William Julius Mickle (29 September 1734 in Langholm, in Dumfrieshire – 28 October 1788 in Forest Hill) was a Scottish poet.
Son of the minister of
Langholm,
Dumfriesshire, he was for some time a
brewer in
Edinburgh, but failed. He moved to England where he worked as a corrector for the
Clarendon Press at
Oxford. In 1771–75 Mickle lodged at the manor house in
Forest Hill, Oxfordshire
Forest Hill is a village in Forest Hill with Shotover civil parish in Oxfordshire, about east of Oxford. The village which is about above sea level is on the northeastern brow of a ridge of hills. The highest point of the ridge is Red Hill, ...
. Mickle had various literary failures and minor successes until, while at Forest Hill, he produced his translation of the ''
Lusiad'', from the
Portuguese of
Luís de Camões. This was a success that brought him both fame and money.
In 1777 he went to Portugal, where he was received with distinction. In 1784 he published the ballad of ''Cumnor Hall'', which suggested to
Scott
Scott may refer to:
Places Canada
* Scott, Quebec, municipality in the Nouvelle-Beauce regional municipality in Quebec
* Scott, Saskatchewan, a town in the Rural Municipality of Tramping Lake No. 380
* Rural Municipality of Scott No. 98, Saska ...
the writing of ''
Kenilworth''. He is perhaps best remembered, however, by the beautiful lyric, "There's nae luck aboot the Hoose", which, although claimed by others, is almost certainly his.
In 1781 Mickle married Mary Tomkins, the daughter of his former landlord in Forest Hill, and settled in
Wheatley Wheatley may refer to:
Places
* Wheatley (crater), on Venus
* Wheatley, Ontario, Canada
* Wheatley, Hampshire, England
* Wheatley, Oxfordshire, England
** Wheatley railway station
* Wheatley, South Yorkshire, England
* Wheatley, now Ben Rhydding, ...
. He died in 1788 while on a visit to his in-laws, and is buried in Forest Hill churchyard.
[Lobel, 1957, pages 122–134]
References
*
Sources
*
External links
William Julius Mickleat th
Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)*
*
*
*
William Julius Mickle Papers. James Marshall and Marie-Louise Osborn Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
Scottish poets
1735 births
1788 deaths
People from Langholm
Scottish translators
Portuguese–English translators
18th-century British translators
{{UK-poet-stub