William Thomas Beckford

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William Beckford
William Beckford
William Courtenay, as a boy.
William Courtenay, as a boy.

William Thomas Beckford (1 October 17602 May 1844), usually known as William Beckford, was an English novelist, art critic, travel writer and politician. He was Member of Parliament for Wells from 1784 to 1790[1], for Hindon from 1790 to 1795 and again from 1806 to 1820.[2]

Beckford was born in the family's London home at 22 Soho Square [3]. Aged ten, he inherited a large fortune from his father, a former Lord Mayor of the City of London, William Beckford consisting of £1 million in cash, land at Fonthill (including the Palladian mansion Fonthill Splendens) in Wiltshire, and several sugar plantations in Jamaica. This allowed him to indulge his interest in art and architecture, as well as writing. He was trained by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in music.

At the age of nineteen he met the Hon. William Courtenay, later Viscount Courtenay and 9th Earl of Devon, then ten years old and reputed to have been singularly beautiful. Beckford fell in love with him, a relationship thought to have been largely romantic and sentimental.[citation needed] However, six years later he went into self-imposed exile on continental Europe when he became the subject of (probably unfounded)[citation needed] gossip that accused him of seducing the youth. Having already married the fourth Earl of Aboyne's daughter, Lady Margaret Gordon on May 5, 1783 aged 23, Beckford took his young wife into exile with him. He loved Margaret deeply but she died in childbirth at the age of 24. Beckford never re-married.

Having studied under Sir William Chambers and Alexander Cozens, Beckford journeyed in Italy in 1782 and promptly wrote a book on his travels: Dreams, Waking Thoughts and Incidents (1783). Shortly afterwards came his best-known work, the Gothic novel Vathek (1786), written originally in French and, as he was accustomed to boast, in a single sitting of three days and two nights. There is reason, however, to believe that this was a flight of his imagination. Vathek is an impressive work, full of fantastic and magnificent conceptions, rising occasionally to sublimity. His other principal writings were Memoirs of Extraordinary Painters (1780), a satirical work; and Letters from Italy with Sketches of Spain and Portugal (1835), full of brilliant descriptions of scenes and manners. In 1793 he visited Portugal, where he settled for a period.

Beckford's fame, however, rests as much upon his eccentric extravagances as a builder and collector as upon his literary efforts. In undertaking his buildings he managed to dissipate his fortune (estimated by his contemporaries to give him an income £100,000 a year, which (although probably never exceeding half that) made him very rich. The loss of his Jamaican sugar plantation to James Beckford Wildman was particularly costly. Only £80,000 of his capital remained at his death.

Fonthill Abbey designed for William Beckford by the architect James Wyatt.  Print from John Rutter's Deliniations of Fonthill and its Abbey (1823).
Fonthill Abbey designed for William Beckford by the architect James Wyatt. Print from John Rutter's Deliniations of Fonthill and its Abbey (1823).

The opportunity to purchase the complete library of Edward Gibbon gave Beckford the basis for his own library, and James Wyatt built Fonthill Abbey in which to house this and the owner's art collection. Nelson visited Fonthill Abbey with the Hamiltons in 1800. The house was completed in 1807. Beckford entered parliament as member for Wells and later for Hindon, quitting by taking the Chiltern Hundreds, but he mostly lived in seclusion, spending much of his father's wealth without adding to it, so that the great house he had built became a ruin. In 1822 he sold Fonthill to John Farquhar for £30,000 and moved to Bath where he bought No 20 Lansdown Crescent and No. 1 Lansdown Place West, joining them with a one-storey arch thrown across a driveway. In 1836 he also bought Nos. 18 and 19 Lansdown Crescent (leaving No 18 empty to ensure peace and quiet).

He spent his later years at Lansdown Crescent from where he commissioned architect Henry Goodridge to design a spectacular folly on Landsdown Hill (Lansdown Tower). Now known as Beckford's Tower, this is where he kept many of his treasures. It is now owned by the Bath Preservation Trust and operated by the Beckford Tower Trust as a museum to Beckford; it is also available for hire as a holiday home from the Landmark Trust. The museum contains numerous engravings, chromolithographs of its original interior and a great deal of information about Beckford, in addition to objects related to Beckford and his life including signs and etched glasses advertising "Beckford Blend Scotch Whisky" and the skull and femur of a horse, believed to be Beckford's.

After his death at his residence in Lansdown Crescent on May 2, 1844 aged 84, his body was laid in a sarcophagus placed on an artificial mound, as was the custom of Saxon kings from whom he claimed to be descended. Beckford had wished to be buried in the grounds of Landsdown Tower, but was instead interred at Bath Abbey cemetery in Lyncombe Vale on 11 May 1844. The Tower was sold to a local publican, who turned it into a beer garden. Eventually however it was bought back by the Beckford's elder daughter, the Duchess of Hamilton, who gave the land around it to Walcot parish for consecration as a cemetery in 1848. This enabled Beckford to be re-buried near the Tower that he so loved. His self-designed tomb — a massive sarcophagus of pink polished granite with bronze armorial plaques — now stands on a hillock in the centre of an oval ditch. On one side of his tomb is a quotation from Vathek: "Enjoying humbly the most precious gift of heaven to man - Hope"; and on another these lines from his poem, "A Prayer": Eternal Power! Grant me, through obvious clouds one transient gleam Of thy bright essence in my dying hour." Goodridge designed a Byzantine entrance gateway to the cemetery, flanked by the bronze railings which had surrounded Beckford's original grave in Lyncombe Vale [4].

Beckford left two daughters, the elder of whom (Susan Euphemia) was married to Alexander Hamilton, 10th Duke of Hamilton.

[edit] Other works

  • Biographical Memoirs of Extraordinary Painters (1824)
  • Recollections of the Monasteries of Alcobaca and Batalha (1835)

[edit] External links

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[edit] See also


This article incorporates public domain text from: Cousin, John William (1910). A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London, J.M. Dent & sons; New York, E.P. Dutton.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.angeltowns.com/town/peerage/wcommons2.htm
  2. ^ http://www.angeltowns.com/town/peerage/hcommons3.htm
  3. ^ british-history.ac.uk
  4. ^ page 275 William Beckford 1760-1844:An eye for the Magnificent 2001, Edited by Derek E. Ostergard