Hood, Alexander, Viscount Bridport (1726–1814)
Alexander Hood, Viscount Bridport (1726–1814): A cousin of the Captain of the Mars, Vice Admiral of England and Commander of the Channel Fleet 1795–1800.
Alexander Hood, Viscount Bridport (1726–1814): A cousin of the Captain of the Mars, Vice Admiral of England and Commander of the Channel Fleet 1795–1800.
Alexander Hood (1758–98): Naval officer, Captain of the Mars, in which Tom Southey served. Killed 21 April 1798 when the Mars captured the French vessel L’Hercule. Hood and two of his brothers were later the subject of a memorial inscription by Southey.
William Hone (1780–1842): Radical satirist, journalist and bookseller. He was tried on three successive days, 18–20 December 1817, for blasphemous and seditious libel, but was acquitted after conducting his own defence, speaking for about seven hours on all three days. His The Political House that Jack Built (1819) was one of the most famous and bestselling satires of its day. In this phase of his career Southey regarded Hone with contempt and was anxious to see him jailed or transported.
Samuel Holworthy (c. 1785–1838): Anglican clergyman, Vicar of St John the Baptist, Croxall, 1809–1838. In 1811 he married Diana Sarah (d. 1857), daughter of the Jamaican plantation owner Nathaniel Bayly (1726–1798, Hist P), MP for Abingdon 1770–1774 and Westbury 1774–1779. In 1821 Holworthy sent Southey a copy of his Poems, by a Clergyman, published earlier in the same year.
See Fox, Elizabeth Vassal (1771–1845)
See Fox, Henry Richard (1773–1840)
James Hogg (1770–1835): A shepherd by upbringing, Hogg taught himself to read and write and became an admirer of the verse of Burns. Scott employed him to help compile his collection of ballads, Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. Hogg published a collection of poems, The Mountain Bard, in 1807, and another, The Forest Minstrel, in 1810. A fringe member of the Edinburgh literary set, Hogg communicated news of forthcoming critical reviews to Southey, and was himself featured, mockingly, in Blackwoods Magazine.
Edward Hogg (1783–1848): Doctor at Hendon and travel writer. With Paul Moon James he planned the idea of an edition of the works of the Bristol poet, William Isaac Roberts, which appeared in 1811. Southey was sympathetic to the project and agreed to promote the book amongst his friends and colleagues.
Septimus Hodson (1768–1833): Born in Huntingdon, the son of Robert Hodson (d. 1803), Rector of Huntingdon. Educated at Caius College, Cambridge 1779–1784, he was ordained in 1787 and was perpetual curate of Little Raveley 1787–1833 and Rector of Thrapston 1789–1828; he was appointed chaplain-in-ordinary to George IV in 1788 and chaplain of the Orphan Asylum in Lambeth in 1789. He was dismissed from the latter two posts in 1797 when it became known that he had assaulted a thirteen-year-old child at the Asylum. He married Margaret Hodson as his fourth wife in 1826.
Margaret Hodson (née Holford; c. 1778–1852): Poet and translator. Born in Chester, she was the eldest daughter of Allen Holford (c. 1755–1788) and his wife Margaret (c. 1761–1834), a poet, playwright and Minerva Press novelist. Margaret Hodson married, as his fourth wife, the Anglican clergyman, Septimus Hodson in 1826. She wrote prolifically as a child and published her first work, the anonymous metrical romance Wallace, or, The Fight of Falkirk, in 1809.