s. In July 1715, he married Sarah, daughter of Christopher and Sarah Broomhead of Sheffield. She was born in 1686, and by her he had only a son, the late Dr. Thomas Balguy,
, an eminent divine of the church of
England in the last century, was born on the 12th of August
1686, at Sheffield in Yorkshire. His father, Thomas JBalguy, who died in 1696, was master of the free grammarschool in that place, and from him he received the first
rudiments of his grammatical education. After his father’s
death he was put under the instruction of Mr. Daubuz,
author of a commentary on the Revelations, who succeeded
to the mastership of the same school, Sept. 23, 1696, for
whom he always professed a great respect. In 1702 he
was admitted of St. John’s college, Cambridge, under the
care of Dr. Edmondson and of Dr. Lambert, afterwards
master of that college. He frequent^ lamented, in the
succeeding part of his life, that he had wasted nearly two
years of his residence there in reading romances. But, at
the end of that tinie happening to meet with Livy, he went
through him with great delight, and afterwards applied himself to serious studies. In 1705-6, he was admitted to the
degree of B. A. and to that of M. A. in 1726. Soon after
he had taken his bachelor’s degree, he quitted the university, and was engaged, for a while, in teaching the free
school at Sheffield, but whether he was chosen master, oxonly employed during a vacancy, does not appear. On
the 15th of July 1708, he was taken into the family of Mr.
Banks, as private tutor to his son, Joseph Banks, esq. air
terwards of Reresby in the county of Lincoln, and
grandfather of the present sir Joseph Banks, K. B. so eminently
distinguished for his skill in natural history, and the expences, labours, and voyages, he has undergone to promote
that part of science. Mr. Balguy, in 1710, was admitted to deacon’s orders, and in 1711 to priest’s by Dr. Sharp,
archbishop of York. By Mr. Banks’ s means, he was introduced to the acquaintance of Mr. Bright of Badsworth, in
the county of York, and was by him recommended to his
father, sir Henry Liddel, of llavensworth castle, who in
1711 took Mr. Balguy into his family, and bestowed upon
him the donative of Lamesly and Tanfield in that county.
For the first four years after he had obtained thissmall preferment, he did not intermit one week without composing
a new sermon and desfrous that so excellent an example
should be followed by his son, he destroyed almost his
whole stock, and committed, at one time, two hundred and
fifty to the flames. In July 1715, he married Sarah,
daughter of Christopher and Sarah Broomhead of Sheffield. She was born in 1686, and by her he had only a
son, the late Dr. Thomas Balguy, archdeacon of Winchester. After his marriage he left sir Henry Liddel' s family,
and lived at a house not far distant, called Cox close, where
he enjoyed, for many years, the friendship of George
Liddel, esq. member for Berwick-upon-Tweed, a younger
son of sir Henry, who usually resided at Raven sworth
castle. The first occasion of Mr. Balguy’s appearance as
an author, was afforded by the Bangorian controversy. In
1718 he published, without his name, “Silvius’s examination of certain doctrines lately taught and defended by the.
llev. Mr. Stebbing;
” and, in the following year, “Silvius’s
letter to the Rev. Dr, Sherlock.
” Both of these performances were written in vindication of bishop Hoadly. Mr.
Stehbing having written against these pamphlets, Mr. Balguy, in 1720, again appeared from the press, in the cause
of the-bishop, in a tract entitled “Silvius’s defence of a
dialogue between a Papist and a Protestant, in answer to
the Rev. Mr. Stebbing; to which are added several remarks
and observations upon that author’s manner of writing.
”
This also being answered by Mr. Stebbing, Mr. Balguy
had prepared a farther defence but Dr. Hoadly prevailed
Upon him to suppress it, on account of the public’s having
grown weary of the controversy, and the unwillingness of
the booksellers to venture upon any new works relating to
it, at their own risk, For a different reason the bishop
persuaded him, though with difficulty, to abstain from printing
another piece which he had written, called “A letter to
Dr. Clarke/' of whom, through his whole life, he was a great
admirer. In 1726 he published
” A letter to a deist cocerning the beauty and excellence of Moral Virtue, and the
support and improvement which it receives from the Christian revelation.“In this treatise he has attacked, with the
greatest politeness, and with equal strength of reason, some
of the principles advanced by lord Shaftesbury, in his
” Inquiry concerning Virtue.“On the 25th of January,
1727-8, Mr. Balguy was collated, by bishop Hoadly, to a
prebend in the church of Salisbury, among the advantages
of which preferment was the right of presenting to four
livings, and of presenting alternately to two others. The
best of them did not fall in his life-time. But two
small livings were disposed of by him one to the Rev.
Christopher Robinson, who married his wife’s sister; the
other to his own son. In 1727 or 1728, he preached an
assize sermon at Newcastle-upon-Tyne, the subject of
which was party spirit. It was printed by order of the
judges, and either inscribed or dedicated to Dr. Talbot,
bishop of Durham.
” The foundation of Moral Goodness,
or a farther inquiry into the original of our idea of Virtue,“was published by him in 1728, This performance, which
is written in a very masterly and candid manner, was in,
answer to Mr. Hutcheson’s
” Inquiry into the original of
our ideas of Beauty and Virtue“and its design is to shew
that moral goodness does not depend solely upon instincts
and affections, but is grounded on the unalterable reason of
things. Mr. Balguy acquired, about this time, the friendship of Dr. Talbot, bishop of Durham, for which he was
chiefly indebted to Dr. llundle, afterwards bishop of Derry
though something, perhaps, might be due to his acquaintance with Dr. Benson, Dr. Seeker, and Dr. Butler. Through
the assistance of his friends in the chapter of Durham, supported by the good offices of bishop Talbot, he obtained,
on the 12th of August 1729, the vicarage of North-AJlerton in Yorkshire, at that time worth only 270l. a year, on
which preferment he continued to his death. This was, in
some measure, his own fault, for he neglected all the usual
methods of recommending himself to his superiors. He had
many invitations from Dr. Blackburne, archbishop of York,
and Dr. Chandler, bishop of Durham but he constantly
refused to accept of them. In the same year he published
”The second part of the foundation of Moral Goodness
illustrating and enforcing the principles and reasonings
contained in the former being an answer to certain remarks communicated by a gentleman to the author.“The
writer of these remarks was lord Darcy. His next publication was
” Divine Rectitude or, a brief inquiry concerning the Moral Perfections of the Deity, particularly in
respect of Creation and Providence.“A question then
much agitated was, concerning the first spring of action in
the Deity. This is asserted by our author to be rectitude,
while Mr. Grove contended that it is wisdom, and Mr.
Bayes, a dissenting minister of Tunbridge, that it is benevolence. The difference between Mr. Grove and Mr. Balguy was chiefly verbal but they both differed materially
from Mr. Bayes, as they supposed that God might have
ends in view, distinct from, and sometimes interfering with
the happiness of his creatures. The essay on divine rectitude was followed by
” A second letter to a deist, concerning a late book, entitled ‘ Christianity as old as the Creation,’ more particularly that chapter which relates to Dr.
Clarke.“To this succeeded
” The law of Truth, or the
obligations of reason essential to all religion to which are
prefixed some remarks supplemental to a late tract entitled
“Divine Rectitude.
” All the treatises that have been
mentioned (excepting the assize sermon, and the pieces which were written in the Bangorian controversy) were
collected, after having gone through several separate editions, by Mr. Balguy, into one volume, and published
with a dedication to bishop Hoadly. This dedication was
reprinted in the late edition of the works of that prelate,
together with two letters of the bishop relating to it, one to
Mr. Balguy, and the other to lady Sundon. The greatest
regard for our author is expressed by Dr. Hoadly in both
these letters, and he acknowledges the pleasure it gave him
to receive the sincere praises of a man whom he so highly
esteemed. In 1741 appeared Mr. Balguy’s “Essay on
Redemption,
” in which he explains the doctrine of the
atonement in a manner similar to that of Dr. Taylor of
Norwich, but Hoadly was of opinion he had not succeeded.
This, and his volume of sermons, iittluding six which had
been published before, were the last pieces committed by
him to the press . A posthumous volume was afterwards
printed, which contained almost the whole of the sermons
he left behind him. Mr, Balguy may justly he reckoned
among the divines and writers who rank with Clarke and
Hoadly, in maintaining what they term the cause of rational
religion and Christian liberty. His tracts will be allowed
to be masterly in their kind, by those who may not entireJy
agree with the philosophical principles advanced in them
and his sermons have long been held in esteem, as some of
the best in the English language. He was remarkable for
his moderation to dissenters of every denomination, not excepting even Roman Catholics, though no man had a
greater abhorrence of popery. Among the Presbyterians
and Quakers he had a number of friends, whom he loved
and valued, and with several of them he kept up a correspondence of letters as well as visits. Among other dissenters of note, he was acquainted with the late lord Barrington, and Philips Glover, esq. of Lincolnshire, author of
an “Inquiry concerning Virtue and Happiness,
” published
after his decease in From two letters of bishop Hoadly to
Mr. Balguy, it appears that both the bishop and Dr. Clarke
were exceedingly fearful of any thing’s being published
which might be prejudicial to the doctor’s interest so that
he could not then (1720) have come to the resolution
which he afterwards formed, of declining farther preferment, rather than repeat his subscription to the thirty-nine
articles. The solicitude of Dr. Hoadly and Dr. Clarke to
prevent Mr. Balguy’s intended publication, was the more
remarkable, as it did not relate to the Trinity, or to any
obnoxious point in theology; but to the natural immortality
of the soul, and such philosophical questions as might have
been deemed of an innocent and indifferent nature.
”
, a very ingenious metaphysician and natural philosopher, was born in 1686, or 1687, at Old Aberdeen, in Scotland, of which city
, a very ingenious metaphysician
and natural philosopher, was born in 1686, or 1687, at Old
Aberdeen, in Scotland, of which city his father was a merchant, and educated in king’s college there. His principal employment was that of a private tutor to young gentlemen; and among other of his pupils were lord Grey,
lord Blantyre, and Mr. Hay of Drummeizier. About
1724, he married the daughter of Mr. Mebane, a clergyman in the shire of Berwick. A few years after he published in 4to, “An Enquiry into the nature of the human
Soul, wherein its immateriality is evinced from the principles of reason and philosophy;
” without date. In Matho:
sive, Cosmotheoria puerilis, Dialogus. In quo prima elementa de mundi ordine et ornatu proponuntur, &c.
”
This was afterwards greatly enlarged, and published in
English, in two volumes, 8vo. In 1750 was published,
“An Appendix to his Enquiry into the nature of the human Soul
” wherein he endeavours to remove some difficulties, which had been started against his notions of the
“vis inertias
” of matter, by Maclaurin, in his “Account
of Sir Isaac Newton’s Philosophical Discoveries.
” To
this piece Mr. Baxter prefixed a dedication to Mr. John
Wilkes, afterwards so well known in the political world,
with whom he had commenced an acquaintance abroad.
He died this year, April the 23d, after suffering for some
months under, a complication of disorders, of which the
gout was the chief, and was buried in the family vault of
Mr. Hay, at Whittingham.
, a French chemist, was born in 1686, and destined by his friends for the profession of theology,
, a French chemist, was born in 1686,
and destined by his friends for the profession of theology,
but the accidentally meeting with a book of chemistry, determined him to make that science the principal pursuit of
his life. From 1718 to 1732, he was employed as the
compiler of the “Gazette de France.
” He translated
Schlutter’s work on the “Fusions of Ores, and on Founderies,
” and published it in L'Art de la Teinture des Laines et EtofTes de Laines,
”
Memoirs of the Academy of Sciences,
” and some to the
royal society of London, of which he was elected a fellow
in 1740. He died at Paris in 1766.
as the son of a considerable maltster of Romsey, in the county of Southampton, at which place he was born in 1686. He was bred to the Jaw under an eminent attorney, and
, a poetical and dramatic writer, was
the son of a considerable maltster of Romsey, in the
county of Southampton, at which place he was born in
1686. He was bred to the Jaw under an eminent attorney,
and was afterwards steward and secretary to the Hon. William Blathwayt, esq. a celebrated courtier in the reign of
king William, and who enjoyed great preferments in that
and the subsequent reign. These are the only particulars
of his life which have been handed down, and are what he
inserted in his “Poetical Register,
” where he also informs
us that he was a great admirer of poets. He died May 8,
1744. His admiration of poetry, although it could not
make him a poet, led him to inquire into poetical history,
and gradually produced his “Poetical Register, or Lives
and Characters of the English dramatic poets,
” and
” The Soldier’s Last Stake,“that,
according to Whincop, Dr. Sewel, who was by no means
remarkable for ill-nature, on reading his
” Love in a Wood,"
wrote the following very severe lines in the title-page:
, born in 1686, at Paris, was the son of Guy Carre“, maitre des requetes.
, born in
1686, at Paris, was the son of Guy Carre“, maitre des
requetes. He was but twenty-five when he purchased a
counsellor’s place in the parliament, and acquired some
degree of credit in that situation by his wit and exterior
accomplishments. He had, by his own account, given
himself up to all manner of licentiousness, for which his
conscience frequently checked him, and although he endeavoured to console himself with the principles of infidelity, his mind was still harassed, when accident or design led him to visit the tomb of M. Paris the deacon, September 7, 1731, with the crowd which, from various motives, were assembled there. If we may believe his own
account, he went merely to scrutinize, with the utmost
severity, the (pretended) miracles wrought there, but felt
himself, as he says, suddenly struck and overwhelmed by
a thousand rays of light, which illuminated him, and, from
an infidel, he immediately became a Christian, but in truth
was devoted from that moment to fanaticism, with the same
violence and impetuosity of temper which had before led
him into the most scandalous excesses. In 1732 he was
involved in a quarrel which the parliament had with the
court, and was, with others, banished to Auvergne. Here
he formed a plan for collecting the proofs of the miracles
wrought at the tomb of the abbe Paris, making them clear
to demonstration, as he called it, and presenting them to
the king. At his return to Paris, he prepared to put this
plan in execution, went to Versailles, July 29, 1737, and
presented the king with a quarto volume magnificently
bound, which he accompanied with a speech. In consequence of this step Montgeron was sent to thebastile, then
confined some months in a Benedictine abbey belonging
to the diocese of Avignon, removed soon after to Viviers,
and carried from thence to be shut up in the citadel of
Valence, where he died in 1754, aged sixty-eight. The
work which he presented to the king is entitled
” La Verite
des Miracles operes par l'Intercession de M. de Paris,“&c.
4to. This first volume by M. Montgeron has been followed
by two more, and he is said also to have left a work in ms.
against the incredulous, written while he was a prisoner.
De Montgeron would, however, have scarcely deserved a
place here, if bishop Douglas, in his
” Criterion," had not
bestowed so much pains on examining the pretended miracles which he records, and thus rendered his history an
object of some curiosity.
, son of the rev. Richard Tickell, was born in 1686 at Bridekirk in Cumberland; and in April 1701 became
, son of the rev. Richard Tickell,
was born in 1686 at Bridekirk in Cumberland; and in April
1701 became a member of Queen’s college, in Oxford; in
1708 he was made M. A. and two years afterwards was
chosen fellow; for which, as he did not comply with the
statutes by taking orders, he obtained a dispensation from,
the crown. He held his fellowship till 1726, and then vacated it by marrying in that year, at Dublin. Tickell was
not one of those scholars who wear away their lives in
closets; he entered early into the world, and was long busy
in public affairs, in which he was initiated under the patronage of Addison, whose notice he is said to have gained
by his verses in praise of “Rosamond.
” He produced
another piece of the same kind at the appearance of
“Cato,
” with equal skill, but not equal happiness. When
the ministers of queen Anne were negociating with France,
Tickell published “The Prospect of Peace,
” a poem, of
which the tendency was to reclaim the nation from the
pride of conquest to the pleasures of tranquillity. Mr.
Addison, however he hated the men then in power, suffered his friendship to prevail over the public spirit, and
gave in the “Spectator
” such praises of Tickell’s poem,
that when, after having long wished to peruse it, Dr. Johnson laid hold on it at last, he thought it unequal to the
honours which it had received, and found it a piece to be
approved rather than admired. But the hope excited by a
work of genius, being general and indefinite, is rarely
gratified. It was read at that time with so much favour
that six editions were sold. At the arrival of king George
he sung “The Royal Progress;
” which, being inserted in
the *' Spectator,“is well known. The poetical incident of
most importance in Tickell’s life was his publication of
the first book of the
” Iliad,“as translated by himself, in
apparent opposition to Pope’s
” Homer,“of which the first
part made its entrance into the world at the same time.
Addison declared that the rival versions were both good;
but that Tickell’s was the best that ever was made; and with
Addison those wits who were his adherents and followers,
were certain to concur. Pope does not appear to have
been much dismayed;
” for,“says he,
” I have the town,
that is, the mob, on my side.“But he remarks, that it
is common for the smaller party to make up in diligence
what they want in numbers;
” he “appeals to the people
as his proper judges; and if they are not inclined to condemn him, he is in little care about the high-flyers at Button’s.
” Pope did not long think Addison an impartial
judge; for he considered him as the writer of TickelPs
version. The reasons for his suspicion we shall literally
transcribe from Mr. Spence’s collection. “There had
been a coldness between Mr. Addison and me for some
time; and we had not been in company together for a good
while, any where but at Button’s coffee-house, where I
used to see him almost every day. On his meeting me
there, one day in particular, he took me aside, and said
he should be glad to dine with me at such a tavern, if 1
stayed till those people were gone (Budgell and Philips).
We went accordingly; and after dinner Mr. Addison said
* that he had wanted for some time to talk with me; that
his friend Tickell had formerly, whilst at Oxford, translated
the first book of the Iliad; that he designed to print it,
and had desired him to look it over; that he must therefore beg that I would not desire him to look over my first
book, because, if he did, it would have the air of doubledealing.‘ I assured him that < I did not at all take it ill of
Mr. Tickell that he was going to publish his translation;
that he certainly had as much right to translate any author
as myself; and that publishing both was entering on a fair
stage. I then added, that I would not desire him to look
over my first book of the ’ Iliad,' because he had looked
over Mr. Tickeli’s; but could wish to have the benefit of
his observations on my second, which I had then finished,
and which Mr. Tickell had not touched upon.‘ Accordingly I sent him the second book the next morning; and
Mr. Addison a few days after returned it, with very high
commendations. Soon after it was generally known that
Mr. Tickell was publishing the first book of the ’ Iliad,‘ I
met Dr. Young in the street; and, upon our falling into
that subject, the doctor expressed a great deal of surprise
at Tickell’ s having had such a translation so long by him.
He said, that c it was inconceivable to him, and that there
must be some mistake in the matter; that each used to
communicate to the other whatever verses they wrote, even
to the least things; that Tickell could not have been busied
in so long a work there without his knowing something of
the matter; and that he had never heard a single word of
it till on this occasion.' This surprise of Dr. Young, together with what Steele had said against Tickell in relation
to this affair, makes it highly probable that there was some
underhand dealing in that business; and indeed Tickelt
himself, who is a very fair worthy man, has since in a
manner as good as owned it to me. [When it was introduced into a conversation between Mr. Tickell and Mr.
Pope by a third person, Tickell did not deny it; which,
considering his honour and zeal for his departed friend,
was the same as owning it.]
” Upon these suspicions, with
which Dr. Warburton hints that other circumstances concurred, Pope always, in his “Art of Sinking,
” quotes this
book as the work of Addison. (See Pope, vol. XXV. p. 168.) When the Hanover succession was disputed, Tickeli
gave what assistance his pen would supply. His “Letter
to Avignon
” stands high among party-poems; it expresses
contempt without coarseness, and superiority without insolence. It had the success which it deserved, being five
times printed. He was now intimately united to Mr. Addison, who, when he went into Ireland as secretary to the
lord Sunderland, took him thither, and employed him in
public business; and, when (1717) afterwards he rose to
be secretary of state, made him under-secretary. ' Their
friendship seems to have continued without abatement; for
when Addison died, he left him the charge of publishing
his works, with a solemn recommendation to the patronage
of Craggs. To these works he prefixed an elegy on the
author, which could owe none of its beauties to the assistance which might be suspected to have strengthened or
embellished his earlier compositions; but neither he not
Addison ever produced nobler lines than are contained in
the third and fourth paragraphs, nor is a more sublime or
more elegant funeral poem to be found in the whole compass of English literature. He was afterwards (in June 1724) made secretary to the lords justices of Ireland, a
place of great honour; in which he continued till 1740,
when he died April 23, at Bath. To Tickell cannot be
refused a high place among the minor poets; nor should it
be forgotten that he was one of the contributors to the
“Spectator.
” With respect to his personal character, he
is said to have been a man of gay conversation, at least a
temperate lover of wine and company, and in his domestic
relations without censure.