HAYLEY, William.

£950 · Offered by Peter Harrington · No longer available

Plays of Three Acts; written for a Private Theatre. First edition. Lovely copy of the collected theatrical works of this now largely forgotten, but once highly popular writer, exceptionally prettily bound and with an attractive provenance. Hayley is best remembered today as a friend and patron of George Romney and William Blake, and biographer of Milton.Hayley (1745-1820) "although affluent [was] determined on a literary career" (ODNB), his plays were singularly unsuccessful, Anna Seward considered 'Lord Russell', collected here, "lacking in spirit and variety", and that 'Marcella', also in this volume, had a "disgusting plot" and was "never likely please". His essays and poems met with greater success, his didactic poem Triumphs of Temper (1781), intended "to reform the entire feminine mind of England by the advice" was appreciated by Emma Hamilton who thanked Hayley "for the lessons she had learnt from the poem", which ran to fourteen editions and proved to be the most durable of all his publications. His life of Milton, originally commissioned by Boydell was similarly popular. Remarkably, he was offered the laureateship in 1790, which he declined for unknown reasons. Southey provided an excellent summary of Hayley's life and work; "confessedly the most popular and the most fashionable of living poets... by grace of the public King of the bards of Britain... because the verse was... on a level with the taste of the age.... Everything about that man is good except his poetry

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