User:Rich Farmbrough/DNB/J/a/James Bird

James Bird|1788|1839| James Bird (born 1788 died 1839), poet and dramatist, was the son of Samuel Bird, a farmer of Earl's Stonham, Suffolk, where he was born on 10 November 1788. After receiving a scanty education he was apprenticed to a miller, and at the same time began to study by himself literature and the drama. The fame of John Kemble, the actor, reached his native village, and as a youth he made a romantic journey to London to witness his performance, returning on foot and penniless. About 1814 he was in a position to hire two windmills at Yoxford, but after five years of ill success in his trade he abandoned it, and opened early in 1820 a stationer's shop in the same place, which maintained him until his death in 1839. Before Bird was sixteen years old he had written poetry, and later he contributed some of his early poems to the 'Suffolk Chronicle', whose editor, Thomas Harral, became his most intimate friend. In 1819 he published his first long poem, 'The Vale of Slaughden', a story of the invasion of East Anglia by the Danes. First issued by subscription, its success induced a London publisher, three months after its appearance, to undertake an edition for the public. In 1820 Dr. Nathan Drake in his 'Winter Nights' (ii. 184-244) reviewed it at length, and claimed for Bird the same rank in literature as that attained by Robert Bloomfield. Bird's second venture was a mock-heroic poem entitled 'The White Hats' (1819), in which he humorously attacked the radical reformers. His subsequent narratives in verse were: 1. 'Machin, or the Discovery of Madeira', 1821. 2. 'Poetical Memoirs: the Exile, a tale in verse', 1823, and second edition 1824; the first part of this volume is a spirited imitation of Byron's 'Don Juan'. 3. 'Dunwich, a Tale of the Splendid City, in four cantos', 1828. 4. 'Framlingham, a Narrative of the Castle', 1831. 5. 'The Emigrant's Tale and Miscellaneous Poems', 1833 (cf. the review in Gentlemen's Magazine ciii. part ii. page l52, and Bird's good-humoured reply, page 229). 6. 'Francis Abbott, the Recluse of Niagara [founded on Captain Alexander's 'Transatlantic Sketches, ii. 147-55]: Metropolitan Sketches', 1837. Bird also wrote two dramas, the one entitled 'Cosmo, Duke of Florence, a Tragedy', published in 1822, and the other 'The Smuggler's Daughter, a Drama', published in 1836. The first, it is stated, was performed several times at small London theatres, but the managers of the chief playhouses refused to examine it. The second was successfully produced at Sadler's Wells in October 1835. Bird edited 'A Short Account of Leiston Abbey' in 1823. Most of his verse indicates an intimate acquaintance with Dryden and Pope, and the influence of Byron and Campbell. But Bird has an habitual command of forcible yet melodious language. Late in life he began with much success the study of Greek. His portrait was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1829. He was the tiither of sixteen children, of whom a son George became a surgeon of London and married a daughter of the poet Edwin Atherstone After Bird's death, his friend Thomas Harral, in 1840, published with a memoir selections from his poems. [Davy's manuscript Suffolk Collections, in Addit. Ms. 19118 ff 289 et. seq.; Harral's Selections with Memoir; Gentlemen's Magazine, new series, ii. 650; Britis. Museum Catalogue]

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