Charles Swain (poet)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Charles Swain (4 January 1801 – 22 September 1874) was an English poet and engraver, born in
Manchester Manchester () is a city in Greater Manchester, England. It had a population of 552,000 in 2021. It is bordered by the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east, and the neighbouring city of Salford to the west. The t ...
. He was honorary professor of poetry at the
Manchester Royal Institution The Royal Manchester Institution (RMI) was an England, English learned society founded on 1 October 1823 at a public meeting held in the Exchange Room by Manchester merchants, local artists and others keen to dispel the image of Manchester as a ...
, and in 1856 was granted a
civil list pension Pensions in the United Kingdom, whereby United Kingdom tax payers have some of their wages deducted to save for retirement, can be categorised into three major divisions - state, occupational and personal pensions. The state pension is based on ...
. His friends included
Robert Southey Robert Southey ( or ; 12 August 1774 – 21 March 1843) was an English poet of the Romantic school, and Poet Laureate from 1813 until his death. Like the other Lake Poets, William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Southey began as a ra ...
. Swain's epitaph for
John Horsefield John Horsefield (18 July 1792 – 6 March 1854) was an English handloom weaver and amateur botanist after whom the daffodil ''Narcissus'' 'Horsfieldii' is named. Horsefield had little formal schooling, and acquired most of his botanical ...
is noted by
English Heritage English Heritage (officially the English Heritage Trust) is a charity that manages over 400 historic monuments, buildings and places. These include prehistoric sites, medieval castles, Roman forts and country houses. The charity states that i ...
as an element of their rationale for listing Horsefield's tomb as a
Grade II In the United Kingdom, a listed building or listed structure is one that has been placed on one of the four statutory lists maintained by Historic England in England, Historic Environment Scotland in Scotland, in Wales, and the Northern Irel ...
monument. Charles Swain was born to an English father and French mother in Every Street, Manchester, England, on 4 January 1801, He received an education and began work when aged 15 as a clerk for Tavaré and Horrocks, a dye-works that was part-owned by a maternal uncle. He married Ann Glover in January 1827 and the couple went on to have five daughters and a son, of which four daughters lived to become adults. Swain left his job at the dye-works after fourteen years to become a bookseller. That venture did not last and two years later he joined Lockett & Co., a firm of engravers and lithographers in Manchester. He had artistic interests – as indicated by his memoir of
Henry Liverseege Henry Liverseege (4 September 1802 – 13 January 1832) was an English genre painter of literary and folklore subjects. Life and work Early years Henry Liverseege was born in Manchester, the son of Edmund Liverseege, a joiner. He was a weakly ...
, the Mancunian artist, and books such as ''A Cabinet of Poetry and Romance: Female Portraits from the Writings of Byron and Scott'' (1845) – and he went on to buy the engraving department from the firm and to run it himself. By the time the bookselling venture ended, Swain was already friends with Robert Southey and with other literary names. His poems had been published in journals from 1822 onwards and he had also had various more substantial works published, such as ''Metrical Essays on Subjects of History and Imagination'' (1827), ''Beauties of the Mind: a Poetical Sketch with Lays Historical and Romantic'' (1831) and ''The Mind'' (1832). Around 1840 he became part of a working class poetry collective known as the Sun Inn Group, which met at a pub on Long Millgate in Manchester. Other notable members included
Samuel Bamford Samuel Bamford (28 February 1788 – 13 April 1872) was an English radical reformer and writer born in Middleton, Lancashire. He wrote on the subject of northern English dialect and wrote some of his better known verse in it. Biography Bamford ...
,
John Critchley Prince John Critchley Prince (1808–1866) was an English labouring-class poet. His ''Hours of the Muses'' went through six editions. Life Born at Wigan, Lancashire, on 21 June 1808, Prince was the son of a poor reed-maker for weavers. He learned to read ...
,
John Bolton Rogerson John Bolton Rogerson (1809–1859) was an English poet. He worked in a mercantile firm and afterwards with a solicitor in Manchester; kept a bookshop from 1834 to 1841; contributed to newspapers, and subsequently engaged in journalistic and othe ...
, Robert Rose, Elijah Ridings, and
Isabella Banks Isabella Banks (; 25 March 1821 – 4 May 1897), also known as Mrs G. Linnaeus Banks, was an English novelist and poet. Born in Manchester, England, Banks is most widely remembered today for her book '' The Manchester Man'', published in 18 ...
. Swain contributed to their only published anthology, ''The Festive Wreath'' (1842), before the Group disbanded in 1843. Swain died on 22 September 1874 as the result of an
epileptic seizure An epileptic seizure, informally known as a seizure, is a period of symptoms due to abnormally excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain. Outward effects vary from uncontrolled shaking movements involving much of the body with los ...
. He had been living at Prestwich Park,
Prestwich Prestwich ( ) is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of Bury, Greater Manchester, England, north of Manchester city centre, north of Salford and south of Bury. Historically part of Lancashire, Prestwich was the seat of the ancient parish o ...
, at the time, in a house bought for him by friends. His wife died four years later.


Famous work

*''Metrical essays on subjects of history and imagination'' (1827) *''Beauties of the mind: A poetical sketch; with Lays historical and romantic'' (1831) *''Dryburgh Abbey, the burial place of Sir Walter Scott: A vision'' (1832) *''Memoir of Henry Liverseege'' (1835) *''Cabinet of poetry and romance'' (1844) *''Rhymes for childhood'' (1846) *''Dramatic chapters: poems and songs'' (1847) *''English melodies'' (1849) *''Letters of Laura d'Auverne'' (1853) *''Poems'' (1857) *''Art and Fashion: with other sketches, songs, and poems'' (1863) *''Songs and ballads'' (1867) *''Dryburgh Abbey and other poems'' (1868) *''Selections'' (1906) (posthumous)


References

Notes Citations


External links


Charles Swain (1801–1874) at ''Spenser and the Tradition: English Poetry 1579–1830''IMSLP
{{DEFAULTSORT:Swain, Charles 1801 births 1874 deaths People from Prestwich Deaths from epilepsy People with epilepsy Poets with disabilities Neurological disease deaths in England English engravers English male poets 19th-century English poets 19th-century English male writers