Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 61.djvu/56

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pathetically in his ‘English Bards and Scotch Reviewers:’

Unhappy White! while life was in its spring
And thy young muse just shook her joyous wing,
The spoiler came; and all thy promise fair
Has sought the grave, to sleep for ever there.
'Twas thine own genius gave the final blow
And helped to plant the wound that laid thee low.

Byron also wrote of White to Dallas on 27 Aug. 1811: ‘Setting aside his bigotry, he surely ranks next Chatterton. It is astonishing how little he was known; and at Cambridge no one thought or heard of such a man till his death rendered all notice useless. For my own part I should have been proud of such an acquaintance; his very prejudices were respectable.’ But Southey's charitable judgment, which Byron echoed, has not stood the test of time. White's verse shows every mark of immaturity. In thought and expression it lacks vigour and originality. A promise of weirdness in an early and prophetic lyric, ‘A Dance of Consumptives’ (from an unfinished ‘Eccentric Drama’), was not fulfilled in his later compositions. The metrical dexterity which is shown in the addition to Waller's ‘Go, lovely Rose,’ is not beyond a mediocre capacity. Such popularity as White's work has enjoyed is to be attributed to the pathetic brevity of his career and to the fervour of the evangelical piety which inspired the greater part of his verse and prose.

[Southey's Memoir prefixed to Remains, 1807; Brown's Nottinghamshire Worthies, pp. 283–99; Julian's Dict. of Hymnology.]

S. L.

WHITE, HUGH (fl. 1107?–1155?), chronicler. [See Hugh.]

WHITE, JAMES (1775–1820), author of ‘Falstaff's Letters,’ baptised on 7 April 1775, was the son of Samuel White of Bewdley in Worcestershire. Born in the same year as Charles Lamb, he was educated with him at Christ's Hospital, where he was admitted on 19 Sept. 1783 on the presentation of Thomas Coventry. He left the school on 30 April 1790 in order to become a clerk in the treasurer's office. After remaining for some years in that position he founded an advertising agency at 33 Fleet Street, which is still carried on. To this business he united that of agent for provincial newspapers.

White was the lifelong friend of Charles Lamb. He was introduced by Lamb to Shakespeare's ‘Henry IV,’ and was at once fascinated by the character of Falstaff, whom he frequently impersonated in the company of his friends. By his success in sustaining the character at a masquerade he roused the jealousy of several small actors hired for the occasion, and according to his friend and schoolfellow John Mathew Gutch [q. v.], he was generally known as ‘Sir John’ among his intimates. In 1796 he published ‘Original Letters, &c., of Sir John Falstaff and his Friends’ (London, 8vo). William Ireland's forgery, ‘Vortigern,’ was produced at Drury Lane in the same year, and the ‘Letters’ were prefaced by a dedication in black letter to ‘Master Samuel Irelaunde,’ the forger's father, which was probably written by Lamb. The ‘Letters’ were held in the highest esteem by Lamb, who induced Coleridge to notice them in the ‘Critical Review’ for June 1797, and himself contributed an appreciation of them to the ‘Examiner’ for 5 Sept. 1819. ‘The whole work,’ he wrote, ‘is full of goodly quips and rare fancies, all deeply masked like hoar antiquity.’ Notwithstanding his enthusiasm, which led him to purchase every second-hand copy he found on the booksellers' stalls and present it to a friend in the hope of making a convert, the sale of the ‘Letters’ was inconsiderable, and they brought their author little fame. A second edition appeared in 1797, composed of unsold copies of the first with new title-pages, but the work was not reprinted until 1877, when a new edition was issued with an elaborate memoir (London, 12mo).

White died in London at his house in Burton Crescent, on 13 March 1820. He married a daughter of Faulder the bookseller, and left three children. He was a man of infinite humour, one ‘who carried away with him half the fun of the world when he died’ (Essays of Elia). Lamb always spoke of him with great affection. ‘Jem White,’ he said to Le Grice in 1833, ‘there never was his like. We shall never see such days as those in which he flourished.’ He commemorated White's annual feast to the chimney-sweeps in one of his most familiar essays, and in the essay ‘On some Old Actors’ he gives a pleasant account of White's discomfiture by Dodd the comedian.

The author of ‘Falstaff's Letters’ must be distinguished from James White (d. 1799), scholar and novelist, who was probably a relative. This James White was elected a scholar of Trinity College, Dublin, in 1778, and graduated B.A. in 1780. He was well versed in the Greek language, edited one or two classical works, and wrote three historical novels of some merit. Towards the close of his life his conduct be-