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Home  »  library  »  BIOS  »  Christopher Smart (1722–1771)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Christopher Smart (1722–1771)

Smart, Christopher. An English poet, and one of the interesting figures of literary history; born at Shipbourne, Kent, April 11, 1722; died on May 21, 1771. His fame rests upon a ‘Song to David’ (1763), pronounced by Dante Gabriel Rossetti “the only great accomplished poem of the eighteenth century.” It is said to have been written in a madhouse, “partly with charcoal on the walls, or indented with a key on the panels of his cell,” the poet having been deprived of his liberty on account of his debts. Noted also is a version of Horace, which had a wide sale. Other works are: ‘Poems’ (1752); ‘Power of the Supreme Being’ (1753); ‘The Hilliad: An Epic Poem’ (1753); ‘Poems on Several Occasions’ (1763); ‘Translation of the Psalms of David’ (1765); and many miscellaneous essays, poems, and translations.