MALLET, DAVID,
a poet and miscellaneous writer, was born at Crieff, in
Perthshire, about 1700. His father, said to have been a
descendant of the proscribed clan Gregor, was named James
Malloch, and kept a small public-house in that town. It is
uncertain where he got his early education, but he appears to
have studied for some time under a professor Ker in Aberdeen,
and during his residence in that city, he wrote a pastoral and a
few other short pieces, which attracted some notice. He
afterwards removed to Edinburgh, and in 1720 was employed as a
tutor in the family of a Mr. Home of that city. At the same time
he attended the university, and in 1723 he was recommended by
the professors as tutor to the two sons of the duke of Montrose,
with whom he made the tour of Europe.
On their return to London, he
continued to reside in the family of the duke, through whom he
got introduced to the best society of the day. He now began to
cultivate his poetical talents with great assiduity. In July
1724 he published in Aaron Hill’s ‘Plain Dealer,’ No. 36, his
beautiful ballad of ‘William and Margaret,’ which at once
procured him a high poetical reputation. On settling in London
he had Anglicised his name to Mallet. Having, says Dr. Johnson,
“by degrees cleared his tongue from his native pronunciation, so
as to be no longer distinguished as a Scot, he seemed inclined
to disencumber himself from all adherences of his original, and
took upon him to change his name from Scotch Malloch to
English Mallet, without any imaginable reason of
preference which the eye or ear can discover.” Dennis, the
Critic, used in derision to call him Moloch, which was possibly
one reason for the change. In 1728 he published a poem, entitled
‘
The Excursion,’ being a series of landscape descriptions in
blank verse, in the style of Thomson’s Seasons, but greatly
inferior to that noble poem. In 1731 he produced a tragedy,
entitled ‘Eurydice,’ which was acted at Drury Lane theatre, but
without success.
His employment as tutor in the
family of the duke of Montrose having come to an end, he went to
reside with a Mr. Knight at Gosfield, it is supposed, as a
teacher. About this time he formed an acquaintance with Pope,
and to court the favour OF THAT EMINENT POET, HE PUBLISHED HIS
POEMS ON ‘Verbal Criticism.’ Pope introduced him to Lord
Bolingbroke, and he was soon after appointed under secretary to
Frederick, prince of Wales, at that time at variance with his
father, with a salary of £200 a-year. In 1739, his tragedy of
‘Mustapha’ was produced, and owed its temporary success to some
political allusions in it to the king and Sir Robert Walpole. To
serve and gratify his patron, the prince, he exhibited Sir
Robert under the character of Rustan the vizier, and the king as
Solyman the Magnificent. On the first night of its
representation the heads of the opposition attended, and by
their plaudits sustained the performance throughout. In the
following year, in conjunction with Thomson, he wrote, by
command of the prince, the masque of ‘Alfred,’ in honour of the
birthday of his royal highness’ eldest daughter. The same year
(1740) he wrote a life of Bacon, prefixed to an edition of his
works, which was of very little merit, and is now forgotten. In
1747 he published his ‘Hermit, or Amyntor and Theodora,’ a poem
which has been praised by Johnson for copiousness of language
and vigour of sentiment, and censured by Warton for nauscous
affectation.
On the death of Pope in 1744,
Mallet, who was indebted to him for his introduction to Lord
Bolingbroke, was by the latter employed to defame the character
of his former friend, who, in a letter to Mr. Knight had once
thus kindly spoken of him: “To prove to you how little essential
to friendship I hold letter-writing, I have not yet written to
Mr. Mallet, whom I love and esteem greatly, nay, whom I know to
have as tender a heart, and that feels a friendly remembrance as
long as any man.” Mallet performed his ungracious task with the
utmost malignity, in his preface to the revised edition of
Bolingbroke’s ‘Patriot King,’ Pope’s offence being that he had
allowed the first version of that work to be surreptitiously
printed. Bolingbroke rewarded him with a bequest of all his
writings, published and unpublished, and Mallet immediately
began to prepare them for the press. “His conduct,” says
Chalmers, “at the very outset of this business affords another
illustration of his character. Francklin, the printer, to whom
many of the political pieces written during the opposition to
Walpole, had been given, as he supposed, in perpetuity, laid
claim to some compensation for those. Mallet allowed his claim,
and the question was referred to arbitrators, who were empowered
to decide upon it, by an instrument signed by the parties; but
when they decided unfavourable to Mr. Mallet, he refused to
yield to the decision, and the printer was thus deprived of the
benefit of the award, by not having insisted upon bonds of
arbitration, to which Mallet had objection as degrading to a man
of honour. He then proceeded, with the help of Millar, the
bookseller, to publish all he could find; and so sanguine was he
in his expectations that he rejected the offer of £3,000 which
Millar offered him for the copyright, although he was, at this
time, so distressed for money that he was forced to borrow some
of Millar to pay the stationer and printer. The work at last
appeared in 5 vols. 4to, and Mallet had soon reason to repent
his refusal of the bookseller’s offer, as this edition was not
sold off in twenty years. As these volumes contained many bold
attacks on revealed religion, they brought much obloquy on the
editor, and even a presentment was made of them by the grand
jury of Westminster.”
In the beginning of 1757 Mallet
was hired by the Newcastle administration to assist in directing
the public indignation, for the disgrace brought on the British
arms in the affair of Minorca, towards the unfortunate Admiral
Byng; and, accordingly, while that officer was on his trial, he
wrote a letter of accusation, under the character of “A Plain
Man,” which, printed on a large sheet, was circulated with great
industry. “The price of blood,” says Dr. Johnson, “was a pension
which he retained till his death.” Mallet was unprincipled
enough to accept of a legacy of £1,000 left by Sarah duchess of
Marlborough at her death in 1744, as the price of a Life of her
illustrious husband, of which he never wrote a line. Besides
this bequest, he received also an annual sum from the second
duke, to encourage him to proceed with it, but he never even
commenced the work.
On Lord Bute becoming premier,
Mallet wrote his ‘Truth in Rhyme.’ He also wrote ‘Edwin and
Emma,’ a ballad. His tragedy of ‘Elvira,’ produced at Drury Lane
in 1763, was written with the design of promoting the political
views of the new administration. As a recompense, he was
appointed keeper of the Book of Entries for ships in the port of
London. He died April 21, 1765. A collected edition of his poems
was published by himself in three vols. In 1759; but most of his
writings are now only known by name. He was an avowed infidel,
and a venal writer of the very worst description. He was twice
married. Of his first wife, by whom he had several children,
nothing is known. One daughter, named Cilesia, who married an
Italian of rank, and died at Genoa in 1790, wrote a tragedy
called “Almida,’ which was acted at Drury Lane. His second wife
was a Lucy Elstob, a freethinker like himself, the daughter of
Lord Carlisle’s steward, with whom he received a considerable
fortune.