Charles Heavysege

Charles Heavysege
Charles Heavysege
Born 2 May 1816(1816-05-02)
Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England
Died 14 July 1876(1876-07-14) (aged 60)
Montreal, Quebec
Language English
Nationality Canada Canadian
Ethnicity English
Citizenship British subject
Notable work(s) Saul, Jephthah's Daughter

Charles Heavysege (May 2, 1816 – July 14, 1876) was a Canadian poet and dramatist. "He was one of the first serious poets to emerge in Canada, and his play Saul was hailed on its appearance as the greatest verse drama in English since the time of Shakespeare." [1]

Contents

Life and Writing

Born in Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England, Heavysege emigrated to Montreal in 1853 where he worked as a wood carver. In 1860 he became a reporter for the Montreal Transcript, and later for the Montreal Daily Witness, where he eventually became city editor.[2]

As a poet, Heavysege was mainly influenced by "Milton, Shakespeare, and the Bible." [3] His first published work was The revolt of Tartarus, a poem in six parts, published in two editions: one under his own name in London in 1852, and a second, heavily edited and published anonymously in Montreal, in 1855.[4]

He published Sonnets in 1855, Saul: a drama in three parts in 1857, Count Filippo; or, the unequal marriage in 1860, The Owl (an imitation of Poe's "The Raven") and The Huntsman in 1864, The Advocate (a prose work) and Jephthah’s daughter in 1865, and Jezebel in 1867.[1]

During his lifetime, Saul was Heavysege's best-known work. Nathaniel Hawthorne passed on a copy to the North British Review,[2] where it was given a laudatory (unsigned) review by Coventry Patmore, who called it "indubitably the best poem ever written out of Great Britain."[4] That was followed by further favorable reviews in the Atlantic Monthly, Galaxy, and New York Evening Post. Saul was published in two further editions, in 1859 (also in Montreal) and 1869 (in Boston).[2] (The Boston edition was reprinted in 1876 and again in 1967.) Other admirers of Saul were Canadian Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald and American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.[3]

Highly regarded in the 1860s and 1870s, Heavysege "was one of the first of the Anglo-Canadian poets to achieve international recognition; he paved the way for later poets such as Charles Sangster and Charles G.D. Roberts."[5]

W.D. Lighthall, who included Heavysege's work in his 1889 anthology Songs of the Great Dominion, wrote of him: "His work is in no sense distinctively Canadian. Canadians do not read him; but they claim him as perhaps their greatest, most original writer, if they could weigh him aright and appreciate him; and he will probably always command their awe, and refuse to be forgotten."[6]

However, his reputation declined in later decades: "In the nationalist 1920's critics disparaged Heavysege's poetry on the grounds that he was not really a Canadian writer, although he continued to be read by poets like W.W.E. Ross, Ralph Gustafson, and A.J.M. Smith.... Today his crude but vigorous poetry is underrated by Canadian criticism."[5]

In 1956, while dismissing Saul and Count Filippo as "Victorian dinosaurs," Canadian literary critic Northrop Frye acknowledged Heavysege as the "first poet who really came to grips with" what Frye considered to be "the central Canadian tragic theme" (that being "the indifference of nature to human values"): "His third poem, Jephthah's Daughter, seems to me to reflect more directly the influence of his Canadian environment, as its main themes are loneliness, the indifference of nature, and the conception of God as a force of nature." [7]

Saul was produced as a radio drama by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 1974.[3]

In fiction

Solly Bridgetower, a character in Robertson Davies' The Salterton Trilogy, is an associate professor of English at the fictional Waverley University, and is urged by his department chair, Dr. Sengreen, to stake out a claim in the emerging field of "Amcan" (American-Canadian literature) by editing a scholarly edition of Heavysege's collected works, in order to earn tenure and make a name for himself (Leaven of Malice, 1954).

Publications

Heaysege published nine works of poetry and prose in his lifetime:[2]

  • The revolt of Tartarus. London, UK: Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1850. Liverpool, UK: D. Marples, 1850. Montreal, 1855.
  • Sonnets (Montreal: H. & G.M. Rose, 1855)
  • Saul: a drama Montreal: H. Rose, 1857; John Lovell, 1859. Boston: Fields, Osgood, 1869, 1876.[1]
  • Count Filippo; or, the unequal marriage. Montreal: B. Dawson, 1860. Toronto, R.& A. Miller, 1860.
  • The Owl (Montreal, 1864)
  • The Dark Huntsman (a dream) Montreal, "Witness" Steam Print House, 1864. ISBN 0665359985 Ottawa: Golden Dog, 1973. ISBN 978-0919614048
  • The Advocate. Toronto, 1865. Montreal: R. Worthington, 1865. A novel.
  • Jepthtah's Daughter. London : S. Low, Son, and Marston, 1865., Montreal: H. Dawson, 1865). Reprint, 1983. ISBN 0665359586
  • "Jezebel", New Dominion Monthly (Montreal), 1867. Jezebel. Ottawa: Golden Dog, 1972.
  • Saul and Selected Poems Toronto, Buffalo: U of Toronto P, 1977. ISBN 978-0802062628

References

  1. ^ a b c "Charles Heavysege," Gale Encyclopedia of Biography, Answers.com. Web, Mar. 12, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d "Heavysege, Charles." Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. Web, Mar. 12, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c Rota Herzberg Lister, "Heavysege, Charles." The Canadian Encyclopedia (Edmonton: Hurtig, 1988), 974.
  4. ^ a b Sandra Djwa, "Charles Heavysege Biography," Encyclopedia of Literature, 7989, JRank.org, Web, Apr. 28, 2011.
  5. ^ a b "Charles Heavysege," Dictionary of Literary Biography, Bookrags.com. Web, Mar. 12, 2011.
  6. ^ William Douw Lighthall, Songs of the Great Dominion: Voices from the Forests and Waters, the Settlements and Cities of Canada (Walter Scott [Windsor Series], 1889), Google Books, Web, Apr. 30, 2011.
  7. ^ Northrop Frye, "Preface to an Uncollected Anthology," The Bush Garden (Toronto: Anansi, 1971), 171.

External links


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  • ca|per|some — «KAY puhr suhm», adjective. given to capering: »I ve never seen a cat…more capersome (Charles Heavysege) …   Useful english dictionary

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