This Poet was the son of the Revd.
Mr. Joseph Boyse, a Dissenting minister of great eminence
in Dublin. Our author’s father was a person
so much respected by those immediately under his ministerial
care, and whoever else had the happiness of his acquaintance,
that people of all denominations united in esteeming
him, not only for his learning and abilities, but
his extensive humanity and undisembled piety.
The Revd. Gentleman had so much
dignity in his manner, that he obtained from the common
people the name of bishop Boyse, meant as a compliment
to the gracefulness of his person and mien. But
though Mr. Boyse was thus reverenced by the multitude,
and courted by people of fashion, he never contracted
the least air of superciliousness: He was humane
and affable in his temper, equally removed from the
stiffness of pedantry, and offensive levity.
During his ministerial charge at Dublin, he published
many sermons, which compose several folio volumes,
a few Poems and other Tracts; but what chiefly distinguished
him as a writer, was the controversy he carried on
with Dr. King, archbishop of Dublin, and author of
the Origin of Evil, concerning the office of a scriptural
bishop. This controverted point was managed on
both sides with great force of argument, and calmness
of temper. The bishop asserted that the episcopal
right of jurisdiction had its foundation in the New-Testament:
Mr. Boyse, consistent with his principles, denied that
any ecclesiastical superiority appeared there; and
in the opinion of many, Mr. Boyse was more than equal
to his antagonist, whom he treated in the course of
the controversy, with the greatest candour and good-manners.
It has been reported that Mr. Boyse
had two brothers, one a clergyman of the church of
England, and the other a cardinal at Rome; but of this
circumstance we have no absolute certainty: Be
it as it may, he had, however, no brother so much
distinguished in the world as himself.
We shall now enter upon the life of
our poet, who will appear while we trace it, to have
been in every respect the reverse of his father, genius
excepted.
He was born in the year 1708, and
received the rudiments of his education in a private
school in Dublin. When he was but eighteen years
old, his father, who probably intended him for the
ministry, sent him to the university of Glasgow, that
he might finish his education there. He had not
been a year at the university, till he fell in love
with one Miss Atchenson, the daughter of a tradesman
in that city, and was imprudent enough to interrupt
his education, by marrying her, before he had entered
into his 20th year.
The natural extravagance of his temper
soon exposed him to want, and as he had now the additional
charge of a wife, his reduced circumstances obliged
him to quit the university, and go over with his wife
(who also carried a sister with her) to Dublin; where
they relied upon the old gentleman for support.
His behaviour in this dependent state, was the very
reverse of what it should have been. In place
of directing his studies to some useful acquisition,
so as to support himself and family, he spent his
time in the most abject trifling, and drew many heavy
expences upon his father, who had no other means of
supporting himself than what his congregation afforded,
and a small estate of fourscore pounds a year in Yorkshire.
Considerations of prudence never entered
into the heart of this unhappy young roan, who ran
from one excess to another, till an indulgent parent
was reduced by his means to very great embarrassments.
Young Boyse was of all men the farthest removed from
a gentleman; he had no graces of person, and fewer
still of conversation. To this cause it was perhaps
owing, that his wife, naturally of a very volatile
sprightly temper, either grew tired of him, or became
enamour’d of variety. It was however abundantly
certain, that she pursued intrigues with other men;
and what is still more surprising, not without the
knowledge of her husband, who had either too abject
a spirit to resent it; or was bribed by some lucrative
advantage, to which, he had a mind mean enough to stoop.
Though never were three people of more libertine characters
than young Boyse, his wife, and sister-in-law; yet
the two ladies wore such a mask of decency before
the old gentleman, that his fondness was never abated.
He hoped that time and experience would recover his
son from his courses of extravagance; and as he was
of an unsuspecting temper, he had not the least jealousy
of the real conduct of his daughter-in-law, who grew
every day in his favour, and continued to blind him,
by the seeming decency of her behaviour, and a performance
of those acts of piety, he naturally expected from
her. But the old gentleman was deceived in his
hopes, for time made no alteration in his son.
The estate his father possessed in Yorkshire was sold
to discharge his debts; and when the old man lay in
his last sickness, he was entirely supported by presents
from his congregation, and buried at their expence.
We have no farther account of Mr.
Boyse, till we find him soon after his father’s
death at Edinburgh; but from what motives he went there
we cannot now discover. At this place his poetical
genius raised him many friends, and some patrons of
very great eminence. He published a volume of
poems in 1731, to which is subjoined The Tablature
of Cebes, and a Letter upon Liberty, inserted in the
Dublin Journal 1726; and by these he obtained a very
great reputation. They are addressed to the countess
of Eglington, a lady of distinguished excellencies,
and so much celebrated for her beauty, that it would
be difficult for the best panegyrist to be too lavish
in her praise. This amiable lady was patroness
of all men of wit, and very much distinguished Mr.
Boyse, while he resided in that country. She
was not however exempt from the lot of humanity, and
her conspicuous accomplishments were yet chequered
with failings: The chief of which was too high
a consciousness of her own charms, which inspired
a vanity that sometimes betrayed her into errors.
The following short anecdote was frequently
related by Mr. Boyse. The countess one day came
into the bed chamber of her youngest daughter, then
about 13 years old, while she was dressing at her toilet.
The countess observing the assiduity with which the
young lady wanted to set off her person to the best
advantage, asked her, what she would give to be ‘as
handsome as her mamma?’ To which Miss replied;
’As much as your ladyship would give to be as
young as me.’ This smart repartee which
was at once pungent and witty, very sensibly affected
the countess; who for the future was less lavish in
praise of her own charms.
Upon the death of the viscountess
Stormont, Mr. Boyse wrote an Elegy, which was very
much applauded by her ladyship’s relations.
This Elegy he intitled, The Tears of the Muses, as
the deceased lady was a woman of the most refined
taste in the sciences, and a great admirer of poetry.
The lord Stormont was so much pleased with this mark
of esteem paid to the memory of his lady, that he
ordered a very handsome present to be given to Mr.
Boyse, by his attorney at Edinburgh.
Though Mr. Boyse’s name was
very well known in that city, yet his person was obscure;
for as he was altogether unsocial in his temper, he
had but few acquaintances, and those of a cast much
inferior to himself, and with whom he ought to have
been ashamed to associate. It was some time before
he could be found out; and lord Stormont’s kind
intentions had been defeated, if an advertisement
had not been published in one of their weekly papers,
desiring the author of the Tears of the Muses to call
at the house of the attorney.
The personal obscurity of Mr. Boyse
might perhaps not be altogether owing to his habits
of gloominess and retirement. Nothing is more
difficult in that city, than to make acquaintances;
There are no places where people meet and converse
promiscuously: There is a reservedness and gravity
in the manner of the inhabitants, which makes a stranger
averse to approach them. They naturally love solitude;
and are very slow in contracting friendships.
They are generous; but it is with a bad grace.
They are strangers to affability, and they maintain
a haughtiness and an apparent indifference, which
deters a man from courting them. They may be
said to be hospitable, but not complaisant to strangers:
Insincerity and cruelty have no existence amongst them;
but if they ought not to be hated, they can never
be much loved, for they are incapable of insinuation,
and their ignorance of the world makes them unfit
for entertaining sensible strangers. They are
public-spirited, but torn to pieces by factions.
A gloominess in religion renders one part of them
very barbarous, and an enthusiasm in politics so transports
the genteeler part, that they sacrifice to party almost
every consideration of tenderness. Among such
a people, a man may long live, little known, and less
instructed; for their reservedness renders them uncommunicative,
and their excessive haughtiness prevents them from
being solicitous of knowledge.
The Scots are far from being a dull
nation; they are lovers of pomp and shew; but then
there is an eternal stiffness, a kind of affected
dignity, which spoils their pleasures. Hence we
have the less reason to wonder that Boyse lived obscurely
at Edinburgh. His extreme carelesness about his
dress was a circumstance very inauspicious to a man
who lives in that city. They are such lovers
of this kind of decorum, that they will admit of no
infringement upon it; and were a man with more wit
than Pope, and more philosophy than Newton, to appear
at their market place negligent in his apparel, he
would be avoided by his acquaintances who would rather
risk his displeasure, than the censure of the public,
which would not fail to stigmatize them, for assocciating
with a man seemingly poor; for they measure poverty,
and riches, understanding, or its opposite, by exterior
appearance. They have many virtues, but their
not being polished prevents them from shining.
The notice which Lady Eglington and
the lord Stormont took of our poet, recommended him
likewise to the patronage of the dutchess of Gordon,
who was a lady not only distinguished for her taste;
but cultivated a correspondence with some of the most
eminent poets then living. The dutchess was so
zealous in Mr. Boyse’s affairs, and so felicitous
to raise him above necessity, that she employed her
interest in procuring the promise of a place for him.
She gave him a letter, which he was next day to deliver
to one of the commissioners of the customs at Edinburgh.
It happened that he was then some miles distant from
the city, and the morning on which he was to have
rode to town with her grace’s letter of recommendation
proved to be rainy. This slender circumstance
was enough to discourage Boyse, who never looked beyond
the present moment: He declined going to town
on account of the rainy weather, and while he let
slip the opportunity, the place was bestowed upon another,
which the commissioner declared he kept for some time
vacant, in expectation of seeing a person recommended
by the dutchess of Gordon.
Of a man of this indolence of temper,
this sluggish meanness of spirit, the reader cannot
be surprised to find the future conduct consist of
a continued serious of blunders, for he who had not
spirit to prosecute an advantage put in his hands,
will neither bear distress with fortitude, nor struggle
to surmount it with resolution.
Boyse at last, having defeated all
the kind intentions of his patrons towards him, fell
into a contempt and poverty, which obliged him to quit
Edinburgh, as his creditors began to sollicit the payment
of their debts, with an earnestness not to be trifled
with. He communicated his design of going to
London to the dutchess of Gordon; who having still
a very high opinion of his poetical abilities, gave
him a letter of recommendation to Mr. Pope, and obtained
another for him to Sir Peter King, the lord chancellor
of England. Lord Stormont recommended him to
the sollicitor-general his brother, and many other
persons of the first fashion.
Upon receiving these letters, he,
with great caution, quitted Edinburgh, regretted by
none but his creditors, who were so exaggerated as
to threaten to prosecute him wherever he should be
found. But these menaces were never carried into
execution, perhaps from the consideration of his indigence,
which afforded no probable prospect of their being
paid.
Upon his arrival in London, he went
to Twickenham, in order to deliver the dutchess of
Gordon’s letter to Mr. Pope; but that gentleman
not being at home, Mr. Boyse never gave himself the
trouble to repeat his visit, nor in all probability
would Pope have been over-fond of him; as there was
nothing in his conversation which any wife indicated
the abilities he possessed. He frequently related,
that he was graciously received by Sir Peter King,
dined at his table, and partook of his pleasures.
But this relation, they who knew Mr. Boyse well, never
could believe; for he was so abject in his disposition,
that he never could look any man in the face whose
appearance was better than his own; nor likely had
courage to sit at Sir Peter King’s table, where
every one was probably his superior. He had no
power of maintaining the dignity of wit, and though
his understanding was very extensive, yet but a few
could discover that he had any genius above the common
rank. This want of spirit produced the greatest
part of his calamities, because he; knew not how to
avoid them by any vigorous effort of his mind.
He wrote poems, but those, though excellent in their
kind, were lost to the world, by being introduced
with no advantage. He had so strong a propension
to groveling, that his acquaintance were generally
of such a cast, as could be of no service to him;
and those in higher life he addressed by letters,
not having sufficient confidence or politeness to
converse familiarly with them; a freedom to which he
was intitled by the power of his genius. Thus
unfit to support himself in the world, he was exposed
to variety of distress, from which he could invent
no means of extricating himself, but by writing mendicant
letters. It will appear amazing, but impartiality
obliges us to relate it, that this man, of so abject
a spirit, was voluptuous and luxurious: He had
no taste for any thing elegant, and yet was to the
last degree expensive. Can it be believed, that
often when he had received half a guinea, in consequence
of a supplicating letter, he would go into a tavern,
order a supper to be prepared, drink of the richest
wines, and spend all the money that had just been
given him in charity, without having any one to participate
the regale with him, and while his wife and child were
starving home? This is an instance of base selfishness,
for which no name is as yet invented, and except by
another poet, with some variation of circumstances,
was perhaps never practiced by the most sensual epicure.
He had yet some friends, many of the
most eminent dissenters, who from a regard to the
memory of his father, afforded him supplies from time
to time. Mr. Boyse by perpetual applications,
at last exhausted their patience; and they were obliged
to abandon a man on whom their liberality was ill
bestowed, as it produced no other advantage to him,
than a few days support, when he returned again with
the same necessities.
The epithet of cold has often been
given to charity, perhaps with a great deal of truth;
but if any thing can warrant us to withhold our charity,
it is the consideration that its purposes are prostituted
by those on whom it is bestowed.
We have already taken notice of the
infidelity of his wife; and now her circumstances
were reduced, her virtue did not improve. She
fell into a way of life disgraceful to the sex; nor
was his behaviour in any degree more moral. They
were frequently covered with ignominy, reproaching
one another for the acquisition of a disease, which
both deserved, because mutually guilty.
It was about the year 1740, that Mr.
Boyse reduced to the last extremity of human wretchedness,
had not a shirt, a coat, or any kind of apparel to
put on; the sheets in which he lay were carried to
the pawnbroker’s, and he was obliged to be confined
to bed, with no other covering than a blanket.
He had little support but what he got by writing letters
to his friends in the most abject stile. He was
perhaps ashamed to let this instance of distress be
known to his friends, which might be the occasion
of his remaining six weeks in that situation.
During this time he had some employment in writing
verses for the Magazines; and whoever had seen him
in his study, must have thought the object singular
enough. He sat up in bed with the blanket wrapt
about him, through which he had cut a hole large enough
to admit his arm, and placing the paper upon his knee,
scribbled in the best manner he could the verses he
was obliged to make: Whatever he got by those,
or any of his begging letters, was but just sufficient
for the preservation of life. And perhaps he would
have remained much longer in this distressful state,
had not a compassionate gentleman, upon hearing this
circumstance related, ordered his cloaths to be taken
out of pawn, and enabled him to appear again abroad.
This six weeks penance one would imagine
sufficient to deter him for the future, from suffering
himself to be exposed to such distresses; but by a
long habit of want it grew familiar to him, and as
he had less delicacy than other men, he was perhaps
less afflicted with his exterior meanness. For
the future, whenever his distresses so press’d,
as to induce him to dispose of his shirt, he fell
upon an artificial method of supplying one. He
cut some white paper in slips, which he tyed round
his wrists, and in the same manner supplied his neck.
In this plight he frequently appeared abroad, with
the additional inconvenience of want of breeches.
He was once sent for in a hurry, to
the house of a printer who had employed him to write
a poem for his Magazine: Boyse then was without
breeches, or waistcoat, but was yet possessed of a
coat, which he threw upon him, and in this ridiculous
manner went to the printer’s house; where he
found several women, whom his extraordinary appearance
obliged immediately to retire.
He fell upon many strange schemes
of raising trifling sums: He sometimes ordered
his wife to inform people that he was just expiring,
and by this artifice work upon their compassion; and
many of his friends were frequently surprised to meet
the man in the street to day, to whom they had yesterday
sent relief, as to a person on the verge of death.
At other times he would propose subscriptions for
poems, of which only the beginning and conclusion
were written; and by this expedient would relieve
some present necessity. But as he seldom was able
to put any of his poems to the press, his veracity
in this particular suffered a diminution; and indeed
in almost every other particular he might justly be
suspected; for if he could but gratify an immediate
appetite, he cared not at what expence, whether of
the reputation, or purse of another.
About the year 1745 Mr. Boyse’s
wife died. He was then at Reading, and pretended
much concern when he heard of her death.
It was an affectation in Mr. Boyse
to appear very fond of a little lap dog which he always
carried about with him in his arms, imagining it gave
him the air of a man of taste. Boyse, whose circumstances
were then too mean to put himself in mourning, was
yet resolved that some part of his family should.
He step’d into a little shop, purchased half
a yard of black ribbon, which he fixed round his dog’s
neck by way of mourning for the loss of its mistress.
But this was not the only ridiculous instance of his
behaviour on the death of his wife. Such was the
sottishness of this man, that when he was in liquor,
he always indulged a dream of his wife’s being
still alive, and would talk very spightfully of those
by whom he suspected she was entertained. This
he never mentioned however, except in his cups, which
was only as often as he had money to spend. The
manner of his becoming intoxicated was very particular.
As he had no spirit to keep good company, so he retired
to some obscure ale-house, and regaled himself with
hot two-penny, which though he drank in very great
quantities, yet he had never more than a pennyworth
at a time. Such a practice rendered him
so compleatly sottish, that even his abilities, as
an author, became sensibly impaired.
We have already mentioned his being
at Reading. His business there was to compile
a Review of the most material transactions at home
and abroad, during the last war; in which he has included
a short account of the late rebellion. For this
work by which he got some reputation, he was paid
by the sheet, a price sufficient to keep him from starving,
and that was all. To such distress must that
man be driven, who is destitute of prudence to direct
the efforts of his genius. In this work Mr. Boyse
discovers how capable he was of the most irksome and
laborious employment, when he maintained a power over
his appetites, and kept himself free from intemperance.
While he remained at Reading, he addressed,
by supplicating letters, two Irish noblemen, lord
Kenyston, and lord Kingsland, who resided in Berkshire,
and received some money from them; he also met with
another gentleman there of a benevolent disposition,
who, from the knowledge he had of the father, pitied
the distresses of the son, and by his interest with
some eminent Dissenters in those parts, railed a sufficient
sum to cloath him, for the abjectness of his appearance
secluded our poet even from the table of his Printer.
Upon his return from Reading, his
behaviour was more decent than it had ever been before,
and there were some hopes that a reformation, tho’
late, would be wrought upon him. He was employed
by a Bookseller to translate Fenelon on the Existence
of God, during which time he married a second wife,
a woman in low circumstances, but well enough adapted
to his taste. He began now to live with more
regard to his character, and support a better appearance
than usual; but while his circumstances were mending,
and his irregular appetites losing ground, his health
visibly declined: he had the satisfaction, while
in this lingering illness, to observe a poem of his,
entitled The Deity, recommended by two eminent writers,
the ingenious Mr. Fielding, and the rev. Mr. James
Harvey, author of The Meditations. The former,
in the beginning of his humorous History of Tom Jones,
calls it an excellent poem. Mr. Harvey stiles
it a pious and instructive piece; and that worthy
gentleman, upon hearing that the author was in necessitous
circumstances, deposited two guineas in the hands
of a trusty person to be given him, whenever his occasions
should press. This poem was written some years
before Mr. Harvey or Mr. Fielding took any notice
of it, but it was lost to the public, as the reputation
of the Bookseller consisted in sending into the world
abundance of trifles, amongst which, it was considered
as one. Mr. Boyse said, that upon its first publication,
a gentleman acquainted with Mr. Pope, took occasion
to ask that poet, if he was not the author of it, to
which Mr. Pope replied, ’that he was not the
author, but that there were many lines in it, of which
he should not be ashamed.’ This Mr. Boyse
considered as a very great compliment. The poem
indeed abounds with shining lines and elevated sentiments
on the several Attributes of the Supreme Being; but
then it is without a plan, or any connexion of parts,
for it may be read either backwards or forwards, as
the reader pleases.
While Mr. Boyse was in this lingering
illness, he seemed to have no notion of his approaching
end, nor did he expect it, ’till it was almost
past the thinking of. His mind, indeed, was often
religiously disposed; he frequently talked upon that
subject, and, probably suffered a great deal from
the remorse of his conscience. The early impressions
of his good education were never entirely obliterated,
and his whole life was a continued struggle between
his will and reason, as he was always violating his
duty to the one, while he fell under the subjection
of the other. It was in consequence of this war
in his mind, that he wrote a beautiful poem called
The Recantation.
In the month of May, 1749, he died
in obscure lodgings near Shoe-Lane. An old acquaintance
of his endeavoured to collect money to defray the
expences of his funeral, so that the scandal of being
buried by the parish might be avoided. But his
endeavours were in vain, for the persons he sollicited,
had been so troubled with applications during the
life of this unhappy man, that they refused to contribute
any thing towards his funeral. The remains of
this son of the muses were, with very little ceremony,
hurried away by the parish officers, and thrown amongst
common beggars; though with this distinction, that
the service of the church was performed over his corpse.
Never was an exit more shocking, nor a life spent
with less grace, than those of Mr. Boyse, and never
were such distinguished abilities given to less purpose.
His genius was not confined to poetry only, he had
a taste for painting, music and heraldry, with the
latter of which he was very well acquainted.
His poetical pieces, if collected, would make six moderate
volumes. Many of them are featured in the Gentleman’s
Magazine, marked with the letter Y. and Alceus.
Two volumes were published in London, but as they
never had any great sale, it will be difficult to find
them.
An ode of his in the manner of Spenser,
entitled The Olive, was addressed to Sir Robert Walpole,
which procured him a present of ten guineas.
He translated a poem from the High Dutch of Van Haren,
in praise of peace, upon the conclusion of that made
at Aix la Chapelle; but the poem which procured him
the greatest reputation, was, that upon the Attributes
of the Deity, of which we have already taken notice.
He was employed by Mr. Ogle to translate some of Chaucer’s
Tales into modern English, which he performed with
great spirit, and received at the rate of three pence
a line for his trouble. Mr. Ogle published a
complete edition of that old poet’s Canterbury
Tales Modernized; and Mr. Boyse’s name is put
to such Tales as were done by him. It had often
been urged to Mr. Boyse to turn his thoughts towards
the drama, as that was the most profitable kind of
poetical writing, and as many a poet of inferior genius
to him has raised large contributions on the public
by the success of their plays. But Boyse never
seemed to relish this proposal, perhaps from a consciousness
that he had not spirit to prosecute the arduous task
of introducing it on the stage; or that he thought
himself unequal to the task.
In the year 1743 Mr. Boyse published
without his name, an Ode on the battle of Dettingen,
entitled Albion’s Triumph; some Stanza’s
of which we shall give as a specimen of Mr. Boyse’s
poetry.
STANZA’s from ALBION’s Triumph.
XIII.
But how, blest sovereign! shall th’unpractis’d
muse
These recent honours of thy
reign rehearse!
How to thy virtues turn her dazzled views,
Or consecrate thy deeds in
equal verse!
Amidst the field of horrors wide display’d,
How paint the calm that
smil’d upon, thy brow!
Or speak that thought which every part
surveyed,
’Directing where the
rage of war should glow:’
While watchful angels hover’d round
thy head,
And victory on high the palm of glory
spread.
XIV.
Nor royal youth reject the artless praise,
Which due to worth like thine
the Muse bestows,
Who with prophetic extasy surveys
These early wreaths of fame
adorn thy brows.
Aspire like Nassau in the glorious strife,
Keep thy great fires’
examples full in eye;
But oh! for Britain’s sake, consult
a life
The noblest triumphs are too
mean to buy;
And while you purchase glory bear
in mind,
A prince’s truest fame is to protect
mankind.
XV.
Alike in arts and arms acknowledg’d
great,
Let Stair accept the lays
he once could own!
Nor Carteret, thou the column of the state!
The friend of science! on
the labour frown!
Nor shall, unjust to foreign worth, the
Muse
In silence Austria’s
valiant chiefs conceal;
While Aremberg’s heroic line she
views,
And Neiperg’s conduct
strikes even envy pale:
Names Gallia yet shall further learn to
fear,
And Britain, grateful still, shall treasure
up as dear!
XIX.
But oh! acknowledg’d victor in the
field,
What thanks, dread sovereign,
shall thy toils reward!
Such honours as delivered nations yield,
Such for thy virtues justly
stand prepar’d:
When erst on Oudenarde’s decisive
plain,
Before thy youth, the Gaul
defeated fled,
The eye of fate foresaw on distant
Maine,
The laurels now that shine
around thy head:
Oh should entwin’d with these fresh
Olives bloom!
Thy Triumphs then would shame the pride
of antient Rome.
XX.
Mean time, while from this fair event
we shew
That British valour happily
survives,
And cherish’d by the king’s
propitious view,
The rising plant of glory
sweetly thrives!
Let all domestic faction learn to cease,
Till humbled Gaul no more
the world alarms:
Till GEORGE procures to Europe solid peace,
A peace secur’d by his
victorious arms:
And binds in iron fetters ear to ear,
Ambition, Rapine, Havock, and Despair,
With all the ghastly fiends of desolating
war.