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George Huddesford : ウィキペディア英語版
George Huddesford

Rev. George Huddesford (1749–1809) was a painter and a satirical poet in Oxford. Huddesford published a number of works. His first was described by Fanny Burney as a "vile poem" as it revealed that she had written the novel, ''Evelina''.〔
==Life==
Huddesford was baptized at St. Mary Magdalen, Oxford, on 7 December 1749. His father, also George Huddesford, was the president of Trinity College. He attended Winchester College and Trinity College, Oxford. His elder brother, William, was to become a leading creator of the Ashmolean Museum.
Huddesford left his father's college and became a fellow of New College in 1771. Huddesford resigned the fellowship as a result of his marriage a year later. It was said that Huddesford had married in haste and unwisely driven by youthful enthusiasm for his prospective wife.
Huddesford was an amateur painter and was a student of Joshua Reynolds after he left Oxford. Huddesford was able to have several paintings exhibited at the Royal Academy before 1775. He had carried out several paintings in oil including a full length portrait of George Lee, the Earl of Lichfield. Joshua Reynolds in turn captured Huddesford in a painting that Huddesford had commissioned,〔W. P. Courtney, ‘Huddesford, George (bap. 1749, d. 1809)’, rev. S. C. Bushell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 (accessed 6 February 2010 )〕 with his good friend John C. Bampfylde and also complete a painting of Mrs Huddesford.〔
His satire 'Warley, A Satire' was published anonymously in 1778 and was dedicated to Joshua Reynolds. This work was called a "vile poem" by Fanny Burney as it revealed that she was the author of ''Evelina'', a novel she had published anonymously as well as revealing a pet name that had been given to her by Samuel Johnson. Other satirical poems followed with "the French" and rigged elections as targets of his wordplay. One later work was a collection of poetry by old fellow Winchester College students which was called the "Wiccamical Chaplet".
In 1791, Huddesford wrote a comic verse anonymously on the subject of the death of Thomas Warton (the younger) who had been Professor of poetry in Oxford, and a friend to Samuel Johnson, Reynolds and Edmund Burke. This large poem compares Warton to a college cat and it is titled, "Monody on the Death of Dick, an Academical Cat." The poem is littered with clever puns and allusions.〔(Monody on the Death of Dick, an Academical Cat ), Rev G. Huddesford, 1791, accessed February 2010〕 The painting of him with John Bampfylde shows the two of them admiring a portrait of Thomas Warton who was master of Winchester College.〔 Huddesford and Bampfylde were close friends, but their relationship was destroyed when Bampfylde was arrested for breaking windows in order to further his affection for Reynold's niece. His good friend was eventually sent to a mental asylum where he was kept for twenty years. It is said that Bampfylde regained his sanity but died of tuberculosis shortly after reclaiming his freedom.〔(Reynolds and the Reproductive print ), tate.org, accessed February 2010〕〔Leslie Stephen, ‘Bampfylde, John Codrington Warwick (1754–1796)’, rev. S. C. Bushell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 (accessed 6 February 2010 )〕
Huddesford joined the church in the six years before his death in London. His connections had brought him the living of Loxley in Warwickshire and "Sir George Whelkers Chapel" in London.

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