John Abraham Heraud
John Abraham Heraud (1799–1887) was an English journalist and poet. He published two extravagant epic poems, The Descent into Hell (1830), and The Judgment of the Flood (1834). He also wrote plays and travel books.
Life
He was born in the parish of St Andrew's, Holborn, London, on 5 July 1799. His father, James Abraham Heraud, of Huguenot descent, was a law stationer, and died at Tottenham, Middlesex, on 6 May 1846, having married Jane, daughter of John and Elizabeth Hicks; she died 2 August 1850. John Abraham, the son, was privately educated, and originally destined for business, but in 1818 began writing for the magazines.[1]
Heraud had a large circle of literary acquaintances, including Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Southey, William Wordsworth, and John Gibson Lockhart.[1] Southey was a correspondent, who thought Heraud capable of learning anything, except "how to check his own exuberance in verse", as he wrote to Robert Gooch.[2]
Heraud wrote for the Quarterly Review and other reviews, and from 1830 to 1833 assisted in editing Fraser's Magazine.[1] There he was sub-editor to William Maginn, taking on literary criticism and philosophy.[3] At this period he was still in partnership with his father, in legal stationery. The partnership was dissolved in 1841, when he went into the trade on his own in the Chancery Lane area, but unsuccessfully.[4]
With the Carlyles Heraud was very close. Thomas Carlyle was well aware of Heraud assiduously cultivating favour, and of James Fraser's opinion that Heraud was "mad as a March hare", writing to Jane Carlyle about him in 1834.[5]
Heraud edited The Sunbeam. A Journal devoted to Polite Literature, in 1838 and 1839; the Monthly Magazine from 1839 to 1842; and subsequently the Christian's Monthly Magazine. In 1843 he became a contributor to The Athenæum, and later served as its dramatic critic until his retirement in 1868. From 1849 to 1879 he was also the dramatic critic of the Illustrated London News.[1] In 1869 he used that position to call for censorship of Formosa, Dion Boucicault's "courtesan play", prompting William Bodham Donne of the Lord Chamberlain's Office to tighten up licensing of drama with sexual overtones.[6]
In the late 1840s friends were trying to sort out Heraud's financial problems, amounting to insolvency; a fund-raising committee was formed, with officers John Forster, Thomas Kibble Hervey and John Westland Marston.[7][8] On 21 July 1873, on the nomination of William Gladstone, he was appointed a brother of the London Charterhouse, where he died on 20 April 1887.[1]
The Syncretics
Heraud was identified as a leading figure in the "Syncretics", a proto-aesthetic group mocked in Punch and prominent around 1840.[9] After a few years the excitement around their eclectic approach subsided. A biographer of Ralph Waldo Emerson, who initially took a great interest, has called Heraud in particular a "general failure".[10]
The group
Other Syncretics were Francis Foster Barham, Richard Henry Horne, and John Westland Marston.[9] Barham and Heraud founded the Syncretic Society, or Syncretic Association.[11] It grew out of an earlier group round James Pierrepont Greaves, the "Aesthetic Society" or "Aesthetic Institution", based in Burton Street on the north side of Bloomsbury, with a core of Greaves and a few neighbours. Heraud and Barham took over the Monthly Magazine, and it functioned as the organ of the group in the period 1839 to 1841.[12][13] Camilla Toulmin gained the impression in 1841, visiting Horne, that there was a group of younger and ambitious men in the Syncretics, besides the better-known names.[14] For example, the Syncretics took up the Festus of Philip James Bailey.[15]
Transatlantic ties
The group also found kinship with, and encouragement from, the New England transcendentalists.[15] Bronson Alcott corresponded with Greaves.[16] He also sent books to Greaves and Heraud; Greaves sent back books including Heraud's Lecture on Poetic Genius.[17] Approval of the Monthly Magazine was strong from Alcott, Convers Francis and George Ripley. Heraud published one piece from New England in 1839, an oration by Robert Bartlett. It proved a false start, though. Later in the year the transcendentalists founded their own periodical, The Dial, along the same lines.[18]
Writing in The Dial in 1842, Emerson in his article English Reformers praised Heraud as an interpreter of Jakob Boehme and Emanuel Swedenborg; and referenced his papers Foreign Aids to Self Intelligence, which had been announced as a three-volume work.[19] Heraud took Emerson to be a disciple of Carlyle, and was contradicted in The Present.[20] A few years later he was explaining that Swedenborg was to be taken only as an example and inspiration, since the transcendentalist approach was at odds with an established church.[21] It was through the pages of the Monthly Magazine that two notable Swedenborgians, James John Garth Wilkinson and Henry James Sr., came to know each other.[22]
Carlyle in fact disapproved of the group around Heraud and Alcott House, Greaves's project. These included John Goodwyn Barmby, Newton Crosland, Horne, Henry Mansel, and James Elishama Smith.[10]
Drama activism
A series of public lectures by the Syncretic Association started early in 1841. Bayle Bernard was one of the speakers, and the talks took place in the Suffolk Street Gallery, London.[23] A circumstantial account, "Damned" Tragedies, was given in the July 1842 Fraser's Magazine. Bernard's talk was light-hearted chat about actors, but Heraud and Frederick Guest Tomlins addressed more serious aspects and limitations of current British theatre, before the weekly series outstayed its welcome at the Gallery.[24]
The Syncretics, who included also George Stephens, became active in agitation to have unperformed drama staged. The context was the restriction in London to three theatres with patents, and an absence of new verse drama productions.[25] Not short of ambition, the Dramatic Committee of the Association, through Heraud, pressed for a reformed and poetic theatre, an actors' joint stock company, and the performance of new work, as well as drama schools to elevate taste.[26] A failed demonstration, Martinuzzi of 1841, written by Stephens, led to Heraud in particular being lampooned in Punch, by William Makepeace Thackeray.[27] The existing theatrical monopoly was, however, abolished by the Theatres Act 1843.[28]
Heraud himself wrote dramas and persisted. The tragedy of Videna, based on Geoffrey of Monmouth, was acted at the Marylebone Theatre in 1854, with James William Wallack; and Wife or No Wife and a version of Ernest Legouvé's Medea were staged later.[1][29][30]
Heraud as poet
Harper's Cyclopædia of British and American poetry noted that as a poet, Heraud had been snubbed by the critics, "and not always unjustly". It also repeated the story attributed to Douglas Jerrold, asked by Heraud whether he had seen "his Descent into Hell", and replying that he'd like to.[31] Heraud made two attempts at epic grandeur in his poems The Descent into Hell, 1830, and The Judgment of the Flood, 1834. The view of Chambers's Cyclopædia of English Literature was that he attempted in poetry what John Martin did in art: the vast, the remote, and the terrible. It found his Descent and Judgment to be "psychological curiosities" of "misplaced power".[32] George Saintsbury put Heraud on a level with Edwin Atherstone, and above Robert Pollok.[33] Herbert Tucker regards the Judgement of the Flood as "deranged", but has more time for the Descent into Hell. He places it with other, earlier attempts to dramatise Christian typology, such as those of William Gilbank and Elizabeth Smith of Birmingham. He notes Heraud's familiarity with Coleridge's apologetics, and his reference to Martin in the annotations.[34]
Heraud later wrote a political epic, which remained unpublished. This work was under the influence of William James Linton.[35]
Works
Heraud was the author of:[1]
- The Legend of St. Loy, with other Poems, 1820.
- Tottenham, a poem, 1820.
- The Descent into Hell, a poem, 1830; second edition, to which are added Uriel, a fragment, and three odes.
- A Philosophical Estimate of the Controversy respecting the Divine Humanity, 1831.
- An Oration on the Death of S. T. Coleridge, 1834.
- The Judgment of the Flood, a poem, 1834; new ed. 1857.
- Substance of a Lecture on Poetic Genius as a Moral Power, 1837.
- Voyages up the Mediterranean of William Robinson, with Memoirs, 1837.
- Expediency and Means of Elevating the Profession of the Educator, a prize essay, printed in the Educator, 1839, pp. 133–260. The other prize winners were John Lalor, Edward Higginson, James Simpson, and Sarah Ricardo-Porter.[36]
- The Life and Times of Girolamo Savonarola: Illustrating the Progress of the Reformation in Italy, During the Fifteenth century. Whittaker. 1843.
- Salvator, the Poor Man of Naples, a dramatic poem, privately printed, 1845,
- Videna, or the Mother's Tragedy. A Legend of Early Britain, 1854.
- The British Empire, written with Sir Archibald Alison and others, 1856.
- Henry Butler's Theatrical Directory and Dramatic Almanack, editor, 1860.
- Shakespeare, his Inner Life as intimated in his Works, 1865.
- The Wreck of the London, a lyrical ballad, 1866.
- The In-Gathering, Cimon and Pero, a Chain of Sonnets, Sebastopol, 1870.
- The War of Ideas, a poem, 1871. Based on the Franco-Prussian War.[37]
- Uxmal: an Antique Love Story. Macée de Léodepart: an Historical Romance, 1877.
- The Sibyl among the Tombs, 1886.
Heraud's knowledge of German was unusual; he was a follower of Friedrich Schelling.[1] He is also regarded as a disciple of Coleridge.[38]
Family
On 15 May 1823 Heraud married, at Old Lambeth Church, Ann Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Baddams, and by her, who died at Islington on 21 September 1867, had two children, Claudius William Heraud of Woodford, and Edith Heraud, an actress.[1]
References
- Alan D. McKillop, A Victorian Faust, PMLA Vol. 40, No. 3 (Sep. 1925), pp. 743–768. Published by: Modern Language Association. Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/457567
- Janice Nadelhaft, Punch and the Syncretics: An Early Victorian Prologue to the Aesthetic Movement, SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900 Vol. 15, No. 4, Nineteenth Century (Autumn, 1975), pp. 627–640. Published by: Rice University. Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/450016
- Fred C. Thomson, A Crisis in Early Victorian Drama: John Westland Marston and the Syncretics, Victorian Studies Vol. 9, No. 4 (Jun. 1966), pp. 375–398. Published by: Indiana University Press. Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3825817
- Frederick Wagner, Eighty-Six Letters (1814–1882) of A. Bronson Alcott (Part One), Studies in the American Renaissance (1979), pp. 239–308. Published by: Joel Myerson. Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/30227466
Notes
- Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney, eds. (1891). . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 26. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Robert Southey (1850). The life and correspondence of Robert Southey. Ed. by C.C. Southey. Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. p. 58. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- E. Hough Walter (11 September 1972). The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals: 1824–1900. Taylor & Francis. pp. 450 note 44. ISBN 978-0-7100-7501-7. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Edith Heraud, Memoirs of John A. Heraud (1898) p. 23; archive.org.
- "carlyleletters.dukejournals.org, TC TO JANE WELSH CARLYLE ; 21 May 1834; DOI: 10.1215/lt-18340521-TC-JWC-01; CL 7: 167–178". Archived from the original on 14 December 2013. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- John Russell Stephens (10 June 2010). The Censorship of English Drama 1824–1901. Cambridge University Press. pp. 86–7. ISBN 978-0-521-13655-6. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
- Charles Dickens (30 June 1988). 1850–1852. Oxford University Press. p. 142 note 6. ISBN 978-0-19-812617-1. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Nigel Cross (9 June 1988). The Common Writer: Life in Nineteenth-Century Grub Street. CUP Archive. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-521-35721-0. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Nadelhaft, p. 629.
- Gay Wilson Allen (1981). Waldo Emerson: A biography. Viking Press. p. 408. ISBN 978-0670748662.
- Nadelhaft, p. 632.
- Thomson, p. 378.
- J. E. M. Latham (1999). Search for a New Eden: James Pierrepont Greaves (1777–1842): The Sacred Socialist and His Followers. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-8386-3809-5. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
- Camilla Dufour Crosland, Landmarks of a Literary Life 1820–1892 (1893), p. 279; archive.org.
- McKillop, p. 762 note 80.
- Tiffany K. Wayne (1 January 2009). Encyclopedia of Transcendentalism. Infobase Publishing. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-4381-0916-9. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Wagner p. 304 note 7 and p. 306 note 2.
- Catherine L. Albanese (1977). Corresponding Motion: Transcendental religion and the new America. Temple University Press. pp. 98–9. ISBN 978-0877220985.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson; Margaret Fuller; George Ripley (1843). The Dial: A Magazine for Literature, Philosophy, and Religion. Weeks, Jordan. p. 231. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Clarence L. Gohdes (1 July 2003). Periodicals of American Transcendentalism 1931. Kessinger Publishing. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-7661-7183-1. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
- Las Vegas David Holland Assistant Professor of History University of Nevada (5 January 2011). Sacred Borders : Continuing Revelation and Canonical Restraint in Early America: Continuing Revelation and Canonical Restraint in Early America. Oxford University Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-19-984252-0. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
- Howard M Feinstein (1999). Becoming William James... Cornell University Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-8014-8642-5. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
- The New monthly belle assemblée. Joseph Rogerson. p. 184. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Thomas Carlyle (1842). Fraser's Magazine. J. Fraser. pp. 93–102. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Thomson, p. 380.
- Jane Moody (30 July 2007). Illegitimate Theatre in London, 1770–1840. Cambridge University Press. p. 178 note 2. ISBN 978-0-521-03986-4. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
- Nadelhaft, p. 637–8.
- Stephens, John Russell. "Stephens, George". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/26382. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- The New quarterly review, and digest of current literature. 1855. p. 12. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Westland Marston (24 May 2012). Our Recent Actors: Being Recollections Critical, And, in Many Cases, Personal, of Late Distinguished Performers of Both Sexes. Cambridge University Press. p. 4 note. ISBN 978-1-108-04767-8. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Epes Sargent, Harper's Cyclopædia of British and American Poetry (1909) p. 519; archive.org.
- Robert Carruthers (1880). Chambers's Cyclopædia of English Literature: A History, Critical and Biographical, of British and American Authors, with Specimens of Their Writings. American Book Exchange. p. 42. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Herbert F. Tucker (17 April 2008). Epic: Britain's Heroic Muse 1790–1910: Britain's Heroic Muse 1790–1910. Oxford University Press. p. 258 note 30. ISBN 978-0-19-152840-8. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Herbert F. Tucker (17 April 2008). Epic: Britain's Heroic Muse 1790–1910: Britain's Heroic Muse 1790–1910. Oxford University Press. pp. 281–2. ISBN 978-0-19-152840-8. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Francis Barrimore Smith (1973). Radical Artisan: William James Linton 1812–1897. Manchester University Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-87471-180-6. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Central Society of Education (1839). The Educator: Prize essays on the expediency and means of elevating the profession of the educator in society. Printed for Taylor & Walton. pp. i. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Spenserians, John Abraham Heraud: Robert Carruthers, in Chambers's Cyclopaedia of English Literature, 3rd ed. (1876; 1879) 7:42.
- David Higgins (2005). Romantic Genius and the Literary Magazine: Biography, Celebrity and Politics. Routledge. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-415-33556-0. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney, eds. (1891). "Heraud, John Abraham". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 26. London: Smith, Elder & Co.