Sir Henry Taylor KCMG (1800 –1886) was an English dramatist and poet, Colonial Office official, and man of letters.
Taylor was highly esteemed as a poet and dramatist. Modern literary historians, however, tend to overlook Taylor's accomplishments in verse and drama and emphasize his importance as a literary critic, pointing out that he was a strong advocate for stylistic simplicity, subject matter rooted in common life, and intellectual discipline in poetic composition, placing special importance on clear and reasoned structure.
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Sir Henry Taylor as Rembrandt. By Julia Margaret Cameron |
Taylor published his Autobiography in 1885, which contains portraits of Wordsworth, Southey, Tennyson and Walter Scott. In it, on his own account, he gave Richard Whately's opinion of him as a "resuscitated Bacon", who had better things to do than write verse (which could be left to women).
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