had asthma attacks.[8] However, not all scholars agree that he was a "sickly youth".[9] The only written record of events during his childhood comes from his writing of a short poem, at the age of four, in which he challenges a rival to the affections of a twelve-year-old girl.[9]

While at Hall-Place, Smart was sent to the local Maidstone Grammar School where he was taught by Charles Walwyn, a scholar from Eton College who had received an MA from King's College, Cambridge in 1696.[10] It was here that Smart received an intensive education in Latin and Greek.[10] He did not complete his education at Maidstone however, as his father died on 3 February 1733, and his mother took Smart and his siblings to live near relatives in Durham after selling off a large portion of the estate to pay off Peter Smart's debts.[11]

Smart then attended Durham School, where the Reverend Mr. Richard Dongworth was headmaster; it is not known whether he lived with his uncle, John Smart, or with a school master.[12] He spent vacations at Raby Castle, which was owned by Henry Vane, 1st Earl of Darlington, the grandson of Christopher Vane.[13] Henry Vane and his wife Grace, sister to William and Henrietta Fitzroy the Duke and Duchess of Cleveland, had four children, Henry, Frederick, Anne, and Mary. They were only a few years younger than Smart and became playmates, with Anne and Henry "pairing off" with Christopher and his sister Margaret respectively.[13] Although nothing resulted from the match, Anne has been traditionally described as being his "first love".[14] During his time with the Vane family, Smart dedicated many poems to Henrietta, the Duchess of Cleveland.[15] It was his closeness with the Vane family along with his skill for learning that encouraged Henrietta to allow him a pension of 40 pounds yearly, continued by her husband after her death in 1742.[11] This allowed Smart to attend Pembroke College, Cambridge.[16]

College edit

 
Christopher Smart's Pembroke portrait showing a letter sent from Alexander Pope

Smart was admitted to Pembroke College on 20 October 1739 as a sizar under Leonard Addison.[17][18] Although it is unclear why he chose Pembroke College, Addison was named in Peter Smart's trust deed (1729).[19] As a sizar, he occasionally had to wait on the "Fellows' table" and perform other menial tasks.[20] On 12 July 1740, he was awarded the "Dr. Watt's Foundation scholarship", which granted him six pounds a year until he gained a Bachelor of Arts degree.[21] In addition to this income, he was also granted four pounds a year for scholarship.[22] Although he was successful academically, he began to run up debt in order to pay for his extravagant lifestyle while at the college.[21]

During his time at Pembroke, Smart borrowed numerous books spanning the fields of literature, religion, and science.[23] These works helped when he wrote the three "Tripos Verse" at the end of each year.[24] These poems were written in Latin and they, along with his other Latin poems like his translation of Alexander Pope's Ode on St. Cecilia's Day, led to him being awarded the Craven scholarship for classics on 10 June 1742, which paid £25 a year for 14 years.[25] These scholarships, combined with his becoming a fellow in 1743, justified Smart calling himself "Scholar of the University".[26]

In 1743, Smart published his translation of Pope's Ode on St. Cecilia's Day as Carmen Cl. Alexandri Pope in S. Caeciliam Latine Redditum and paid for the publication himself.[27] With this translation, he wanted to win Pope's favor and translate Pope's Essay on Man, but Pope rejected the idea and, after a lettered response and a possible meeting between the two, Smart translated Pope's An Essay on Criticism (De Arte Critica) instead.[27] The initial letter sent from Pope recommending the future translation was prized by Smart.[28] In response to this letter and his budding relationship with Pope, the Pembroke Fellows honoured him with a portrait showing him holding the letter from Pope and allowed him to write a poem in celebration of Jubilee of Pembroke's 400th year in 1744.[28][29]

In October 1745, Smart was elected Praelector of Philosophy, which paid one pound a year, and made one of three Keepers of the Common Chest.[30] The next year, on 11 February 1746, he became a Master of Arts and was later elected on 10 October 1746, to Praelector of Philosophy, Praelector of Rhetoric, and Keeper of the Common Chest.[31] However, he had run up more debt of over twice his annual income, and he was not re-elected in 1747 to the Praelectorship and was denied his control over the Common Chest accounts.[32] However, he was made a "Preacher before the Mayor of Cambridge" at the college under the title "Concionatori Coram Praetore oppidano", and his modest living during this year allowed him to regain Praelectorship in Philosophy along with being made a catechist, which suggests that he was ordained in the Anglican church.[33]

In 1746, Smart became tutor to John Hussey Delaval, but this was abruptly cancelled because Delaval was removed from Pembroke after a variation of broken rules and mischief.[34] After recovering from this, Smart returned to studying. In April 1747, a comedy he wrote just months before, A Trip to Cambridge, or The Grateful Fair, was performed in Pembroke College Hall, with many parts, including female roles, played by Smart himself.[35] The prologue was printed in The Cambridge Journal Weekly Flying-Post, which claimed that the play received "Universal Applause".[36]

During his final years at Pembroke, Smart was writing and publishing many poems.[37] On 9 January 1748, there were three proposals for "A Collection of Original Poems, By Christopher Smart, M.A., Fellow of Pembroke Hall, in the University of Cambridge" that would include "The Hop Garden", "The Judgment of Midas, a Masque", his odes, his translations into Latin, and some original Latin poems.[38] Thomas Gray, on 17 March 1747, referred to this work as Smart's "Collection of Odes".[38] This collection was not printed in 1748 but was delayed until 1752, and was re-titled Poems on Several Occasions.[38]

Between 1740 and 1746, he was introduced to Harriot Pratt, and he began to write poetry about her.[39] By 1749, he was in love with her and wrote to his friend Charles Burney (father of Fanny Burney), "I am situated within a mile of my Harriote & Love has robd Friendship of her just dues ... There was a great musical crash at Cambridge, which was greatly admired, but I was not there, being much better pleased with hearing my Harriote on her spinnet & organ at her ancient mansion", suggesting that he was living permanently in Market Downham, London.[40] Although he wrote many poems dedicated to Harriot, his poem "The Lass with the Golden Locks" (1752) claims that he was done with both Harriot, Polly, and other women.[41] The "lass with the golden locks" who replaced Smart's previous fancies was Anna Maria Carnan.[42] Anna would be Smart's future wife and she was the stepdaughter of John Newbery, Smart's future publisher.[43]

Influence edit

While Smart was prolific in his own right, he was influenced by many of his contemporaries, as well as those that came before him. His primary influences being Alexander Pope, Virgil and Horace.[44] Pope's influence can especially be seen in Smart's poem The Hilliad, a play on Pope's poem The Dunciad.

Smart also left his mark on writers after him. In his book Poor Kit Smart, Christopher Devlin writes of Smart's influence "Robert Browning, however, D. G. Rossetti and Sir Francis Palgrave proclaimed aloud that this madman's Song to David was along the masterpieces of the English language."[44]

London edit

Although Smart seemed to turn his life around at Pembroke, he slowly abandoned the college for London. During 1749, he listed himself on Pembroke's "Liber Absentiae" and would occasionally return to Pembroke throughout 1749 and 1750.[45] Because of his relationship with those at Pembroke, he was allowed to keep his name in the college's records, which allowed him to participate and be charged as a member of the college.[45] By 1750 he was living near St. James's Park and was busy familiarising himself with Grub Street.[46] It was this year that Smart developed a business relationship with John Newbery.[47] He worked for Newbery and married his stepdaughter in 1752.[48] It is unknown how Smart and Newbery met, but Smart's daughter claimed Charles Burney introduced the two.[49] Newbery was looking for a contributory to his The Midwife and The Student magazines, and it is possible that Smart's winning of Cambridge's "Seatonian Prize" on 25 March 1750 brought his poetic abilities to Newbery's attention.[49]

The "Seatonian Prize" was a contest for one English poem each year on the topic of "the Perfections or Attributes of the Supreme Being" and the prize would be the "Rent of the [Kislingbury, Northamptonshire] estate"[49] It was established by the will of Thomas Seaton, an "Anglican divine and hymn writer".[50] Smart wrote in the "poetical essay" tradition using Miltonic blank verse.[51] In 1750, the poem he won the prize with was On the Eternity of the Supreme Being.[49] The prize was only worth 17 pounds each year before 7 pounds were deducted for the publication of the poem.[52] However, after the publication of the poem, Smart became a regular contributor in The Student.[53]

The Student, before Smart's work, was a serious magazine that included a few poems and critical essays.[53] However, once he joined and began writing under many pseudonyms, the magazine became filled with satire, parody, and humorous essays and poems.[53] Along with him composing 15 of the essays and the majority of the poems published in the two volumes of the magazine, he decided to append three of The Inspector, a "humorous news report", to the second of the volumes.[54] These reports included many "puff pieces" promoting Smart's works along with various stories written by his friends and associates, including the famous writers/poets Henry Fielding, Samuel Johnson, William Collins, and Tobias Smollett.[54] However, this was not the only important publication produced by him during this time.

During his time in London, Smart's work included Mother Midnight's Oratory, a series of "wild tavern entertainments" to which Smart acted as writer and performer.[55]

The Midwife edit

 
Title page of The Midwife

The Midwife, first published on 16 October 1751 and lasting until April 1753, was produced primarily by Smart while he worked on The Student.[56] This magazine was popular enough to be published in four editions.[57] To hide his identity for practical and humorous reasons, he adopted the persona of a midwife, also known as a "Mrs. Midwife" in slang, and called this persona "Mrs. Mary Midnight".[56]

When his poem "Night Piece" was attacked by William Kenrick in Kapelion, or Poetical Ordinary, possibly out of a prearranged publicity stunt, Smart used The Midwife in December 1750, to attack back at Kenrick and promised an Old Woman's Dunciad to be written against the other poet.[58] However, Kenrick beat Smart to the use of the title and printed his own in January 1751.[58] This feud lasted as attacks published in a few issues of The Midwife, but it soon died out when Smart focused his attention to writing a prologue and epilogue for a production of Othello and using the magazine to promote it.[59]

His attention slowly shifted away from The Midwife when he wrote for, and won, the "Seatonian Prize" for his On the Immensity of the Supreme Being and when he began working with Newbery's children's magazine, The Lilliputian Magazine.[60] However, Smart returned to this character full force when he established The Old Woman's Oratory; or Henley in Petticoats in December 1751.[61] The Oratory included Smart playing as Mrs. Midnight, various songs and dances, animal acts, and "miscellany" acts.[62] The Oratory was successful, and was completely redone on 21 January 1752.[63] However, not everyone enjoyed the show, and Horace Walpole described the performance as "the lowest buffoonery in the world even to me who am used to my uncle Horace."[64] Late in 1752, Smart finished and published a collection of his works as Poems on Several Occasions, which resulted in the end of the Oratory and The Midwife.[65]

Later career edit

 
Illustration of The Hop-Garden

In 1752, Christopher Smart was slowly dragged into a large "paper war" that involved many of London's writers.[66] After the publication of Poems on Several Occasions, including The Hop-Garden, in June 1752, John Hill launched a major attack upon Smart's poetry.[67] Smart responded with his mock-epic The Hilliad.[68] Before the release of Smart's poem, Hill was engaged in a large literary battle between various members of Grub Street's and London's writing community, especially Henry Fielding.[69] This battle may have been for publicity only and lasted over many months before Smart involved himself.[70] However, even with such a late entry, his Hilliad was the "loudest broadside" of the war.[71]

Smart was incurring numerous debts, and started publishing as much as possible during this time to support his family. He is said to have married Anna-Maria Carnan around 1752 or 1753, although the exact date is unknown; they initially kept their marriage a secret so Smart could continue to get money from his Cambridge fellowship, which ended shortly thereafter.[44] By 1754, the pair already had two daughters, Marianne (3 May 1753) and Elizabeth Anne (27 October 1754).[72] As a married man, he could no longer remain enrolled at Pembroke and collect his scholarship money when his marriage and children were made apparent to the heads of the college.[72] Newbery allowed Smart, along with his wife and their children, to live at Canonbury House, Islington.[43] Although Newbery had a strong reputation for charity, he was determined to have complete control over his writers.[73] It is likely that such an attitude combined with monetary problems led to a rift forming between the two by 1753.[74]

Between 1753 and 1755, Smart published or republished at least 79 works.[75] However, even if he received money from each of these publications, they were unable to provide enough of an income to support a family, especially to his standard of living.[76] While he was producing a poem each year for the Seatonian Prize, this amounted to very little of his writing; he was forced into a life of "hack work", which was described by his contemporary, Arthur Murphy, as "a bookseller is his only friend, but for that bookseller, however liberal, he must toil and drudge."[77] In December 1755, he finished The Works of Horace, Translated Literally into English Prose, a translation of Horace, which was widely used but brought him little profit.[78]

He signed a 99-year contract in November 1755 to produce a weekly paper entitled The Universal Visitor or Monthly Memorialist for Thomas Gardner and Edmund Allen.[79] However, the strain of publishing caused Smart to have a seizure, and he was unable to keep up with the publishing of the paper.[80] Allen was a friend of Samuel Johnson, and it was Samuel Johnson, along with many other friends of Smart, who contributed to the magazine in order to help Smart keep up with his contract.[80] In March 1756, Newbery published, without Smart's authority, his final "Seatonian Prize" poem, On the Goodness of the Supreme Being, and later, on 5 June, he published, again without Smart's authority, his Hymn to the Supreme Being, a poem which thanked God for recovery from an illness of some kind, possibly a "disturbed mental state".[81] The Hymn to the Supreme Being marks the time in Smart's life after the mysterious "fit" was resolved and the beginning of his obsession with religion and his praying "without ceasing".[82]

Asylum confinement edit

 
A caricature of Christopher Smart in Tommy Tagg's book published by John Newbery

A "Commission of Lunacy" was taken out against Smart, and he was admitted to St Luke's Hospital for Lunatics on 6 May 1757 as a "Curable Patient".[83] It is possible that Smart was confined by Newbery over old debts and a poor relationship between the two; Newbery had previously mocked Smart and his immorality in his A Collection of Pretty Poems for the Amusement of Children six Foot High.[84] Regardless of the exact reasons, there is evidence suggesting that Newbery's admittance of Smart into the mental asylum was not based on "madness".[85] However, there is also evidence that an incident of some kind took place in St. James's Park in which Smart started to pray loudly in public until he had "routed all the company" (Jubilate Agno B89).[85]

It is not known what exactly happened during his confinement, but Smart did work on two of his most famous poems, Jubilate Agno and A Song to David.[86] What is known is that he may have been in a private madhouse before St Luke's and that he was later moved from St Luke's to Mr. Potter's asylum until his release.[87] At St Luke's, he transitioned from being "curable" to "incurable", and was moved to Mr. Potter's asylum for monetary reasons.[88] During this time, Anna left and took the children with her to Ireland.[89] His isolation led him into writing religious poetry, although he abandoned the traditional genres of the 18th century that marked his earlier poetry when he wrote Jubilate Agno.[90] Although it is debated as to whether his turning inward to examine himself in his poetry represents an evangelical type of Christianity, his poetry during his isolation does show a desire for "unmediated revelation".[91] There is an "inner light" that serves as a focal point for Smart and his poems written during this time, and that inner light connects him to the Christian God.[92]

Smart was left alone, except for his cat Jeoffry and the occasional gawker.[93] It is very possible that he felt "homeless" during this time and surely felt that he was in a "limbo … between public and private space".[94] In London, only a few of his works were still being published.[95] However, not everyone viewed Smart's "madness" as problematic, and Johnson defended him, sometimes seriously and sometimes comically, many times.[96] A century later, Robert Browning remarked that A Song to David was great because Smart was mad, and that the poem allowed him to rank alongside of Milton and Keats.[97]

He was discharged from St. Luke's asylum uncured after one year. He was thought to be confined elsewhere for the following seven years, during which time he wrote Jubilate Agno.[48] Elizabeth, his daughter, claimed: "He grew better, and some misjudging friends who misconstrued Mr Newbery's great kindness in placing him under necessary & salutary restriction which might possibly have eventually wrought a cure, invited him to dinner and he returned to his confinement no more."[98] Although this may be a misstatement of the events, Smart did leave the asylum on 30 January 1763.[99]

Final years edit

A Song to David was printed on 6 April 1763 along with a proposal for a new translation of the Psalms.[100] It is said that Smart composed the poem during his second period of confinement to an asylum during an episode of religious mania[101] The poem was received harshly, which was possibly just thinly veiled personal attacks over Smart being freed from the asylum just weeks before.[102] However, Kenrick, Smart's former rival, praised the poem in one of his own printed on 25 May 1763.[103] Also, John Lockman followed on 21 June 1763, with his own poem in praise of Smart's and Samuel Boyce followed this on 15 July 1763 with another.[104] Along with this support, Smart responded to his critics at the Critical Review; in regards to Smart's response, the Critical Review claimed that they would "say no more of Mr. Smart".[105]

After A Song to David, he tried to publish a collection of his Psalms translations, and Newbery sought to ruin him by hiring James Merrick to produce his own translations.[106] Newbery then hired Smart's new publisher, James Fletcher, which in turn forced Smart to find a new publisher, delaying the printing of his Psalms.[107] Finally, on 12 August 1765, he printed A Translation of the Psalms of David, which included Hymns and Spiritual Songs and a second edition of A Song to David.[108] This work was criticised by Tobias Smollett who was working with Newbery at the time, and Newbery's edition by Merrick was constantly compared with Smart's.[109] However, modern criticism has received Smart's version in a more favourable light.[110] While working on this project, he was also working on a translation of the Phaedrus and a verse translation of Horace.[111] His verse Horace was published in July 1767 including a preface in which he attacked Newbery, but the attack was in vain because Newbery died soon after.[112]

On 20 April 1770, Smart was arrested for debt.[113] On 11 January 1771, he was tried by Lord Mansfield, the gentleman who originally introduced Smart to Alexander Pope, and he was soon recommended to the King's Bench Prison.[114] Although he was in prison, Charles Burney purchased the "Rules" (allowing him some freedom), and Smart's final weeks may have been peaceful although pathetic.[115] In his final letter, Smart begged for money from Rev. Mr. Jackson, saying: "Being upon recovery from a fit of illness, and having nothing to eat, I beg you to send me two or three shillings which (God willing) I will return, with many thanks, in two or three days."[116] On 20 May 1771, Smart died from either liver failure or pneumonia shortly after completing his final work, Hymns, for the Amusement of Children.[114]

Death edit

In response to his uncle's death, Christopher Hunter wrote, "I trust he is now at peace; it was not his portion here."[117] Fanny Burney, in her journal, wrote:

But now I speak of authors, let me pay the small tribute of regret and concern due to the memory of poor Mr. Smart, who died lately in the King's Bench Prison; a man by nature endowed with talents, wit, and vivacity, in an eminent degree; and whose unhappy loss of his sense was a public as well as private misfortune. I never knew him in his glory, but ever respected him in his decline, from the fine proofs he had left of his better day, and from the account I have heard of his youth from my father, who was then his intimate companion; as, of late years, he has been his most active and generous friend, having raised a kind of fund for his relief, though he was ever in distress. His intellects, so cruelly impaired, I doubt not, affected his whole conduct.[118]

On 22 May 1771, a jury of twelve fellow inmates of the King's Bench Prison declared that Smart "upon the Twentieth day of May Instant died a Natural Death within the Rules of the Prison."[118] He was buried on 26 May in St Paul's Covent Garden.[118]

Literary themes and styles edit

Christopher Smart received occasional mentions by critics and scholars after his death, especially by Robert Browning, but analysis and commentary on his works increased dramatically with the "discovery" of Jubilate Agno in 1939.[119] Many recent critics approach Smart from a religious perspective (Neil Curry, Harriet Guest, Clement Hawes, Chris Mounsey). However, some also favour a psychology/sexual analysis of his works (Lance Bertelsen, Clemet Hawes, Alan Liu).

Religion edit

 
A page from the "Let" side of the Jubilate Agno manuscript
 
A page from the "For" side of the Jubilate Agno manuscript

Although Smart wrote the "Seatonian Prize" poems early on, there is a contrast between the mimicked Miltonic blank verse and the intense exploration of religion found in his later works.[120] His first "Seatonian Prize" poem, On the Eternity of the Supreme Being is part of two traditional types of religious writing: "authoritative discourse of religious poetry" and "tentative and self-critical discourse of an apparently more personal devotion"[121] In connecting the two, he redefines "the role of the religious poet."[121] By establishing a debate between these two forms, Harriet Guest claims that Smart creates "a poetic space which allows the poet to make provisional, even questionable statements", which are important to his later works.[122] To Guest, Smart, in his religious poems, "is not concerned to offer instruction in Christian conduct."[123] Besides the greater theological debate, the poems are also the origins of Smart's belief that all of creation is constantly praising God, and that a poet must "give voice to mute nature's praise of God."[51]

Jubilate Agno reflects an abandonment of traditional poetic structures in order to explore complex religious thought.[124] His "Let" verses join creation together as he seemingly writes his own version of Biblical poetry.[125] Smart, in Jubilate Agno, plays on words and the meaning behind words in order to participate with the divine that exists within language.[126] Although the original manuscript divided the "Let" and "For" verses onto opposing sides of the manuscript, Karina Williams claims that "Dr W. H. Bond then discovered that some of the LET and FOR folios were numbered and dated concurrently, and that these chronologically parallel texts were further connected by verbal links."[127] This justified her combining the two sides to follow each other.[127] Using this as a model, Guest claims that the "For" verses explore religion with a "personal tone" and the "Let" are "unambiguous" and deal with public matters.[128] Jeanne Walker goes further than Guest and claims that the "Let " and "For" sections are united with the Hebrew tradition and "iterate both present and future simultaneously, that is, they redeem time."[129]

Words and language connect the poet to divine revelation, and God is the "great poet" who used language in order to create the universe.[130] Through words and language, Smart attempted to capture the creative power of those words.[131] By relying on the power of words, Smart is, according to Clement Hawes, subverting "Anglican control over religious functions and services."[132] In essence, Smart's approach to religion in Jubilate Agno is comparable to John Wesley's theological dictum and to the writings of John Perro and William Bowling.[133] He also creates his own natural philosophy and criticizes science, like that established by Isaac Newton, for their ignoring "the glory of Almighty God."[134]

To Smart, each piece of matter is alive because it is connected to God, and matter cannot be described in a cold manner that disconnects it from this reality.[135] However, Smart accomplished his new science by relying on Newtonian empiricism.[136] As part of his desire to bring back the divine language to poetry and science, he creates an "Ark of Salvation" in order to describe a prophetic and apocalyptic future which emphasises the importance of Christ and England.[137] Along with being prophetic, the poem itself is modelled after the canticles and follows the form of the Benedicite.[137] The Benedicite is not the only model however, and there is a strong link between Jubilate Agno and the psalm tradition.[138]

Smart's A Song to David is an attempt to bridge poetry written by humans and Biblical poetry.[139] The Biblical David plays an important role in this poem just as he played an important role in Jubilate Agno[140] However, David in Jubilate Agno is an image of the creative power of poetry whereas he becomes a fully realized model of the religious poet.[140] By focusing on David, Smart is able to tap into the "heavenly language."[141] Many critics have focused on the role of David as planner of Solomon's Temple and his possible role with the Freemasons.[142] However, the true life of the poem comes later when Christ is introduced as the major subject.[82] After Christ is introduced, Smart attempts to "reach to heaven" and the final passages, to Neil Curry, represent a "final rush for glory."[143]

According to Mounsey, A Song to David and Smart's Psalms is an attempt to "Christianize" the Old Testament through writing an 18th-century psalter.[144] However, the Psalms perform a secondary function: they allow Smart to relate to the suffering of David and to reinforce his own religious convictions by following his Biblical model.[145] As part of Smart's "Christianizing" of the Psalms, Jesus becomes a divine form of suffering, and Smart becomes further juxtaposed with his Biblical model as both praise God for Jesus's ultimate sacrifice and for the beauty of all creation.[145] The Hymns and Psalms form their own sort of liturgy and attempt to reform Anglican liturgy by emphasizing God's place in nature.[146]

Smart's Hymns are modelled after a tradition exemplified by Robert Nelson.[147] They are steeped in Anglican tradition and also emphasize English patriotism and England's divine favour.[148] The Hymns, according to Guest, "[express] a delight in creation that is largely absent from the work of other hymn-writers of the century, unless they are paraphrasing the words of David."[149] To Hawes, the Hymns exemplify an evangelical spirit that separates Smart from the traditional Anglican church.[150] Although he wrote his second set of hymns, Hymns for the Amusement of Children, for a younger audience, Smart cares more about emphasizing the need for children to be moral instead of "innocent".[151] These works have been seen as possibly too complicated for "amusement" because they employ ambiguities and complicated theological concepts.[152] In essence, the Hymns for the Amusement of Children is intended to teach children the specific virtues that make up the subject matter of the work.[153] Like the Hymns for the Amusement of Children, Smart's The Parables of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ were designed to teach morals.[154] However, these Parables alter the original Biblical parables in order to simplify them and help them "make sense"[155] As such, Todd Parker claims that the Parables, and the other religious works of Smart, are part of his final push for the "evangelization of London's reading public."[156]

Language edit

The language and commentary on language is of particular emphasis in Jubilate Agno. To Alan Jacobs, Smart's use of language represents his attempt to connect to the "Ur language", allowing Smart to connect to "the Word calling forth the world."[157] This is similar to David and Orpheus's ability as poets to create through their song.[140] In his constant emphasis on the force of poetry, Jubilate Agno takes on the qualities of the Ars Poetica tradition.[158] As such, Smart is attempting to develop a poetic language that will connect him to the "one true, eternal poem."[159] The poetic language that he creates is related to Adam's "onomathetic" tradition, or the idea that names hold significant weight in the universe and that Adam was able to join in with creation by naming objects.[160]

In Jubilate Agno, he describes his writing as creating "impressions".[161] To accomplish this task, he incorporated puns and onomatopoeia in order to emphasize the theological significance of his poetic language.[162] In addition to these techniques, he relied on repeated language and allusions to traditional works and to scripture for a source of authority in various works, especially in his Hymns.[163] Along with scriptural authority, he relies on prophetic rhetoric to gain his audience's sympathy.[164]

During the 18th century, there was a debate over poetic language and the translations of Smart, especially of Horace, positioned him as one who sought to redeem traditional forms and understanding of language.[165] However, some critics, like Alan Liu, believe that translations are effectively forced to compete against the original works, and that Smart's language, at least in his translations, must constantly seek to undermine the original authors, like Horace.[166] Not all critics agree with Liu, and those like Donald Davie believe that the Smart's translations cannot be compared to the original works, but are part of a system of Smart competing against the language of his contemporaries.[167] Thomas Keymer further verified this point about Smart's translations by revealing that the poet claims, in William Toldervy's The History of Two Orphans, "But what heaven-exciting harmony might we not expect from that exalted genius, who can produce such lines as these following!" in anticipation of replacing the previous flawed translations of the Psalms.[168]

Regardless of where he stood on the specific issue of translation Smart believed that there was an importance to language, which carried over to his constant revising of his poems to slowly correct them.[169] Many of Smart's poems served a dual purpose, and when put to music were altered to meet various standards.[170] By constantly revising, he ensured that his poems were always the "authentic" version.[171]

Gender edit

Smart's role as Mrs. Midnight along with his gendered comments in Jubilate Agno form the focal point for analysing his understanding of sexuality and gender. With Mrs. Midnight, Smart challenges the traditional social order found in 18th-century England.[172] However, some, like Lance Bertelsen, argue that the Mrs. Midnight persona reveals a split personality torn between masculine and feminine roles.[173] Fraser Easton say the existence of Mrs. Midnight proves that Smart identified a female connection to poetry and her character was used to defy popular 18th-century notions of who is able to attain knowledge.[174] This role allowed Smart to focus on "social and sexual dimensions" in his satire.[175] However, there is a potentially darker side to Mrs. Midnight, and she could represent his feelings that he was "emasculated by economic pressures."[176]

The image of "horns" in Jubilate Agno is commonly viewed as a sexual image.[177] Easton puts particular emphasis on the image of horns as a phallic image and contends that there are masculine and feminine horns throughout Smart's poem.[178] Hawes picks up this theme and goes on to claims that the poem shows "that [Smart] had been 'feminized' as a cuckold."[179] In response to this possible cuckolding, Jubilate Agno predicts a misogynistic future while simultaneously undermining this effort with his constant associations to female creation.[180]

Environmental edit

Smart had a reputation for being a "dedicated gardener".[181] His poem The Hop-Garden helped to further this reputation, and even during his stay in a mental asylum he convinced others of his bond with nature.[181] Johnson witnessed Smart's time in asylum and stated, "he has partly as much exercise as he used to have, for he digs in the garden."[182] Gardening, to Smart, was a way in which humans could interact with nature and actually "improve" on the natural landscape.[183]

However, Smart did not only write about gardens and vegetation, and his focus on his cat Jeoffry is widely known and his focus on nature connects him to those mistreated and neglected by 18th-century society.[184] The first fragment of Jubilate Agno is a poetic "Ark" that pairs humans with animals in order to purify all of creation.[137] The whole work relies on his extensive background in botany and his knowledge of taxonomy.[185] He actively participated in the 18th-century taxonomy systems established by Carl Linnaeus; however, Smart is mythologising his view of nature and creation when he adds information from Pliny the Elder into his work.[186]

By using this knowledge, Smart was able to give a "voice" to nature; he believed that nature, like his cat Jeoffry, is always praising God but needs a poet in order to bring out that voice.[51] As such, themes of animals and language are merged in Jubilate Agno, and Jeoffry is transformed into a manifestation of the Ars Poetica tradition.[187]

Freemasonry edit

Many critics have focused on the role of David as planner of Solomon's Temple and his possible role with the Freemasons.[142] Although it is not known for sure whether Smart was a Freemason or not, there is evidence suggesting that he was either part of the organization or had a strong knowledge of its belief system.[188] Based on personal admittance to contributing to A Defence of Freemasonry, contemporary verification of his participation in the volume and with Masonic meetings, there is enough to confirm "his participation in Masonic affairs."[189] Furthermore, there are accounts of Smart attending meetings at the Bell Tavern in Westminster.[189][190] The information available has led Marie Roberts to declare in her 1986 book British Poets and Secret Societies, "It has been universally accepted by scholars that Christopher Smart ... was a Freemason yet no record of his membership has been traced."[191] However, in the notes to Chris Mounsey's 2001 book Christopher Smart: Clown of God, Marie Roberts' 1986 book is referred to as "an account of Smart's work which accepts his association with the Freemasons," but in Mounsey's view, "Since neither Smart's name nor his pseudonyms appear in the records of the Freemasons, it is highly unlikely he was ever one of their number."[192]

Smart's involvement with Masonry can be traced through his poems, including Jubilate Agno and A Song to David, with his constant references to Masonic ideas and his praise of Freemasonry in general.[193] In Jubilate Agno, Smart declares "I am the Lord's builder and free and accepted MASON in CHRIST JESUS" (B 109). This declaration of being a "free and accepted MASON" has been interpreted to define his connection to speculative Masonry. The "in Christ Jesus" declaration places Smart within a Christian version of Masonry. He also declares himself to be "the Lord's builder" and this connects his life with the building of King Solomon's Temple, an important Masonic idea. In A Song to David, Smart returns to the building of Solomon's Temple and incorporates many of the Masonic images that he uses in Jubilate Agno.[194]

It was this detail that encouraged many critics to try to decode the "seven pillar" section of A Song of David along the lines of Masonic imagery.[142] The poem follows two traditional sets of motions common to Freemason writing that mimic the image of Jacob's Ladder: movement from earth to heaven and movement from heaven to earth.[195] This image further connects Freemason belief surrounding the relationship of David to Solomon's Temple.[196] While these images, and further images in A Song to David are related also to depictions of the Temple in Isaac Newton's Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended (1728), the John Bunyan's Solomon's Temple Spiritualiz'd (1688), and to the Geneva Bible, these works were relied on by the Freemasons.[197]

Based on this theory, the first pillar, the Greek alpha, represents the mason's compass and "God as the Architect of the Universe."[198] The second, the Greek gamma, represents the mason's square.[199] In addition, the square represents the "vault of heaven."[196] The third, the Greek eta, represents Jacob's ladder itself and is connected to the complete idea of seven pillars.[200] The fourth, the Greek theta, is either "the all-seeing eye or the point within a circle."[200] The fifth letter, the Greek iota, represents a pillar and the temple.[201] The sixth letter, the Greek sigma, is an incomplete hexagram, otherwise known as "the blazing star or hexalpha" to the Freemasons.[201] The last, the Greek omega, represents a lyre and David as a poet.[202]

Works edit

 
First page of Abimelech (1768)

Smart, throughout his career, published many known works. Although his works are far too many to list, a few of his most famous and important publications during his life include:

One of his most famous poems, Jubilate Agno, was not published until 1939, by William Force Stead.[119] In 1943, lines from this poem were set to music by Benjamin Britten with the translated title Rejoice in the Lamb.

He is also credited with the writing of A Defence of Freemasonry (1765), also known as A Defence of Freemasonry as practised in the regular lodges, both foreign and domestic, under the Constitution of the English Grand Master, in which is contained a refutation of Mr. Dermott's absurd and ridiculous account of Freemasonry, in his book entitled 'Ahiman Rezon' and the several queries therein reflecting on the regular Masons, briefly considered and answered, that response to Laurence Dermott's Ahiman Rezon.[189] Although there is no direct attribution on the text's title page, it was established as his work since its publication, and it includes a poem directly attributed to him.[189]

A two-volume edition of the Complete Poems of Christopher Smart was published in 1949 by Norman Callan, Professor of English at Queen Mary College, London (now University). There have been numerous reprints. Penguin published Selected Poems in 1990.

References edit

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  17. ^ "Smart, Christopher (SMRT739C)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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  101. ^ Smith 1927
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  108. ^ Poetical Works III p. xiii
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  116. ^ Dearnley 1969, p. 11
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  119. ^ a b Poetical Works I p. xxii
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  127. ^ a b Prose Works I p. xxii
  128. ^ Guest 1989, pp. 141–142
  129. ^ Walker 1980, p. 458
  130. ^ Curry 2005, p. 28
  131. ^ Hawes 1996, pp. 140–141
  132. ^ Hawes 1996, p. 152
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  134. ^ Guest 1989, p. 201
  135. ^ Guest 1989, p. 214
  136. ^ Mounsey 2001, p. 221
  137. ^ a b c Prose Works I p. xxv
  138. ^ Walker 1980, p. 450
  139. ^ Guest 1989, p. 246
  140. ^ a b c Hawes 1996, p. 167
  141. ^ Jacobs 1998, p. 189
  142. ^ a b c Curry 2005, p. 57
  143. ^ Curry 2005, p. 69
  144. ^ Mounsey 2001, p. 213
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  146. ^ Guest 1989, p. 251
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  151. ^ Curry 2005, p. 91
  152. ^ Booth 1999, p. 71
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  154. ^ Parker 1999, p. 88
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  157. ^ Jacobs 1998, p. 196
  158. ^ Ennis 2000, p. 8
  159. ^ Ennis 2000, p. 10
  160. ^ Costa 2002, p. 296
  161. ^ Liu 1985, p. 127
  162. ^ Costa 2002, p. 305
  163. ^ Walsh 1999, p. 40
  164. ^ Katz 1999, p. 54
  165. ^ Walsh 1998, p. 147
  166. ^ Liu 1985, p. 133
  167. ^ Davie 1990, p. 825
  168. ^ Keymer 2003, p. 57
  169. ^ Mahony 1983, p. 196
  170. ^ Mahony 1983, p. 200
  171. ^ Mahony 1983, p. 203
  172. ^ Bertelsen 1999, p. 364
  173. ^ Bertelsen 1999, p. 365
  174. ^ Easton 1998, p. 198
  175. ^ Easton 1998, p. 200
  176. ^ Hawes 1995, p. 9
  177. ^ Liu 1985, p. 121
  178. ^ Easton 1998, p. 234
  179. ^ Hawes 1995, p. 4
  180. ^ Hawes 1995, p. 16
  181. ^ a b Dearnley 1969, p. 46
  182. ^ Boswell's Life of Johnson
  183. ^ Dearnley 1969, p. 47
  184. ^ Bertelsen 1999, p. 375
  185. ^ Mounsey 2001, p. 226
  186. ^ Miller 1999, p. 109
  187. ^ Ennis 2000, p. 16
  188. ^ Rose 2005, p. 404
  189. ^ a b c d Sherbo 1967, p. 221
  190. ^ Lane, John Masonic Records, 1717–1886. London, 1886. p. 4, 23
  191. ^ Roberts 1986, p. 10
  192. ^ Mounsey 2001, p. 320
  193. ^ Roberts 1986, pp. 10–11
  194. ^ Roberts 1986, p. 11
  195. ^ Rose 2005, p. 405
  196. ^ a b Rose 2005, p. 407
  197. ^ Rose 2005, p. 409
  198. ^ Rose 2005, p. 406
  199. ^ Rose 2005, pp. 406–407
  200. ^ a b Rose 2005, p. 408
  201. ^ a b Rose 2005, p. 410
  202. ^ Rose 2005, p. 413

Sources edit

  • Bertelsen, Lance (1999). "'Neutral Nonsense, neither False nor True': Christopher Smart and the Paper War(s) of 1752–53.". In Hawes, Clement (ed.). Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment. New York: St. Martin's. 308 pp.
  • Booth, Mark W. (1999). "Syntax and Paradigm in Smart's Hymns for the Amusement of Children". In Hawes, Clement (ed.). Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment. New York: St. Martin's. pp. 67–81. 308 pp.
  • Costa, Dennis (October 2002). "Language in Smart's Jubilate Agno". Essays in Criticism: A Quarterly Journal of Literary Criticism. 52 (4): 295–313. doi:10.1093/eic/52.4.295.
  • Curry, Neil (2005). Christopher Smart. Devon: Northcote House Publishers. 128 pp.
  • Davie, Donald (October 1990). "Psalmody as Translation". The Modern Language Review. 85 (4): 817–828. doi:10.2307/3732640. JSTOR 3732640.
  • Devlin, Christopher (1961). Poor Kit Smart. Southern Illinois University Press. OCLC 608836.
  • Dearnley, Moira (1969). The Poetry of Christopher Smart. New York: Barnes & Noble. 332 pp.
  • Easton, Fraser (Fall–Winter 1998). "Christopher Smart's Cross-Dressing: Mimicry, Depropriation, and Jubilate Agno" (PDF). Genre: Forms of Discourse and Culture. 31 (3–4): 193–243.
  • Ennis, Daniel J. (2000). "Christopher Smart's Cat Revisited: Jubilate Agno and the Ars Poetica Tradition". South Atlantic Review. 65 (1): 1–23. doi:10.2307/3201922. JSTOR 3201922.
  • Guest, Harriet (1989). A Form of Sound Words: The Religious Poetry of Christopher Smart. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 312 pp.
  • Hawes, Clement, ed. (1999). Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment. New York: St. Martin's Press. 308 pp.
  • Hawes, Clement (1996). Mania and Literary Style: The Rhetoric of Enthusiasm from the Ranters to Christopher Smart. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. xii, 241 pp.
  • Hawes, Clement (Summer 1995). "Smart's Bawdy Politic: Masculinity and the Second Age of Horn in Jubilate Agno". Criticism: A Quarterly for Literature and the Arts. 37 (3): 413–442. JSTOR 23116608.
  • Hunter, Christopher (1791). The Poems of the late Christopher Smart. Reading.
  • Jacobs, Alan (Spring–Summer 1998). "Diagnosing Christopher's Case: Smart's Readers and the Authority of Pentecost". Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature. 50 (3–4): 183–204.
  • Katz, Edward Joseph (1999). "Action and Speaking Are One': A Logological Reading of Smart's Prophetic Rhetoric". In Hawes, Clement (ed.). Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 47–66. 308 pp.
  • Keymer, Thomas (February 2003). "William Toldervy and the Origins of Smart's A Translation of the Psalms of David". Review of English Studies: The Leading Journal of English Literature and the English Language. 54 (213): 52–66. doi:10.1093/res/54.213.52.
  • Liu, Alan (Autumn 1985 – Winter 1986). "Christopher Smart's 'Uncommunicated Letters': Translation and the Ethics of Literary History". Boundary 2. 14 (1–2): 115–146. doi:10.2307/303516. JSTOR 303516.
  • Mahony, Robert; Rizzo, Betty (1984). Christopher Smart : an annotated bibliography, 1743–1983. New York: Garland Pub.
  • Mahony, Robert (1983). "Revision and Correction in the Poems of Christopher Smart". Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. 77 (2): 196–206. doi:10.1086/pbsa.77.2.24302620. S2CID 163528691.
  • Miller, Eric (1999). "Taxonomy and Confession in Christopher Smart and Jean-Jacques Rousseau". In Hawes, Clement (ed.). Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment. New York: St. Martin's. pp. 99–118. 308 pp.
  • Mounsey, Chris (2001). Christopher Smart: Clown of God. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press. 342 pp.
  • Parker, Todd C. (1999). "Smart's Enlightened Parables and the Problem of Genre". In Hawes, Clement (ed.). Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment. New York: St. Martin's. pp. 83–97. 308 pp.
  • Price, Martin (1973). The restoration and the eighteenth century. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-501614-9. OCLC 2341106.
  • Rizzo, Betty (November 1984). "Christopher Smart: A Letter and Lines from a Prisoner of the King's Bench". Review of English Studies: A Quarterly Journal of English Literature and the English Language. 35 (140): 510–516. doi:10.1093/res/XXXV.140.510. JSTOR 516379.
  • Roberts, Marie (1986). British Poets and Secret Societies. Totowa: Barnes and Noble.
  • Rose, John (Fall 2005). "All the Crumbling Edifices Must Come Down: Decoding Christopher Smart's Song to David". Philological Quarterly. 84 (4): 403–424.
  • Sherbo, Arthur (1967). Christopher Smart: Scholar of the University. Michigan State University Press. 303 pp.
  • Smart, Christopher (1980). Williamson, Karina (ed.). The Poetical Works of Christopher Smart, I: Jubilate Agno. Oxford: Clarendon. 143 pp.
  • Smart, Christopher (1987). Walsh, Marcus (ed.). The Poetical Works of Christopher Smart, III: A Translation of the Psalms of David. Oxford: Clarendon. 440 pp.
  • Smart, Christopher (1991). Rizzo, Betty; Mahony, Robert (eds.). The Annotated Letters of Christopher Smart. Southern Illinois University Press.
  • Smith, Robin Flower (1927). "Smart's "Song to David"". The British Museum Quarterly. 2 (2): 38–39. doi:10.2307/4420831. JSTOR 4420831.
  • Walker, Jeanne Murray (Summer 1980). "'Jubilate Agno' as Psalm". Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900. 20 (3): 449–459. doi:10.2307/450290. JSTOR 450290.
  • Walsh, Marcus (1999). "'Community of Mind': Christopher Smart and the Poetics of Allusion". In Hawes, Clement (ed.). Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment. New York: St. Martin's. pp. 29–46. 308 pp.
  • Walsh, Marcus (1998). "Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue: Christopher Smart and the Lexis of the Particular". Yearbook of English Studies. 28: 144–162. doi:10.2307/3508762. JSTOR 3508762.

External links edit

  • Christopher Smart at the Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)
  • Works by Christopher Smart at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Christopher Smart at Internet Archive
  • Works by Christopher Smart at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Autograph manuscript of Jubilate Agno at Houghton Library
  • Audio: Robert Pinsky reads "Jubilate Agno" by Christopher Smart (via )
  • Jubilate Agno, Smart's Love of his Cat
  • Jubilate Agno HTML edition by Ray Davis.
  • "Biographical note on Poetry Foundation"
  • Hutchinson, John (1892). "Christopher Smart" . Men of Kent and Kentishmen (Subscription ed.). Canterbury: Cross & Jackman. p. 126.

christopher, smart, australian, cricketer, chris, smart, april, 1722, 1771, english, poet, major, contributor, popular, magazines, midwife, student, friend, influential, cultural, icons, like, samuel, johnson, henry, fielding, smart, high, church, anglican, wi. For the Australian cricketer see Chris Smart Christopher Smart 11 April 1722 20 May 1771 was an English poet He was a major contributor to two popular magazines The Midwife and The Student and a friend to influential cultural icons like Samuel Johnson and Henry Fielding Smart a high church Anglican was widely known throughout London 1 Christopher SmartBorn 1722 04 11 11 April 1722Shipbourne EnglandDied20 May 1771 1771 05 20 aged 49 King s Bench Prison LondonPen nameMrs Mary Midnight Ebenezer PentweazleOccupationActor Editor Playwright Poet TranslatorLiterary movementThe AugustansSpouseAnna Maria Carnan m 1752 wbr Children3 including ElizabethSmart was infamous as the pseudonymous midwife Mrs Mary Midnight and for widespread accounts of his father in law John Newbery locking him away in a mental asylum for many years over Smart s supposed religious mania Even after Smart s eventual release a negative reputation continued to pursue him as he was known for incurring more debt than he could repay this ultimately led to his confinement in debtors prison until his death His two most widely known works are A Song to David and Jubilate Agno which are believed to have been written during his confinement in St Luke s Asylum although this is still debated by scholars as there is no record of when they were written It is even more unclear when the works were written as Jubilate Agno was not published until 1939 when it was found in a library archive and A Song to David received mixed reviews until the 19th century To his contemporaries Smart was known mainly for his many contributions in the journals The Midwife and The Student along with his famous Seaton Prize poems and his mock epic The Hilliad Although he is recognized primarily as a religious poet his poetry includes various other themes such as his theories on nature and his promotion of English nationalism Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 College 1 3 Influence 1 4 London 1 5 The Midwife 1 6 Later career 1 7 Asylum confinement 1 8 Final years 1 9 Death 2 Literary themes and styles 2 1 Religion 2 2 Language 2 3 Gender 2 4 Environmental 2 5 Freemasonry 3 Works 4 References 4 1 Sources 5 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Christopher Smart was born in Shipbourne in Kent England on the Fairlawne estate of William Viscount Vane younger son of Lord Barnard of Barnard Castle 2 He was according to his nephew of a delicate constitution having been born earlier than the natural period 3 He was baptized in Wrotham parish on 11 May 1722 His father was Peter Smart steward 4 or bailiff 2 of Fairlawne His mother Winifred nee Griffiths was from Radnorshire Wales 5 Before giving birth to Christopher Winifred had two daughters Margaret and Mary Anne 5 During his younger years Fairlawne was the residence of Christopher Vane 1st Baron Barnard and Lady Barnard who bequeathed 200 to Smart 6 He supposedly received this sum due to his father s closeness to the Vane family Smart being named after Christopher Vane and the young boy being considered the pride of Fairlawn 6 7 In 1726 three years after Christopher Vane died Peter Smart purchased Hall Place in East Barming which included a mansion house fields orchards gardens and woodland a property that was influential throughout Smart s later life 6 From the age of four until eleven he spent much time around the farms but did not participate leading to speculation that he had had asthma attacks 8 However not all scholars agree that he was a sickly youth 9 The only written record of events during his childhood comes from his writing of a short poem at the age of four in which he challenges a rival to the affections of a twelve year old girl 9 While at Hall Place Smart was sent to the local Maidstone Grammar School where he was taught by Charles Walwyn a scholar from Eton College who had received an MA from King s College Cambridge in 1696 10 It was here that Smart received an intensive education in Latin and Greek 10 He did not complete his education at Maidstone however as his father died on 3 February 1733 and his mother took Smart and his siblings to live near relatives in Durham after selling off a large portion of the estate to pay off Peter Smart s debts 11 Smart then attended Durham School where the Reverend Mr Richard Dongworth was headmaster it is not known whether he lived with his uncle John Smart or with a school master 12 He spent vacations at Raby Castle which was owned by Henry Vane 1st Earl of Darlington the grandson of Christopher Vane 13 Henry Vane and his wife Grace sister to William and Henrietta Fitzroy the Duke and Duchess of Cleveland had four children Henry Frederick Anne and Mary They were only a few years younger than Smart and became playmates with Anne and Henry pairing off with Christopher and his sister Margaret respectively 13 Although nothing resulted from the match Anne has been traditionally described as being his first love 14 During his time with the Vane family Smart dedicated many poems to Henrietta the Duchess of Cleveland 15 It was his closeness with the Vane family along with his skill for learning that encouraged Henrietta to allow him a pension of 40 pounds yearly continued by her husband after her death in 1742 11 This allowed Smart to attend Pembroke College Cambridge 16 College edit nbsp Christopher Smart s Pembroke portrait showing a letter sent from Alexander PopeSmart was admitted to Pembroke College on 20 October 1739 as a sizar under Leonard Addison 17 18 Although it is unclear why he chose Pembroke College Addison was named in Peter Smart s trust deed 1729 19 As a sizar he occasionally had to wait on the Fellows table and perform other menial tasks 20 On 12 July 1740 he was awarded the Dr Watt s Foundation scholarship which granted him six pounds a year until he gained a Bachelor of Arts degree 21 In addition to this income he was also granted four pounds a year for scholarship 22 Although he was successful academically he began to run up debt in order to pay for his extravagant lifestyle while at the college 21 During his time at Pembroke Smart borrowed numerous books spanning the fields of literature religion and science 23 These works helped when he wrote the three Tripos Verse at the end of each year 24 These poems were written in Latin and they along with his other Latin poems like his translation of Alexander Pope s Ode on St Cecilia s Day led to him being awarded the Craven scholarship for classics on 10 June 1742 which paid 25 a year for 14 years 25 These scholarships combined with his becoming a fellow in 1743 justified Smart calling himself Scholar of the University 26 In 1743 Smart published his translation of Pope s Ode on St Cecilia s Day as Carmen Cl Alexandri Pope in S Caeciliam Latine Redditum and paid for the publication himself 27 With this translation he wanted to win Pope s favor and translate Pope s Essay on Man but Pope rejected the idea and after a lettered response and a possible meeting between the two Smart translated Pope s An Essay on Criticism De Arte Critica instead 27 The initial letter sent from Pope recommending the future translation was prized by Smart 28 In response to this letter and his budding relationship with Pope the Pembroke Fellows honoured him with a portrait showing him holding the letter from Pope and allowed him to write a poem in celebration of Jubilee of Pembroke s 400th year in 1744 28 29 In October 1745 Smart was elected Praelector of Philosophy which paid one pound a year and made one of three Keepers of the Common Chest 30 The next year on 11 February 1746 he became a Master of Arts and was later elected on 10 October 1746 to Praelector of Philosophy Praelector of Rhetoric and Keeper of the Common Chest 31 However he had run up more debt of over twice his annual income and he was not re elected in 1747 to the Praelectorship and was denied his control over the Common Chest accounts 32 However he was made a Preacher before the Mayor of Cambridge at the college under the title Concionatori Coram Praetore oppidano and his modest living during this year allowed him to regain Praelectorship in Philosophy along with being made a catechist which suggests that he was ordained in the Anglican church 33 In 1746 Smart became tutor to John Hussey Delaval but this was abruptly cancelled because Delaval was removed from Pembroke after a variation of broken rules and mischief 34 After recovering from this Smart returned to studying In April 1747 a comedy he wrote just months before A Trip to Cambridge or The Grateful Fair was performed in Pembroke College Hall with many parts including female roles played by Smart himself 35 The prologue was printed in The Cambridge Journal Weekly Flying Post which claimed that the play received Universal Applause 36 During his final years at Pembroke Smart was writing and publishing many poems 37 On 9 January 1748 there were three proposals for A Collection of Original Poems By Christopher Smart M A Fellow of Pembroke Hall in the University of Cambridge that would include The Hop Garden The Judgment of Midas a Masque his odes his translations into Latin and some original Latin poems 38 Thomas Gray on 17 March 1747 referred to this work as Smart s Collection of Odes 38 This collection was not printed in 1748 but was delayed until 1752 and was re titled Poems on Several Occasions 38 Between 1740 and 1746 he was introduced to Harriot Pratt and he began to write poetry about her 39 By 1749 he was in love with her and wrote to his friend Charles Burney father of Fanny Burney I am situated within a mile of my Harriote amp Love has robd Friendship of her just dues There was a great musical crash at Cambridge which was greatly admired but I was not there being much better pleased with hearing my Harriote on her spinnet amp organ at her ancient mansion suggesting that he was living permanently in Market Downham London 40 Although he wrote many poems dedicated to Harriot his poem The Lass with the Golden Locks 1752 claims that he was done with both Harriot Polly and other women 41 The lass with the golden locks who replaced Smart s previous fancies was Anna Maria Carnan 42 Anna would be Smart s future wife and she was the stepdaughter of John Newbery Smart s future publisher 43 Influence edit While Smart was prolific in his own right he was influenced by many of his contemporaries as well as those that came before him His primary influences being Alexander Pope Virgil and Horace 44 Pope s influence can especially be seen in Smart s poem The Hilliad a play on Pope s poem The Dunciad Smart also left his mark on writers after him In his book Poor Kit Smart Christopher Devlin writes of Smart s influence Robert Browning however D G Rossetti and Sir Francis Palgrave proclaimed aloud that this madman s Song to David was along the masterpieces of the English language 44 London edit Although Smart seemed to turn his life around at Pembroke he slowly abandoned the college for London During 1749 he listed himself on Pembroke s Liber Absentiae and would occasionally return to Pembroke throughout 1749 and 1750 45 Because of his relationship with those at Pembroke he was allowed to keep his name in the college s records which allowed him to participate and be charged as a member of the college 45 By 1750 he was living near St James s Park and was busy familiarising himself with Grub Street 46 It was this year that Smart developed a business relationship with John Newbery 47 He worked for Newbery and married his stepdaughter in 1752 48 It is unknown how Smart and Newbery met but Smart s daughter claimed Charles Burney introduced the two 49 Newbery was looking for a contributory to his The Midwife and The Student magazines and it is possible that Smart s winning of Cambridge s Seatonian Prize on 25 March 1750 brought his poetic abilities to Newbery s attention 49 The Seatonian Prize was a contest for one English poem each year on the topic of the Perfections or Attributes of the Supreme Being and the prize would be the Rent of the Kislingbury Northamptonshire estate 49 It was established by the will of Thomas Seaton an Anglican divine and hymn writer 50 Smart wrote in the poetical essay tradition using Miltonic blank verse 51 In 1750 the poem he won the prize with was On the Eternity of the Supreme Being 49 The prize was only worth 17 pounds each year before 7 pounds were deducted for the publication of the poem 52 However after the publication of the poem Smart became a regular contributor in The Student 53 The Student before Smart s work was a serious magazine that included a few poems and critical essays 53 However once he joined and began writing under many pseudonyms the magazine became filled with satire parody and humorous essays and poems 53 Along with him composing 15 of the essays and the majority of the poems published in the two volumes of the magazine he decided to append three of The Inspector a humorous news report to the second of the volumes 54 These reports included many puff pieces promoting Smart s works along with various stories written by his friends and associates including the famous writers poets Henry Fielding Samuel Johnson William Collins and Tobias Smollett 54 However this was not the only important publication produced by him during this time During his time in London Smart s work included Mother Midnight s Oratory a series of wild tavern entertainments to which Smart acted as writer and performer 55 The Midwife edit nbsp Title page of The MidwifeThe Midwife first published on 16 October 1751 and lasting until April 1753 was produced primarily by Smart while he worked on The Student 56 This magazine was popular enough to be published in four editions 57 To hide his identity for practical and humorous reasons he adopted the persona of a midwife also known as a Mrs Midwife in slang and called this persona Mrs Mary Midnight 56 When his poem Night Piece was attacked by William Kenrick in Kapelion or Poetical Ordinary possibly out of a prearranged publicity stunt Smart used The Midwife in December 1750 to attack back at Kenrick and promised an Old Woman s Dunciad to be written against the other poet 58 However Kenrick beat Smart to the use of the title and printed his own in January 1751 58 This feud lasted as attacks published in a few issues of The Midwife but it soon died out when Smart focused his attention to writing a prologue and epilogue for a production of Othello and using the magazine to promote it 59 His attention slowly shifted away from The Midwife when he wrote for and won the Seatonian Prize for his On the Immensity of the Supreme Being and when he began working with Newbery s children s magazine The Lilliputian Magazine 60 However Smart returned to this character full force when he established The Old Woman s Oratory or Henley in Petticoats in December 1751 61 The Oratory included Smart playing as Mrs Midnight various songs and dances animal acts and miscellany acts 62 The Oratory was successful and was completely redone on 21 January 1752 63 However not everyone enjoyed the show and Horace Walpole described the performance as the lowest buffoonery in the world even to me who am used to my uncle Horace 64 Late in 1752 Smart finished and published a collection of his works as Poems on Several Occasions which resulted in the end of the Oratory and The Midwife 65 Later career edit nbsp Illustration of The Hop GardenIn 1752 Christopher Smart was slowly dragged into a large paper war that involved many of London s writers 66 After the publication of Poems on Several Occasions including The Hop Garden in June 1752 John Hill launched a major attack upon Smart s poetry 67 Smart responded with his mock epic The Hilliad 68 Before the release of Smart s poem Hill was engaged in a large literary battle between various members of Grub Street s and London s writing community especially Henry Fielding 69 This battle may have been for publicity only and lasted over many months before Smart involved himself 70 However even with such a late entry his Hilliad was the loudest broadside of the war 71 Smart was incurring numerous debts and started publishing as much as possible during this time to support his family He is said to have married Anna Maria Carnan around 1752 or 1753 although the exact date is unknown they initially kept their marriage a secret so Smart could continue to get money from his Cambridge fellowship which ended shortly thereafter 44 By 1754 the pair already had two daughters Marianne 3 May 1753 and Elizabeth Anne 27 October 1754 72 As a married man he could no longer remain enrolled at Pembroke and collect his scholarship money when his marriage and children were made apparent to the heads of the college 72 Newbery allowed Smart along with his wife and their children to live at Canonbury House Islington 43 Although Newbery had a strong reputation for charity he was determined to have complete control over his writers 73 It is likely that such an attitude combined with monetary problems led to a rift forming between the two by 1753 74 Between 1753 and 1755 Smart published or republished at least 79 works 75 However even if he received money from each of these publications they were unable to provide enough of an income to support a family especially to his standard of living 76 While he was producing a poem each year for the Seatonian Prize this amounted to very little of his writing he was forced into a life of hack work which was described by his contemporary Arthur Murphy as a bookseller is his only friend but for that bookseller however liberal he must toil and drudge 77 In December 1755 he finished The Works of Horace Translated Literally into English Prose a translation of Horace which was widely used but brought him little profit 78 He signed a 99 year contract in November 1755 to produce a weekly paper entitled The Universal Visitor or Monthly Memorialist for Thomas Gardner and Edmund Allen 79 However the strain of publishing caused Smart to have a seizure and he was unable to keep up with the publishing of the paper 80 Allen was a friend of Samuel Johnson and it was Samuel Johnson along with many other friends of Smart who contributed to the magazine in order to help Smart keep up with his contract 80 In March 1756 Newbery published without Smart s authority his final Seatonian Prize poem On the Goodness of the Supreme Being and later on 5 June he published again without Smart s authority his Hymn to the Supreme Being a poem which thanked God for recovery from an illness of some kind possibly a disturbed mental state 81 The Hymn to the Supreme Being marks the time in Smart s life after the mysterious fit was resolved and the beginning of his obsession with religion and his praying without ceasing 82 Asylum confinement edit Main article Christopher Smart s asylum confinement nbsp A caricature of Christopher Smart in Tommy Tagg s book published by John NewberyA Commission of Lunacy was taken out against Smart and he was admitted to St Luke s Hospital for Lunatics on 6 May 1757 as a Curable Patient 83 It is possible that Smart was confined by Newbery over old debts and a poor relationship between the two Newbery had previously mocked Smart and his immorality in his A Collection of Pretty Poems for the Amusement of Children six Foot High 84 Regardless of the exact reasons there is evidence suggesting that Newbery s admittance of Smart into the mental asylum was not based on madness 85 However there is also evidence that an incident of some kind took place in St James s Park in which Smart started to pray loudly in public until he had routed all the company Jubilate Agno B89 85 It is not known what exactly happened during his confinement but Smart did work on two of his most famous poems Jubilate Agno and A Song to David 86 What is known is that he may have been in a private madhouse before St Luke s and that he was later moved from St Luke s to Mr Potter s asylum until his release 87 At St Luke s he transitioned from being curable to incurable and was moved to Mr Potter s asylum for monetary reasons 88 During this time Anna left and took the children with her to Ireland 89 His isolation led him into writing religious poetry although he abandoned the traditional genres of the 18th century that marked his earlier poetry when he wrote Jubilate Agno 90 Although it is debated as to whether his turning inward to examine himself in his poetry represents an evangelical type of Christianity his poetry during his isolation does show a desire for unmediated revelation 91 There is an inner light that serves as a focal point for Smart and his poems written during this time and that inner light connects him to the Christian God 92 Smart was left alone except for his cat Jeoffry and the occasional gawker 93 It is very possible that he felt homeless during this time and surely felt that he was in a limbo between public and private space 94 In London only a few of his works were still being published 95 However not everyone viewed Smart s madness as problematic and Johnson defended him sometimes seriously and sometimes comically many times 96 A century later Robert Browning remarked that A Song to David was great because Smart was mad and that the poem allowed him to rank alongside of Milton and Keats 97 He was discharged from St Luke s asylum uncured after one year He was thought to be confined elsewhere for the following seven years during which time he wrote Jubilate Agno 48 Elizabeth his daughter claimed He grew better and some misjudging friends who misconstrued Mr Newbery s great kindness in placing him under necessary amp salutary restriction which might possibly have eventually wrought a cure invited him to dinner and he returned to his confinement no more 98 Although this may be a misstatement of the events Smart did leave the asylum on 30 January 1763 99 Final years edit A Song to David was printed on 6 April 1763 along with a proposal for a new translation of the Psalms 100 It is said that Smart composed the poem during his second period of confinement to an asylum during an episode of religious mania 101 The poem was received harshly which was possibly just thinly veiled personal attacks over Smart being freed from the asylum just weeks before 102 However Kenrick Smart s former rival praised the poem in one of his own printed on 25 May 1763 103 Also John Lockman followed on 21 June 1763 with his own poem in praise of Smart s and Samuel Boyce followed this on 15 July 1763 with another 104 Along with this support Smart responded to his critics at the Critical Review in regards to Smart s response the Critical Review claimed that they would say no more of Mr Smart 105 After A Song to David he tried to publish a collection of his Psalms translations and Newbery sought to ruin him by hiring James Merrick to produce his own translations 106 Newbery then hired Smart s new publisher James Fletcher which in turn forced Smart to find a new publisher delaying the printing of his Psalms 107 Finally on 12 August 1765 he printed A Translation of the Psalms of David which included Hymns and Spiritual Songs and a second edition of A Song to David 108 This work was criticised by Tobias Smollett who was working with Newbery at the time and Newbery s edition by Merrick was constantly compared with Smart s 109 However modern criticism has received Smart s version in a more favourable light 110 While working on this project he was also working on a translation of the Phaedrus and a verse translation of Horace 111 His verse Horace was published in July 1767 including a preface in which he attacked Newbery but the attack was in vain because Newbery died soon after 112 On 20 April 1770 Smart was arrested for debt 113 On 11 January 1771 he was tried by Lord Mansfield the gentleman who originally introduced Smart to Alexander Pope and he was soon recommended to the King s Bench Prison 114 Although he was in prison Charles Burney purchased the Rules allowing him some freedom and Smart s final weeks may have been peaceful although pathetic 115 In his final letter Smart begged for money from Rev Mr Jackson saying Being upon recovery from a fit of illness and having nothing to eat I beg you to send me two or three shillings which God willing I will return with many thanks in two or three days 116 On 20 May 1771 Smart died from either liver failure or pneumonia shortly after completing his final work Hymns for the Amusement of Children 114 Death edit In response to his uncle s death Christopher Hunter wrote I trust he is now at peace it was not his portion here 117 Fanny Burney in her journal wrote But now I speak of authors let me pay the small tribute of regret and concern due to the memory of poor Mr Smart who died lately in the King s Bench Prison a man by nature endowed with talents wit and vivacity in an eminent degree and whose unhappy loss of his sense was a public as well as private misfortune I never knew him in his glory but ever respected him in his decline from the fine proofs he had left of his better day and from the account I have heard of his youth from my father who was then his intimate companion as of late years he has been his most active and generous friend having raised a kind of fund for his relief though he was ever in distress His intellects so cruelly impaired I doubt not affected his whole conduct 118 On 22 May 1771 a jury of twelve fellow inmates of the King s Bench Prison declared that Smart upon the Twentieth day of May Instant died a Natural Death within the Rules of the Prison 118 He was buried on 26 May in St Paul s Covent Garden 118 Literary themes and styles editChristopher Smart received occasional mentions by critics and scholars after his death especially by Robert Browning but analysis and commentary on his works increased dramatically with the discovery of Jubilate Agno in 1939 119 Many recent critics approach Smart from a religious perspective Neil Curry Harriet Guest Clement Hawes Chris Mounsey However some also favour a psychology sexual analysis of his works Lance Bertelsen Clemet Hawes Alan Liu Religion edit nbsp A page from the Let side of the Jubilate Agno manuscript nbsp A page from the For side of the Jubilate Agno manuscriptAlthough Smart wrote the Seatonian Prize poems early on there is a contrast between the mimicked Miltonic blank verse and the intense exploration of religion found in his later works 120 His first Seatonian Prize poem On the Eternity of the Supreme Being is part of two traditional types of religious writing authoritative discourse of religious poetry and tentative and self critical discourse of an apparently more personal devotion 121 In connecting the two he redefines the role of the religious poet 121 By establishing a debate between these two forms Harriet Guest claims that Smart creates a poetic space which allows the poet to make provisional even questionable statements which are important to his later works 122 To Guest Smart in his religious poems is not concerned to offer instruction in Christian conduct 123 Besides the greater theological debate the poems are also the origins of Smart s belief that all of creation is constantly praising God and that a poet must give voice to mute nature s praise of God 51 Jubilate Agno reflects an abandonment of traditional poetic structures in order to explore complex religious thought 124 His Let verses join creation together as he seemingly writes his own version of Biblical poetry 125 Smart in Jubilate Agno plays on words and the meaning behind words in order to participate with the divine that exists within language 126 Although the original manuscript divided the Let and For verses onto opposing sides of the manuscript Karina Williams claims that Dr W H Bond then discovered that some of the LET and FOR folios were numbered and dated concurrently and that these chronologically parallel texts were further connected by verbal links 127 This justified her combining the two sides to follow each other 127 Using this as a model Guest claims that the For verses explore religion with a personal tone and the Let are unambiguous and deal with public matters 128 Jeanne Walker goes further than Guest and claims that the Let and For sections are united with the Hebrew tradition and iterate both present and future simultaneously that is they redeem time 129 Words and language connect the poet to divine revelation and God is the great poet who used language in order to create the universe 130 Through words and language Smart attempted to capture the creative power of those words 131 By relying on the power of words Smart is according to Clement Hawes subverting Anglican control over religious functions and services 132 In essence Smart s approach to religion in Jubilate Agno is comparable to John Wesley s theological dictum and to the writings of John Perro and William Bowling 133 He also creates his own natural philosophy and criticizes science like that established by Isaac Newton for their ignoring the glory of Almighty God 134 To Smart each piece of matter is alive because it is connected to God and matter cannot be described in a cold manner that disconnects it from this reality 135 However Smart accomplished his new science by relying on Newtonian empiricism 136 As part of his desire to bring back the divine language to poetry and science he creates an Ark of Salvation in order to describe a prophetic and apocalyptic future which emphasises the importance of Christ and England 137 Along with being prophetic the poem itself is modelled after the canticles and follows the form of the Benedicite 137 The Benedicite is not the only model however and there is a strong link between Jubilate Agno and the psalm tradition 138 Smart s A Song to David is an attempt to bridge poetry written by humans and Biblical poetry 139 The Biblical David plays an important role in this poem just as he played an important role in Jubilate Agno 140 However David in Jubilate Agno is an image of the creative power of poetry whereas he becomes a fully realized model of the religious poet 140 By focusing on David Smart is able to tap into the heavenly language 141 Many critics have focused on the role of David as planner of Solomon s Temple and his possible role with the Freemasons 142 However the true life of the poem comes later when Christ is introduced as the major subject 82 After Christ is introduced Smart attempts to reach to heaven and the final passages to Neil Curry represent a final rush for glory 143 According to Mounsey A Song to David and Smart s Psalms is an attempt to Christianize the Old Testament through writing an 18th century psalter 144 However the Psalms perform a secondary function they allow Smart to relate to the suffering of David and to reinforce his own religious convictions by following his Biblical model 145 As part of Smart s Christianizing of the Psalms Jesus becomes a divine form of suffering and Smart becomes further juxtaposed with his Biblical model as both praise God for Jesus s ultimate sacrifice and for the beauty of all creation 145 The Hymns and Psalms form their own sort of liturgy and attempt to reform Anglican liturgy by emphasizing God s place in nature 146 Smart s Hymns are modelled after a tradition exemplified by Robert Nelson 147 They are steeped in Anglican tradition and also emphasize English patriotism and England s divine favour 148 The Hymns according to Guest express a delight in creation that is largely absent from the work of other hymn writers of the century unless they are paraphrasing the words of David 149 To Hawes the Hymns exemplify an evangelical spirit that separates Smart from the traditional Anglican church 150 Although he wrote his second set of hymns Hymns for the Amusement of Children for a younger audience Smart cares more about emphasizing the need for children to be moral instead of innocent 151 These works have been seen as possibly too complicated for amusement because they employ ambiguities and complicated theological concepts 152 In essence the Hymns for the Amusement of Children is intended to teach children the specific virtues that make up the subject matter of the work 153 Like the Hymns for the Amusement of Children Smart s The Parables of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ were designed to teach morals 154 However these Parables alter the original Biblical parables in order to simplify them and help them make sense 155 As such Todd Parker claims that the Parables and the other religious works of Smart are part of his final push for the evangelization of London s reading public 156 Language edit The language and commentary on language is of particular emphasis in Jubilate Agno To Alan Jacobs Smart s use of language represents his attempt to connect to the Ur language allowing Smart to connect to the Word calling forth the world 157 This is similar to David and Orpheus s ability as poets to create through their song 140 In his constant emphasis on the force of poetry Jubilate Agno takes on the qualities of the Ars Poetica tradition 158 As such Smart is attempting to develop a poetic language that will connect him to the one true eternal poem 159 The poetic language that he creates is related to Adam s onomathetic tradition or the idea that names hold significant weight in the universe and that Adam was able to join in with creation by naming objects 160 In Jubilate Agno he describes his writing as creating impressions 161 To accomplish this task he incorporated puns and onomatopoeia in order to emphasize the theological significance of his poetic language 162 In addition to these techniques he relied on repeated language and allusions to traditional works and to scripture for a source of authority in various works especially in his Hymns 163 Along with scriptural authority he relies on prophetic rhetoric to gain his audience s sympathy 164 During the 18th century there was a debate over poetic language and the translations of Smart especially of Horace positioned him as one who sought to redeem traditional forms and understanding of language 165 However some critics like Alan Liu believe that translations are effectively forced to compete against the original works and that Smart s language at least in his translations must constantly seek to undermine the original authors like Horace 166 Not all critics agree with Liu and those like Donald Davie believe that the Smart s translations cannot be compared to the original works but are part of a system of Smart competing against the language of his contemporaries 167 Thomas Keymer further verified this point about Smart s translations by revealing that the poet claims in William Toldervy s The History of Two Orphans But what heaven exciting harmony might we not expect from that exalted genius who can produce such lines as these following in anticipation of replacing the previous flawed translations of the Psalms 168 Regardless of where he stood on the specific issue of translation Smart believed that there was an importance to language which carried over to his constant revising of his poems to slowly correct them 169 Many of Smart s poems served a dual purpose and when put to music were altered to meet various standards 170 By constantly revising he ensured that his poems were always the authentic version 171 Gender edit Smart s role as Mrs Midnight along with his gendered comments in Jubilate Agno form the focal point for analysing his understanding of sexuality and gender With Mrs Midnight Smart challenges the traditional social order found in 18th century England 172 However some like Lance Bertelsen argue that the Mrs Midnight persona reveals a split personality torn between masculine and feminine roles 173 Fraser Easton say the existence of Mrs Midnight proves that Smart identified a female connection to poetry and her character was used to defy popular 18th century notions of who is able to attain knowledge 174 This role allowed Smart to focus on social and sexual dimensions in his satire 175 However there is a potentially darker side to Mrs Midnight and she could represent his feelings that he was emasculated by economic pressures 176 The image of horns in Jubilate Agno is commonly viewed as a sexual image 177 Easton puts particular emphasis on the image of horns as a phallic image and contends that there are masculine and feminine horns throughout Smart s poem 178 Hawes picks up this theme and goes on to claims that the poem shows that Smart had been feminized as a cuckold 179 In response to this possible cuckolding Jubilate Agno predicts a misogynistic future while simultaneously undermining this effort with his constant associations to female creation 180 Environmental edit Smart had a reputation for being a dedicated gardener 181 His poem The Hop Garden helped to further this reputation and even during his stay in a mental asylum he convinced others of his bond with nature 181 Johnson witnessed Smart s time in asylum and stated he has partly as much exercise as he used to have for he digs in the garden 182 Gardening to Smart was a way in which humans could interact with nature and actually improve on the natural landscape 183 However Smart did not only write about gardens and vegetation and his focus on his cat Jeoffry is widely known and his focus on nature connects him to those mistreated and neglected by 18th century society 184 The first fragment of Jubilate Agno is a poetic Ark that pairs humans with animals in order to purify all of creation 137 The whole work relies on his extensive background in botany and his knowledge of taxonomy 185 He actively participated in the 18th century taxonomy systems established by Carl Linnaeus however Smart is mythologising his view of nature and creation when he adds information from Pliny the Elder into his work 186 By using this knowledge Smart was able to give a voice to nature he believed that nature like his cat Jeoffry is always praising God but needs a poet in order to bring out that voice 51 As such themes of animals and language are merged in Jubilate Agno and Jeoffry is transformed into a manifestation of the Ars Poetica tradition 187 Freemasonry edit Many critics have focused on the role of David as planner of Solomon s Temple and his possible role with the Freemasons 142 Although it is not known for sure whether Smart was a Freemason or not there is evidence suggesting that he was either part of the organization or had a strong knowledge of its belief system 188 Based on personal admittance to contributing to A Defence of Freemasonry contemporary verification of his participation in the volume and with Masonic meetings there is enough to confirm his participation in Masonic affairs 189 Furthermore there are accounts of Smart attending meetings at the Bell Tavern in Westminster 189 190 The information available has led Marie Roberts to declare in her 1986 book British Poets and Secret Societies It has been universally accepted by scholars that Christopher Smart was a Freemason yet no record of his membership has been traced 191 However in the notes to Chris Mounsey s 2001 book Christopher Smart Clown of God Marie Roberts 1986 book is referred to as an account of Smart s work which accepts his association with the Freemasons but in Mounsey s view Since neither Smart s name nor his pseudonyms appear in the records of the Freemasons it is highly unlikely he was ever one of their number 192 Smart s involvement with Masonry can be traced through his poems including Jubilate Agno and A Song to David with his constant references to Masonic ideas and his praise of Freemasonry in general 193 In Jubilate Agno Smart declares I am the Lord s builder and free and accepted MASON in CHRIST JESUS B 109 This declaration of being a free and accepted MASON has been interpreted to define his connection to speculative Masonry The in Christ Jesus declaration places Smart within a Christian version of Masonry He also declares himself to be the Lord s builder and this connects his life with the building of King Solomon s Temple an important Masonic idea In A Song to David Smart returns to the building of Solomon s Temple and incorporates many of the Masonic images that he uses in Jubilate Agno 194 It was this detail that encouraged many critics to try to decode the seven pillar section of A Song of David along the lines of Masonic imagery 142 The poem follows two traditional sets of motions common to Freemason writing that mimic the image of Jacob s Ladder movement from earth to heaven and movement from heaven to earth 195 This image further connects Freemason belief surrounding the relationship of David to Solomon s Temple 196 While these images and further images in A Song to David are related also to depictions of the Temple in Isaac Newton s Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended 1728 the John Bunyan s Solomon s Temple Spiritualiz d 1688 and to the Geneva Bible these works were relied on by the Freemasons 197 Based on this theory the first pillar the Greek alpha represents the mason s compass and God as the Architect of the Universe 198 The second the Greek gamma represents the mason s square 199 In addition the square represents the vault of heaven 196 The third the Greek eta represents Jacob s ladder itself and is connected to the complete idea of seven pillars 200 The fourth the Greek theta is either the all seeing eye or the point within a circle 200 The fifth letter the Greek iota represents a pillar and the temple 201 The sixth letter the Greek sigma is an incomplete hexagram otherwise known as the blazing star or hexalpha to the Freemasons 201 The last the Greek omega represents a lyre and David as a poet 202 Works edit nbsp First page of Abimelech 1768 Smart throughout his career published many known works Although his works are far too many to list a few of his most famous and important publications during his life include A Song to David Poems on Several Occasions including the Hop Garden The Hilliad The Hop Garden Hymns and Spiritual Songs Epistle to Mrs Tyler Psalm 58 Psalm 114 On A Lady Throwing Snow Balls At Her Lover For I Will Consider My Cat Jeoffry On My Wife s Birth Day The Sweets Of Evening Where s The Poker The Pig The Long Nosed Fair Hymns for the Amusement of Children The Oratorios Hannah and Abimelech The Parables of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ A Poetical Translation of the Fables of Phaedrus The Seatonian Prize poems A Translation of the Psalms of David The Works of Horace Prose and VerseOne of his most famous poems Jubilate Agno was not published until 1939 by William Force Stead 119 In 1943 lines from this poem were set to music by Benjamin Britten with the translated title Rejoice in the Lamb He is also credited with the writing of A Defence of Freemasonry 1765 also known as A Defence of Freemasonry as practised in the regular lodges both foreign and domestic under the Constitution of the English Grand Master in which is contained a refutation of Mr Dermott s absurd and ridiculous account of Freemasonry in his book entitled Ahiman Rezon and the several queries therein reflecting on the regular Masons briefly considered and answered that response to Laurence Dermott s Ahiman Rezon 189 Although there is no direct attribution on the text s title page it was established as his work since its publication and it includes a poem directly attributed to him 189 A two volume edition of the Complete Poems of Christopher Smart was published in 1949 by Norman Callan Professor of English at Queen Mary College London now University There have been numerous reprints Penguin published Selected Poems in 1990 References edit Mounsey 2001 p 281 a b Mounsey 2001 p 22 Hunter 1791 p vi Sherbo 1967 p 4 a b Sherbo 1967 p 5 a b c Sherbo 1967 p 6 Mounsey 2001 p 27 Mounsey 2001 p 29 a b Sherbo 1967 p 12 a b Sherbo 1967 p 9 a b Sherbo 1967 p 19 Sherbo 1967 p 13 a b Sherbo 1967 p 16 Sherbo 1967 p 17 Mounsey 2001 p 40 Sherbo 1967 p 22 Smart Christopher SMRT739C A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Sherbo 1967 p 24 Mounsey 2001 p 43 Sherbo 1967 p 25 a b Sherbo 1967 p 26 Mounsey 2001 p 48 Mounsey 2001 p 44 Mounsey 2001 p 47 Mounsey 2001 p 49 Sherbo 1967 p 31 a b Mounsey 2001 p 50 a b Sherbo 1967 p 33 Mounsey 2001 p 51 Sherbo 1967 p 36 Sherbo 1967 p 42 Sherbo 1967 pp 44 45 Sherbo 1967 p 45 Mounsey 2001 pp 54 55 Sherbo 1967 pp 53 54 Sherbo 1967 p 54 Sherbo 1967 p 50 a b c Sherbo 1967 p 51 Sherbo 1967 p 46 Sherbo 1967 p 48 Sherbo 1967 p 49 Poetical Works iv p xxiii a b Sherbo 1967 p 87 a b c Devlin 1961 a b Sherbo 1967 p 57 Sherbo 1967 pp 58 59 Sherbo 1967 p 59 a b Price 1973 a b c d Sherbo 1967 p 62 Curry 2005 p 7 a b c Curry 2005 p 8 Sherbo 1967 p 67 a b c Sherbo 1967 p 68 a b Sherbo 1967 p 69 Christopher Smart Intro The Allen Ginsberg Project 16 April 2018 Retrieved 12 December 2019 a b Sherbo 1967 p 70 Mounsey 2001 p 99 a b Sherbo 1967 p 72 Sherbo 1967 p 73 Sherbo 1967 pp 74 75 Sherbo 1967 p 75 Mounsey 2001 p 119 Mounsey 2001 p 128 Sherbo 1967 p 80 Mounsey 2001 pp 130 131 Mounsey 2001 pp 131 132 Mounsey 2001 p 131 Mounsey 2001 p 134 Bertelsen 1999 p 135 Bertelsen 1999 p 143 Bertelsen 1999 p 144 a b Sherbo 1967 p 100 Mounsey 2001 p 149 Mounsey 2001 p 157 Mahony amp Rizzo 1984 Mounsey 2001 p 159 Mounsey 2001 p 167 Sherbo 1967 p 102 Sherbo 1967 p 104 a b Sherbo 1967 p 105 Curry 2005 p 5 a b Curry 2005 pp 6 7 Sherbo 1967 p 112 Mounsey 2001 p 181 a b Mounsey 2001 p 200 Mounsey 2001 p 202 Mounsey 2001 p 203 Mounsey 2001 pp 203 204 Sherbo 1967 p 135 Guest 1989 p 123 Hawes 1996 p 140 Hawes 1996 p 141 Sherbo 1967 p 130 Hawes 1996 p 155 Mounsey 2001 p 238 Keymer 2003 p 190 Jacobs 1998 p 193 Mounsey 2001 p 239 Mounsey 2001 p 240 Mounsey 2001 pp 247 248 Smith 1927 Mounsey 2001 p 249 Mounsey 2001 p 250 Mounsey 2001 p 252 Mounsey 2001 p 257 Mounsey 2001 p 260 Mounsey 2001 p 261 Poetical Works III p xiii Mounsey 2001 p 267 Davie 1990 p 828 Mounsey 2001 p 268 Mounsey 2001 p 269 Mounsey 2001 p 271 a b Mounsey 2001 p 272 Rizzo 1984 p 515 Dearnley 1969 p 11 Curry 2005 p 103 a b c Sherbo 1967 p 265 a b Poetical Works I p xxii Guest 1989 p 70 a b Guest 1989 p 71 Guest 1989 p 83 Guest 1989 p 94 Guest 1989 p 132 Guest 1989 p 140 Guest 1989 p 167 a b Prose Works I p xxii Guest 1989 pp 141 142 Walker 1980 p 458 Curry 2005 p 28 Hawes 1996 pp 140 141 Hawes 1996 p 152 Hawes 1996 p 163 Guest 1989 p 201 Guest 1989 p 214 Mounsey 2001 p 221 a b c Prose Works I p xxv Walker 1980 p 450 Guest 1989 p 246 a b c Hawes 1996 p 167 Jacobs 1998 p 189 a b c Curry 2005 p 57 Curry 2005 p 69 Mounsey 2001 p 213 a b Curry 2005 p 44 Guest 1989 p 251 Curry 2005 p 74 Curry 2005 p 76 Guest 1989 p 252 Hawes 1996 p 134 Curry 2005 p 91 Booth 1999 p 71 Curry 2005 p 93 Parker 1999 p 88 Parker 1999 p 95 Parker 1999 p 84 Jacobs 1998 p 196 Ennis 2000 p 8 Ennis 2000 p 10 Costa 2002 p 296 Liu 1985 p 127 Costa 2002 p 305 Walsh 1999 p 40 Katz 1999 p 54 Walsh 1998 p 147 Liu 1985 p 133 Davie 1990 p 825 Keymer 2003 p 57 Mahony 1983 p 196 Mahony 1983 p 200 Mahony 1983 p 203 Bertelsen 1999 p 364 Bertelsen 1999 p 365 Easton 1998 p 198 Easton 1998 p 200 Hawes 1995 p 9 Liu 1985 p 121 Easton 1998 p 234 Hawes 1995 p 4 Hawes 1995 p 16 a b Dearnley 1969 p 46 Boswell s Life of Johnson Dearnley 1969 p 47 Bertelsen 1999 p 375 Mounsey 2001 p 226 Miller 1999 p 109 Ennis 2000 p 16 Rose 2005 p 404 a b c d Sherbo 1967 p 221 Lane John Masonic Records 1717 1886 London 1886 p 4 23 Roberts 1986 p 10 Mounsey 2001 p 320 Roberts 1986 pp 10 11 Roberts 1986 p 11 Rose 2005 p 405 a b Rose 2005 p 407 Rose 2005 p 409 Rose 2005 p 406 Rose 2005 pp 406 407 a b Rose 2005 p 408 a b Rose 2005 p 410 Rose 2005 p 413 Sources edit Bertelsen Lance 1999 Neutral Nonsense neither False nor True Christopher Smart and the Paper War s of 1752 53 In Hawes Clement ed Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment New York St Martin s 308 pp Booth Mark W 1999 Syntax and Paradigm in Smart s Hymns for the Amusement of Children In Hawes Clement ed Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment New York St Martin s pp 67 81 308 pp Costa Dennis October 2002 Language in Smart s Jubilate Agno Essays in Criticism A Quarterly Journal of Literary Criticism 52 4 295 313 doi 10 1093 eic 52 4 295 Curry Neil 2005 Christopher Smart Devon Northcote House Publishers 128 pp Davie Donald October 1990 Psalmody as Translation The Modern Language Review 85 4 817 828 doi 10 2307 3732640 JSTOR 3732640 Devlin Christopher 1961 Poor Kit Smart Southern Illinois University Press OCLC 608836 Dearnley Moira 1969 The Poetry of Christopher Smart New York Barnes amp Noble 332 pp Easton Fraser Fall Winter 1998 Christopher Smart s Cross Dressing Mimicry Depropriation and Jubilate Agno PDF Genre Forms of Discourse and Culture 31 3 4 193 243 Ennis Daniel J 2000 Christopher Smart s Cat Revisited Jubilate Agno and the Ars Poetica Tradition South Atlantic Review 65 1 1 23 doi 10 2307 3201922 JSTOR 3201922 Guest Harriet 1989 A Form of Sound Words The Religious Poetry of Christopher Smart Oxford Oxford University Press 312 pp Hawes Clement ed 1999 Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment New York St Martin s Press 308 pp Hawes Clement 1996 Mania and Literary Style The Rhetoric of Enthusiasm from the Ranters to Christopher Smart Cambridge Cambridge University Press xii 241 pp Hawes Clement Summer 1995 Smart s Bawdy Politic Masculinity and the Second Age of Horn in Jubilate Agno Criticism A Quarterly for Literature and the Arts 37 3 413 442 JSTOR 23116608 Hunter Christopher 1791 The Poems of the late Christopher Smart Reading Jacobs Alan Spring Summer 1998 Diagnosing Christopher s Case Smart s Readers and the Authority of Pentecost Renascence Essays on Values in Literature 50 3 4 183 204 Katz Edward Joseph 1999 Action and Speaking Are One A Logological Reading of Smart s Prophetic Rhetoric In Hawes Clement ed Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment New York St Martin s Press pp 47 66 308 pp Keymer Thomas February 2003 William Toldervy and the Origins of Smart s A Translation of the Psalms of David Review of English Studies The Leading Journal of English Literature and the English Language 54 213 52 66 doi 10 1093 res 54 213 52 Liu Alan Autumn 1985 Winter 1986 Christopher Smart s Uncommunicated Letters Translation and the Ethics of Literary History Boundary 2 14 1 2 115 146 doi 10 2307 303516 JSTOR 303516 Mahony Robert Rizzo Betty 1984 Christopher Smart an annotated bibliography 1743 1983 New York Garland Pub Mahony Robert 1983 Revision and Correction in the Poems of Christopher Smart Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 77 2 196 206 doi 10 1086 pbsa 77 2 24302620 S2CID 163528691 Miller Eric 1999 Taxonomy and Confession in Christopher Smart and Jean Jacques Rousseau In Hawes Clement ed Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment New York St Martin s pp 99 118 308 pp Mounsey Chris 2001 Christopher Smart Clown of God Lewisburg Bucknell University Press 342 pp Parker Todd C 1999 Smart s Enlightened Parables and the Problem of Genre In Hawes Clement ed Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment New York St Martin s pp 83 97 308 pp Price Martin 1973 The restoration and the eighteenth century New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 501614 9 OCLC 2341106 Rizzo Betty November 1984 Christopher Smart A Letter and Lines from a Prisoner of the King s Bench Review of English Studies A Quarterly Journal of English Literature and the English Language 35 140 510 516 doi 10 1093 res XXXV 140 510 JSTOR 516379 Roberts Marie 1986 British Poets and Secret Societies Totowa Barnes and Noble Rose John Fall 2005 All the Crumbling Edifices Must Come Down Decoding Christopher Smart s Song to David Philological Quarterly 84 4 403 424 Sherbo Arthur 1967 Christopher Smart Scholar of the University Michigan State University Press 303 pp Smart Christopher 1980 Williamson Karina ed The Poetical Works of Christopher Smart I Jubilate Agno Oxford Clarendon 143 pp Smart Christopher 1987 Walsh Marcus ed The Poetical Works of Christopher Smart III A Translation of the Psalms of David Oxford Clarendon 440 pp Smart Christopher 1991 Rizzo Betty Mahony Robert eds The Annotated Letters of Christopher Smart Southern Illinois University Press Smith Robin Flower 1927 Smart s Song to David The British Museum Quarterly 2 2 38 39 doi 10 2307 4420831 JSTOR 4420831 Walker Jeanne Murray Summer 1980 Jubilate Agno as Psalm Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 20 3 449 459 doi 10 2307 450290 JSTOR 450290 Walsh Marcus 1999 Community of Mind Christopher Smart and the Poetics of Allusion In Hawes Clement ed Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment New York St Martin s pp 29 46 308 pp Walsh Marcus 1998 Something Old Something New Something Borrowed Something Blue Christopher Smart and the Lexis of the Particular Yearbook of English Studies 28 144 162 doi 10 2307 3508762 JSTOR 3508762 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Christopher Smart nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Christopher Smart nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Christopher Smart Christopher Smart at the Eighteenth Century Poetry Archive ECPA Works by Christopher Smart at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Christopher Smart at Internet Archive Works by Christopher Smart at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Autograph manuscript of Jubilate Agno at Houghton Library Audio Robert Pinsky reads Jubilate Agno by Christopher Smart via poemsoutloud net Jubilate Agno Smart s Love of his Cat Song to David Jubilate Agno HTML edition by Ray Davis Biographical note on Poetry Foundation Hutchinson John 1892 Christopher Smart Men of Kent and Kentishmen Subscription ed Canterbury Cross amp Jackman p 126 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christopher Smart amp oldid 1217003188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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