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HILL

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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:hill:2f1411166366
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
ad18f77de1ac877858476ee39a4675d1c10e03144e346e0cfa057e4e538cd9b3
Computed Hash
ad18f77de1ac877858476ee39a4675d1c10e03144e346e0cfa057e4e538cd9b3
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ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:43:07
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Verified Text

hill, aaron (1685-1750), english author, was born in london on the 10th of february 1685. he was the son of george hill of malmesbury abbey, wiltshire, who contrived to sell an estate entailed on his son. in his fourteenth year he left westminster school to go to constantinople, where william, lord paget de beaudesert (1637-1713), a relative of his mother, was ambassador. paget sent him, under care of a tutor, to travel in palestine and egypt, and he returned to england in 1703. he was estranged from his patron by the "envious fears and malice of a certain female," and again went abroad as companion to sir william wentworth. on his return home in 1709 he published _a full and just account of the present state of the ottoman empire_, a production of which he was afterwards much ashamed, and he addressed his poem of _camillus_ to charles mordaunt, earl of peterborough. in the same year he is said to have been manager of drury lane theatre and in 1710 of the haymarket. his first play, _elfrid: or the fair inconstant_ (afterwards revised as _athelwold_), was produced at drury lane in 1709. his connexion with the theatre was of short duration, and the rest of his life was spent in ingenious commercial enterprises, none of which were successful, and in literary pursuits. he formed a company to extract oil from beechmast, another for the colonization of the district to be known later as georgia, a third to supply wood for naval construction from scotland, and a fourth for the manufacture of potash. in 1730 he wrote _the progress of wit, being a caveat for the use of an eminent writer_. the "eminent writer" was pope, who had introduced him into _the dunciad_ as one of the competitors for the prize offered by the goddess of dullness, though the satire was qualified by an oblique compliment. a note in the edition of 1729 on the obnoxious passage, in which, however, the original initial was replaced by asterisks, gave hill great offence. he wrote to pope complaining of his treatment, and received a reply in which pope denied responsibility for the notes. hill appears to have been a persistent correspondent, and inflicted on pope a series of letters, which are printed in elwin & courthope's edition (x. 1-78). hill died on the 8th of february 1750, and was buried in westminster abbey. the best of his plays were _zara_ (acted 1735) and _merope_ (1749), both adaptations from voltaire. he also published two series of periodical essays, _the prompter_ (1735) and, with william bond, _the plaindealer_ (1724). he was generous to fellow-men of letters, and his letters to richard savage, whom he helped considerably, show his character in a very amiable light. _the works of the late aaron hill, consisting of letters ..., original poems.... with an essay on the art of acting_ appeared in 1753, and his _dramatic works_ in 1760. his _poetical works_ are included in anderson's and other editions of the british poets. a full account of his life is provided by an anonymous writer in theophilus cibber's _lives of the poets_, vol. v.