- Eneas Sweetland Dallas
Eneas Sweetland Dallas (E. S. Dallas) (1828–1879) was a Scottish
journalist andauthor .E.S. Dallas was the elder son of John Dallas of Jamaica, a planter of Scottish parentage, and his wife Elizabeth (née Baillie), the daughter of the Rev. Angus McIntosh of
Tain and sister of Rev. Caldor McIntosh. He was born in the island ofJamaica in 1828 and was brought toEngland when four years of age. He was educated at theEdinburgh University , where he studied philosophy under Sir William Hamilton, and acquired the habit of applying notions derived from eclecticpsychology to the analysis of aesthetic effects inpoetry ,rhetoric , and thefine art s.His first publication in which he proved his mastery of this line of investigation was entitled "Poetics, an Essay on Poetry," a work which he produced in 1852, when he had taken up his residence in
London . His abilities were destined, however, to be absorbed chiefly in anonymous journalism. He first made his mark in London by sending an article to "The Times ," a critique which by its vigour and profundity secured immediate attention.For many years afterwards he was on
John Thadeus Delane 's brilliant staff. Neither biography, politics,literary criticism , nor any other subject came amiss to his comprehensive intellect. Few men wrote more careful, graceful English, a merit well worth recording.E.S. Dallas also contributed to the "Daily News," the "
Saturday Review (London) ," the "Pall Mall Gazette ," and the "World", and for some time in 1868 edited "Once a Week ." In 1866 he produced two volumes of a projected four-volume work named "The Gay Science," a title borrowed fromProvençal troubadour s. It was an attempt to discover the source in the constitution of the human mind of the pleasure afforded by poetry. The subject was, however, too abstruse for the general reader, and the book did not meet with the attention which it deserved.He acted as a special correspondent for "The Times" at the Paris exhibition of 1867, and again sent interesting letters to "The Times" from
Paris during the siege of 1870. In 1868 he edited an abridgment ofSamuel Richardson 's "Clarissa ." Afterwards he wrote a treatise ongastronomy , based on the famous work ofBrillat-Savarin ; to it he attached the pseudonym of A. Kettner, and the title was "Kettner's Book of the Table, a Manual of Cookery," 1877. More recently he was engaged on a new edition of François de La Rochefoucauld's "Maxims," and he wrote an elaborate article on that work, which was unpublished at the time of his death.In December 1853 he married, according to Scottish law, the well-known actress Miss
Isabella Glyn (then the widow of Edward Wills), and on 12 July 1855 he was again married to her at St. George's, Hanover Square. A separation followed not long after, and the marriage was dissolved in the divorce court on the wife's petition, 10 May 1874.E.S. Dallas died at 88 Newman Street, north of
Oxford Street , London,17 January 1879 , and was buried atKensal Green on 24 January.References
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