Christopher Smart
Christopher Smart (11 April 1722 – 20 May 1771) was an English poet distinguished by his fervent religious verse and innovative form, most notably the ecstatic Jubilate Agno, written during his confinement for mental disturbance, and A Song to David, an intricate ode lauding the biblical king for its rhythmic complexity and spiritual depth.[1][2]
Born in Shipbourne, Kent, to Peter Smart, a steward whose death in 1733 prompted the family's relocation to Durham, Smart received early education at Maidstone Grammar School and Durham School before entering Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, in 1739, where he earned a B.A. in 1744 and a fellowship in 1745.[3][1] His academic verse, including prize-winning poems on divine attributes, foreshadowed his lifelong preoccupation with Christian themes.[3]
Relocating to London in 1749 amid mounting debts and intemperance, Smart married Anna Maria Carnan, daughter of publisher John Newbery, around 1752 and contributed prolifically to periodicals like The Midwife and The Student, while producing translations of Horace and the Psalms, fables for children, and original poetry such as The Hop-Garden.[1][2] His reputation peaked with A Song to David in 1763, yet personal decline followed: episodes of religious fervor, manifesting in public prayers and perceived eccentricity, led to his involuntary commitment in St. Luke's Hospital from 1757 to 1758 and private asylums until 1763.[1][3]
During confinement, Smart composed Jubilate Agno, a litanic fragment pairing lines from "Let" and "For," celebrating creation—including the famed paean to his cat Jeoffry—rediscovered and published in 1939, revitalizing interest in his visionary style.[1] Released but impoverished, he faced further debt imprisonment in King's Bench Prison, where he succumbed to liver disorder, his later hymns and biblical dramas overshadowed until posthumous reevaluation affirmed his place among 18th-century religious poets.[1][3]
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Childhood
Christopher Smart was born on April 11, 1722, in Shipbourne, near Maidstone in Kent, England, on the Fairlawne estate where his father served as steward.[1][3] His father, Peter Smart (1687–1733), came from an old north-country family and managed the property of Christopher Vane, 1st Baron Barnard.[3][4] His mother, Winifred (née Griffiths, d. c. 1766), originated from Radnorshire in Wales, contributing to Smart's later expressed pride in his Welsh ancestry.[1][3] As the youngest of three children and the only son, Smart had two older sisters, Margaret and Mary.[5] The family resided in the Medway Valley during his early years, a region Smart later evoked nostalgically in his poetry, such as in references to "SHIPBOURNE FAIRLAWN."[1] Limited details survive of specific childhood events prior to age eleven, though the family's position on the Vane estate provided modest stability under Peter's employment.[3] Peter Smart's death in 1733 plunged the family into financial debt, prompting Winifred to relocate with her children to County Durham to seek patronage from the Vane family at Raby Castle; Smart was also placed with a relative in nearby Staindrop.[1][3] This upheaval marked the end of Smart's Kentish childhood and initiated reliance on aristocratic support that shaped his subsequent education.[3]Formal Schooling
Smart began his formal education at Maidstone Grammar School in Kent, attending until approximately 1733 when he was eleven years old.[3] Following the death of his father that year, which left the family in financial difficulty, he relocated to County Durham to live with an uncle in Staindrop and enrolled at Durham School, a prominent grammar school.[3][1] Under the headmastership of Richard Dongworth, Smart excelled in classical studies, particularly Latin, and gained early recognition for his verse-making abilities, including composing an amorous poem titled "To Ethelinda" at age thirteen.[4][1] His progress was supported by local patrons, such as Henry Vane, Lord Barnard, whose family estate at Raby Castle provided additional opportunities during vacations that further nurtured his literary interests.[1] These years laid the groundwork for his later academic pursuits, emphasizing rigorous training in Latin and Greek that distinguished him among peers.[6]University Years and Early Influences
Christopher Smart entered Pembroke Hall at the University of Cambridge in 1739, at the age of seventeen, supported by an annual exhibition from his prior schooling at Durham. His proficiency in classical studies was evident early, as he won several prizes and composed Latin verses for the tripos lists over three consecutive years. In 1742, he secured the Craven Scholarship, affirming his academic standing.[1][3] Smart graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in January 1744 and was elected a fellow of Pembroke College in July 1745, a position he retained until after his marriage in 1751. During this period, he divided time between Cambridge and London from 1743 onward, yet continued scholarly pursuits. His university years culminated in the annual Seatonian Prize competitions starting in 1750, which he won consecutively for the first five years with poems extolling attributes of the Supreme Being, such as eternity and immensity. These awards, open to Cambridge M.A. holders, reflected his deepening engagement with theological poetry.[3][1] Early literary outputs at Cambridge included a 1743 Latin translation of Alexander Pope's Ode for Musick, which prompted a commendatory letter from Pope himself, and the commencement of his georgic poem The Hop-Garden. Smart's immersion in classical texts honed his verse in Latin and English, drawing from models like Pindar, Dryden, and Pope, while extensive library borrowings from 1745 reveal interests in poetry, theology, and science. This classical foundation, combined with emerging religious motifs, shaped his distinctive style blending erudition and fervor.[1][3][7]Literary Beginnings and London Period
Arrival in London and Initial Publications
In 1749, Christopher Smart secured a leave of absence from Pembroke Hall, University of Cambridge, and relocated to London, seeking greater literary recognition amid the city's dynamic cultural environment while distancing himself from academic restrictions.[1] He retained his fellowship until 1754, allowing nominal ties to the university despite his primary focus shifting to metropolitan pursuits.[8] Upon establishing himself in London, Smart partnered with publisher John Newbery, editing and contributing extensively to periodicals including The Student (1750–1751) and The Midwife (1750–1753), where he supplied poetry, prose, and satirical content often under pseudonyms like Ebenezer Prittle or Jack Spindle.[3] These efforts introduced his versatile style to a wider audience, blending classical imitation with contemporary commentary on urban life and manners.[1] He also participated in Newbery's "Mrs. Midnight’s Oratory" entertainments, composing songs and recitations for public performance.[1] Smart's initial standalone London volume, Poems on Several Occasions (1752), assembled prior Cambridge compositions such as odes, fables, Latin translations, and the georgic The Hop-Garden, supported by subscribers including David Garrick and Samuel Foote.[3] Concurrently, he released On the Omniscience of the Supreme Being: A Poetical Essay (1752), a devotional work affirming his interest in religious themes through structured verse.[8] By 1753, The Hilliad appeared as a mock-epic satire lampooning rival poet William Hill, showcasing Smart's readiness to engage in literary rivalries.[8]
Contributions to Magazines
Upon relocating to London in the mid-1740s, Christopher Smart supported himself by writing and editing for periodicals, engaging in the competitive Grub Street trade of ephemeral journalism.[1] He collaborated with publisher John Newbery, contributing content to various magazines that blended poetry, essays, songs, and satire to appeal to diverse audiences.[3] In 1750, Smart provided material for The Student, or The Oxford and Cambridge Monthly Miscellany, a periodical targeting university readers with academic and literary pieces.[1] His contributions included verse and prose that reflected his classical training and early poetic ambitions.[1] From 1751 to 1753, Smart edited The Midwife, or The Old Woman's Magazine, a monthly satirical journal to which he supplied roughly fifty octavo pages of content per issue.[9] Under the guise of midwifery advice, the magazine featured travesties, fables, literary criticism, and political commentary, allowing Smart to critique contemporary culture through humorous personas like an elderly midwife.[9] Some of his early fables, later collected, first appeared in its pages.[10] These efforts demonstrated his productivity and adaptability but also immersed him in journalistic rivalries.[1]
Key Early Works and Recognition
Smart gained early notice through extensive contributions to periodicals, editing The Student, or the Oxford and Cambridge Monthly Miscellany (1750–1751), where he published pieces such as "On an Eagle confined in a College-Court" (20 June 1751), and supplying content for The Midwife, or the Old Woman's Magazine (1751–1753) under the pseudonym Mary Midnight, which featured songs, Latin epigrams, and satirical prose.[1] These efforts, often humorous or miscellaneous, showcased his versatility and helped sustain his income amid financial precarity, while associating him with publisher John Newbery.[3] His breakthrough in serious poetry arrived with the Seatonian Prize, a Cambridge University award established in 1750 for the best poem by a Master of Arts on the attributes of the Supreme Being; Smart claimed the inaugural honor that year with On the Eternity of the Supreme Being, a poetical essay emphasizing divine timelessness.[1] He repeated the victory annually from 1750 to 1755, producing works such as On the Immensity of the Supreme Being (1751), which explored God's boundless extent, thereby establishing his reputation for pious, metaphysical verse amid competition from fellow alumni.[1] In 1752, Smart issued Poems on Several Occasions by subscription through Newbery, compiling tripos verses, odes, fables, Latin translations (including his 1743 rendering of Alexander Pope's Ode for Musick on St. Cecilia's Day), and the georgic The Hop-Garden.[3] The latter, in two books of blank verse, depicted hop cultivation in Kent—his native county—as a harmonious blend of rural labor and divine order, drawing on Virgilian models while incorporating local topography and agricultural detail for vivid realism.[3] The volume's subscriber list, boasting figures like Voltaire, Thomas Gray, and David Garrick, signaled broader literary acknowledgment, though it later provoked criticism from John Hill, who deemed Smart's style overwrought. These achievements—prizes totaling £25 annually from the Seatonian and the 1752 collection's reach—positioned Smart as a promising religious and occasional poet by mid-century, bridging academic verse with commercial publication, even as his experimental flair hinted at future innovations.[1][3]Personal Decline and Confinement
Financial and Marital Strains
Smart married Anna Maria Carnan, stepdaughter of the publisher John Newbery, clandestinely in 1752 to retain his remunerative fellowship at Pembroke College, Cambridge, which barred married fellows.[2] The union produced two daughters, Mary Anne in 1753 and Elizabeth in 1754, born while the family resided at Canonbury House in London.[1] Disclosure of the marriage resulted in forfeiture of Smart's fellowship stipend of £30 annually, forcing reliance on sporadic earnings from magazine contributions and translations, which proved inadequate for supporting the household amid London's high living costs.[1] By the mid-1750s, Smart's extravagant expenditures on fine clothing, entertainments, and possibly gambling had accumulated significant debts, necessitating loans from Newbery that strained familial relations.[1] His documented indulgence in heavy drinking further eroded financial stability and domestic harmony, fostering quarrels over fiscal irresponsibility.[2] These pressures manifested in Smart's irregular behavior and public eccentricities by 1756, amid reports of unpaid bills and creditor pursuits that threatened imprisonment.[8] Marital tensions escalated as Anna Maria assumed greater responsibility for the children's welfare, culminating in her relocation with the daughters to Dublin in 1759 and later to Reading, marking a de facto separation by 1763.[1] In response to Smart's ongoing insolvency, she secured legal safeguards against liability for his debts, as evidenced in arrangements tied to Newbery's 1767 will, underscoring the irreparable rift wrought by economic distress.[8]Incarceration in Asylum
In May 1757, Christopher Smart was admitted to St. Luke's Hospital for Lunatics in London by his father-in-law, the publisher John Newbery, following episodes of eccentric religious behavior that included public prostrations and attempts to lead strangers in prayer.[11][2] The confinement stemmed from Smart's mounting debts and familial intervention, as Newbery sought to manage his son-in-law's instability amid financial strains from Smart's irregular income as a writer.[1] Unable to sustain the costs at St. Luke's, Smart's family transferred him in 1758 to a private madhouse operated by Mr. Potter in Bethnal Green, where he endured harsher conditions typical of such institutions, including isolation and limited oversight.[1][2] During this six-year period of confinement, Smart composed significant portions of his devotional poem Jubilate Agno, fragments of which reflect his intense piety and observations of confinement, such as praising his cat Jeoffry as a divine creature.[12] Smart remained in Potter's asylum until January 1763, when he was released through the efforts of literary friends, including Samuel Johnson, who attested to his rationality upon discharge.[1] The exact medical diagnosis at the time aligned with contemporary views of religious mania, though records indicate no formal cure was declared, and Smart's release hinged more on external advocacy than institutional clearance.[11]Debate on Madness: Pathological vs. Persecutory Interpretations
Christopher Smart was confined to St. Luke's Hospital for Lunatics in London from May 1757 until his transfer or release around 1758, remaining under some form of confinement or supervision until January 1763.[1] The precise reasons for his initial commitment remain debated, with accounts citing disruptive religious practices, such as prolonged prostrate prayers that interfered with household routines, alongside mounting debts and erratic behavior reported by his wife Anna and associates.[13] The pathological interpretation posits Smart's confinement as a response to genuine mental illness, often characterized as religious mania or delusional fervor akin to modern bipolar disorder or schizophrenia. Proponents point to biographical anecdotes, including his landlady's complaint of incessant kneeling and chanting, which disrupted daily life, and the fragmented, associative style of Jubilate Agno—composed during confinement—as evidence of disordered cognition.[14] Contemporary observers, including medical reformers like those influencing St. Luke's humane but custodial approach, viewed such "enthusiasm" as a pathological excess requiring institutional restraint, distinguishing it from rational piety.[15] Critics like Moira Dearnley have argued that Smart's poetry exhibits overt signs of madness, with its obsessive cataloguing and visionary leaps reflecting an underlying psychosis rather than controlled artistry.[16] In contrast, the persecutory interpretation frames Smart's institutionalization as socially engineered control rather than medical necessity, driven by familial, financial, or class-based motives mislabeling nonconformist enthusiasm as insanity. Samuel Johnson, who visited Smart in confinement, contended that his "infirmities are not noxious to society," advocating release on grounds that mere eccentricity—such as unconventional worship—did not warrant incarceration.[17] Scholar Clement Hawes argues in Mania and Literary Style that eighteenth-century diagnoses of "mania" often served as rhetoric to pathologize plebeian or dissenting religious expression, positioning Smart's High Church fervor and innovative poetics as threats to Enlightenment rationality and elite norms rather than symptoms of disease.[18] Additional evidence includes potential creditor pressures via publisher John Newbery and Anna Smart's role in petitioning for commitment amid debts exceeding £1,000, suggesting asylum use as a mechanism to manage liabilities without formal bankruptcy.[13] This view highlights the era's loose criteria for madness, where asylums like St. Luke's admitted individuals on family testimony alone, blurring lines between pathology and persecution.[14] The debate persists due to sparse primary records—no formal clinical diagnosis exists—and retrospective projections of modern psychiatry onto eighteenth-century contexts, where "madness" encompassed moral, religious, and social deviations. Hawes and others caution against uncritical acceptance of pathological labels, noting academic tendencies to romanticize confinement as creative catalyst while overlooking power dynamics in institutionalization.[18] Empirical evidence favors neither exclusively; Smart's post-release productivity, including A Song to David (1763), suggests functional capacity inconsistent with severe pathology, yet his reported behaviors align with period understandings of enthusiasm as potentially destabilizing.[1]Later Career and Major Achievements
Release and Composition of A Song to David
Christopher Smart was discharged from St. Luke's Hospital for Lunatics in early 1763, after approximately six years of confinement initiated in 1757 due to debts and erratic behavior attributed by contemporaries to mental instability.[8] Upon release, he relocated to modest lodgings in Westminster, London, where he resumed literary activities amid ongoing financial precarity.[3] A Song to David, a 76-stanza hymn extolling the biblical King David as a divine poet and precursor to Christian revelation, was composed principally during Smart's asylum years between 1757 and 1763, contemporaneous with his fragmentary religious work Jubilate Agno.[8] Scholars infer this timeline from thematic parallels with Jubilate Agno, including ecstatic praise and liturgical structures, as well as Smart's isolation fostering introspective, biblically infused verse.[5] The poem's intricate form—featuring anaphoric refrains, numerical symbolism (e.g., sevenfold divisions echoing creation), and allusions to Hebrew prosody—suggests deliberate craftsmanship amid adversity, though no manuscript drafts survive to pinpoint exact composition phases.[19] Smart self-published A Song to David on April 6, 1763, issuing it alongside subscription proposals for a new Psalms translation and hymn collection, marking his first major post-confinement output.[20] Printed by the modest firm of J. Fletcher in London, the edition totaled around 500 copies at 3 shillings each, reflecting Smart's constrained resources and reliance on patronage networks.[3] Initial critical response was tepid, with reviewers in periodicals like The Critical Review deeming it overly obscure and derivative of Miltonic sublime, though its release signaled Smart's determination to reclaim poetic stature after institutionalization.[20]Post-Confinement Publications
Following his release from confinement in 1763, Christopher Smart resumed publishing with a focus on religious and translational works, seeking to establish financial stability through devotional literature. In 1765, he issued A Translation of the Psalms of David, Attempted in the Spirit of Christianity, and Adapted to the Divine Service, a metrical version intended for church use, printed by Dryden Leach for the author and sold by C. Bathurst and others.[21] [22] This edition incorporated Hymns and Spiritual Songs for the Fasts and Festivals of the Church of England, a collection of original hymns aligned with the Anglican liturgical calendar, emphasizing themes of praise and ecclesiastical observance.[1] [23] These publications reflected Smart's post-confinement emphasis on biblical adaptation and spiritual verse, though contemporary sales were modest, supported by subscriptions from patrons including former associates.[5] Between 1767 and 1768, Smart produced The Works of Horace, Translated into English Verse, a multi-volume rendering of the Roman poet's odes, epodes, satires, and epistles, praised for its fidelity and rhythmic innovation despite the era's preference for prose translations.[24] In 1768, Smart ventured into dramatic religious composition with Abimelech, an oratorio in three acts drawn from the biblical narrative in Judges 9, set to music by Samuel Arnold and premiered at the Theatre Royal in the Haymarket; it received a single performance in Smart's lifetime amid limited public interest.[1] That same year, he published The Parables of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, a versified interpretation of 24 Gospel parables, aimed at moral instruction but critiqued for its eccentricity.[1] These efforts underscored Smart's persistent productivity, blending classical scholarship with fervent Christianity, yet they yielded scant commercial success before his death in 1771.[1]Final Literary Efforts
In the final year of his life, Christopher Smart faced renewed financial desperation, leading to his arrest for debt and confinement within the rules of King's Bench Prison in April 1770.[1] Despite these dire circumstances, he completed his last major poetic project, Hymns for the Amusement of Children, in December 1770.[1] This collection of 32 short hymns, dated 1771 upon publication, was designed to provide moral and religious instruction to young readers through simple, rhythmic verses that blend delight with devotion.[3] The hymns emphasize themes of gratitude to God, the wonders of creation, and Christian virtues, often drawing on everyday observations to evoke praise—such as in "Praise to God for Mankind," which highlights human capacity for worship, or "Love Divine," extolling familial and divine bonds.[25] Smart's approach prioritizes accessibility for children, using repetitive structures and vivid imagery to foster spiritual awareness without overt didacticism, reflecting his lifelong commitment to religious poetry adapted for broader audiences.[3] Completed amid imprisonment and ill health, the work stands as a testament to his enduring productivity, though it received little contemporary notice.[1] Smart died on May 20, 1771, shortly after the hymns' completion, likely from liver failure exacerbated by his hardships.[1] No further substantial publications followed, marking Hymns for the Amusement of Children as the capstone of his literary output, a modest yet poignant effort to impart faith's joys to the next generation.[3]Poetic Themes and Techniques
Central Role of Religious Faith
Christopher Smart's adherence to High Church Anglicanism formed the foundation of his poetic vision, manifesting in fervent expressions of praise and the sacralization of everyday elements.[1] His faith emphasized God's omnipresence in creation, often drawing on biblical models and liturgical forms to affirm divine order amid personal adversity.[1] A pivotal spiritual intensification occurred following a severe illness in 1756, which Smart attributed to divine intervention, prompting public acts of prayer and compositions like Hymn to the Supreme Being, on Recovery from a Dangerous Fit of Illness, published that June.[1] This event heralded a phase of "religious mania," as contemporaries described it, where faith transcended conventional 18th-century restraint, leading to ecstatic, prophetic tones in his verse.[1] During his confinement from 1757 to 1763, this deepened devotion fueled major works, positioning religious praise as the core mechanism for poetic exploration and redemption. In Jubilate Agno, composed between 1758 and 1763, Smart crafts an expansive doxology wherein all creation—animals, elements, and humans—rejoices in God, structured antiphonally with "Let" lines (imperatives of praise) paired against "For" lines (affirmations of truth).[26] For instance, the famous section on his cat Jeoffry portrays the animal's routines as ritualistic worship, underscoring Smart's belief that nature inherently glorifies the Creator: "For he counteracts the powers of darkness by his electrical skin and glaring eyes."[26] This liturgical mimicry, influenced by Anglican rites and Hebrew psalmody, reflects faith as a cosmic harmony, where individual suffering aligns with universal adoration.[1] Similarly, A Song to David (written circa 1758–1763, published 1763) elevates King David as an archetype of praiseful devotion, employing numerological patterns—such as a central cluster of ten stanzas—to symbolize spiritual ascent and divine perfection.[1] Smart's hymns, including those in Hymns and Spiritual Songs (1765) for Church festivals and Hymns for the Amusement of Children (1771), extend this role, adapting faith for communal and didactic purposes while insisting on God's sovereignty over chaos.[1] Throughout, his poetry rejects secular rationalism, privileging empirical observation of creation as evidence of theological truths, thus rendering religious faith not merely thematic but the generative force of his art.[26]Innovative Language and Structure
Christopher Smart's poetry innovated through experimental forms that intertwined linguistic precision with religious ecstasy, often prioritizing auditory and associative effects over conventional narrative. In Jubilate Agno (composed 1758–1763), Smart devised an antiphonal structure of paired lines: those beginning "Let" issue imperatives for humanity's responsive praise to God, while "For" lines enumerate divine manifestations in creation, particularly animals and natural phenomena. This liturgical call-and-response, inspired by Hebrew poetic traditions and psalmic rhythms, generates a hypnotic, incantatory rhythm, with over 1,200 extant lines fragmented across sections that blend doxology, personal diary, and cosmological manifesto.[26][1] The language of Jubilate Agno amplifies this structure via dense alliteration, onomatopoeia, puns, archaisms, and coined terms, treating words as vibrational links to divine order. For instance, the renowned "Cat Jeoffry" passage deploys successive "For" clauses—"For he counteracts the Devil, who is Death, by brisking about the life to come,"—to portray feline motion as sacred counterpoint to entropy, emphasizing sound's mimetic power and etymological depth as revelatory tools.[26] In A Song to David (1763), Smart employed repetition and amplification as structural engines, with stanzas ascending through echoed phrases and catalogues of creation to evoke sublime praise, culminating in a numerological core of ten central stanzas symbolizing David's harp strings. This gyrating progression, matching symmetrical parts via refrain-like motifs, forges a dynamic architecture that mirrors spiritual intensification, distinct from neoclassical restraint yet rooted in biblical praise forms.[1][27][28]Depictions of Nature and Animals
In Jubilate Agno, composed between 1759 and 1763 during Smart's confinement, animals emerge as vital agents in cosmic praise, each embodying divine attributes and participating in perpetual worship of God. Smart structures much of the poem in antiphonal pairs, such as "Let [biblical or geographic name] rejoice with [animal]," animating creatures like the lion, eagle, and butterfly as symbols of strength, vision, and transformation that reflect God's creative order. This depiction extends sympathy to animals' sensory experiences, portraying them not as mere instinctual beings but as attuned to spiritual rhythms, as in the line "For the flowers are great blessings," linking floral beauty to animal vitality in a unified natural liturgy.[29][30] The fragment "For I will consider my Cat Jeoffry" stands as the most detailed animal portrait, transforming everyday feline traits into theological proofs. Smart observes Jeoffry's leaps as "exceeding high" acts of glorifying God, his tongue as "exceeding pure" for its musical potential in praise, and even his prey play as merciful, noting "For one mouse in seven escapes by his dallying." These enumerations, drawn from direct companionship during Smart's isolation, underscore animals' innate piety, with Jeoffry serving "the Living God duly and daily" through physicality that humans often overlook. Scholars interpret this as Smart granting voice to silenced nature, countering anthropocentric views by positing animals' behaviors as unmediated hymns.[31] Beyond Jubilate Agno, Smart's georgic The Hop-Garden (1752) celebrates rural nature through hop cultivation, depicting fields, vines, and seasonal cycles as harmonious providential designs that sustain human labor and divine economy. Hops climb "with vigorous twine" amid "vernal sweets," evoking nature's resilience and abundance, while insects and birds integrate into the landscape as fellow beneficiaries of creation's bounty. This contrasts urban alienation, affirming nature's moral and aesthetic uplift, though animals appear subordinately to vegetative and elemental forces. Such portrayals align with Smart's broader oeuvre, where empirical observation of flora and fauna yields first-hand evidence of teleological purpose, free from sentimental projection.[32]Influences from Freemasonry and Esotericism
Christopher Smart's affiliation with Freemasonry, a fraternal organization emphasizing moral and spiritual enlightenment through symbolic rituals, is documented in scholarly analyses of his life and works. Membership in such lodges was common among 18th-century intellectuals, and Smart's participation aligned with his era's interest in fraternal societies promoting brotherhood and esoteric moral philosophy.[33] This connection manifests in his poetry through recurring motifs of light, geometry, and divine order—core Masonic symbols—particularly in Jubilate Agno (composed circa 1758–1763) and A Song to David (1763).[34] In Jubilate Agno, Smart employs antiphonal structure reminiscent of Masonic liturgical forms, pairing "Let" verses praising creation with "For" verses attributing agency to God, evoking the balanced dualities in Masonic lore such as the square and compass. Specific lines, like those invoking the "east and west" orientation of lodges or the transformative power of light, align with Masonic iconography without requiring exclusive interpretation through that lens.[35] Similarly, A Song to David integrates Masonic doctrines of universal harmony and the architectonic divine, portraying David as a builder-king akin to the Great Architect of the Universe, a central Masonic archetype. These elements suggest Freemasonry shaped Smart's vision of cosmic unity, blending Christian piety with fraternal symbolism.[33] Beyond Freemasonry, Smart's oeuvre exhibits mystical and supernatural inclinations, potentially drawing from broader esoteric currents like Neoplatonism or cabbalistic ideas of emanation and divine names, though direct evidence is sparse and interpretive. His early exposure to Puritan forebears with interests in the arcane may have primed such themes, as seen in Jubilate Agno's ecstatic catalogs of creation's hidden correspondences.[1] However, assertions of profound occult erudition—beyond Masonic texts—rely on circumstantial poetic allusions rather than biographical records, with critics noting the fragility of linking his fervor to systematic esotericism.[36] Smart's mysticism appears more integrally religious, channeling first-hand devotional intensity than derived occult systems, prioritizing empirical praise of the natural world over speculative arcana.[37]Legacy and Critical Reception
Contemporary Views and Neglect
During Christopher Smart's lifetime, his poetry garnered mixed responses from critics. His Seatonian Prize-winning poems, awarded annually from 1750 to 1755 for religious themes, earned praise for their doctrinal orthodoxy and lyrical skill.[1] However, A Song to David (1763), composed during his confinement, met with perplexity rather than acclaim or outright dismissal, described by reviewers as a "very curious composition" lacking clear structure or conventional appeal.[8] Collections like Poems on Several Occasions (1763) received lukewarm notices, with some odes lauded for vigor but others faulted for inconsistencies, blank verse, and factual errors in translations.[1] After Smart's death on May 20, 1771, at age 49 in debtor's prison, his literary standing eroded rapidly. By the late 18th century, he was remembered chiefly as a cautionary figure of eccentricity, with scant attention to his oeuvre beyond A Song to David, which faded from prominence.[1] Critics and anthologists overlooked his hymns, fables, and experimental forms, viewing him through the lens of personal downfall rather than poetic innovation.[38] This neglect arose primarily from the stigma of Smart's mental afflictions and institutionalizations—from St. Luke's Hospital (1757–1758) to private asylums until 1763—which contemporaries attributed to religious mania or alcoholism, branding him "poor Smart the mad poet."[1] Financial imprudence, including debts exceeding £1,000 by the 1760s and repeated imprisonments, further diminished his credibility among patrons and the Church, which rejected his 1765 Psalms translation despite its scholarly rigor.[1] His uneven productivity and divergence from neoclassical norms, favoring ecstatic praise over polished satire, alienated an era prizing restraint, ensuring obscurity persisted into the 19th century absent major reprints or biographies until Edmund Blunden's 1924 efforts.[38][1]19th- and 20th-Century Rediscovery
In the nineteenth century, Christopher Smart's poetry garnered limited but notable admiration, primarily from fellow poets rather than systematic critical analysis. Robert Browning, in his 1887 collection Parleyings with Certain People of Importance in Their Day, devoted a section to Smart, extolling A Song to David as a masterpiece of visionary intensity and defending the poet's religious fervor against dismissals attributing it to insanity.[1] Browning's endorsement highlighted Smart's structural innovations and lyrical power, positioning A Song to David as a precursor to Romantic sensibilities, though broader scholarly engagement remained sparse amid the era's preference for more conventional Augustan figures.[8] The twentieth century marked a decisive revival, initiated by reevaluations of Smart's mental state and the unearthing of unpublished manuscripts. In 1930, scholar Charles David Abbott's essay "Christopher Smart's Madness" argued that Smart's confinement reflected familial and financial pressures rather than profound derangement, reframing his ecstatic style as deliberate artistic expression rooted in deep Christian piety.[39] This perspective gained traction with the 1939 publication of Jubilate Agno—Smart's fragmented liturgical poem composed during his asylum years—as Rejoice in the Lamb, edited by William Force Stead from a rediscovered manuscript held at the British Museum.[26] The edition, emphasizing sections like the famous hymn to Smart's cat Jeoffry, showcased the poem's rhythmic antiphony ("let" and "for" verses praising creation), sparking interest in Smart's proto-modernist experimentation with form and divine praise.[1] Post-1939 scholarship proliferated, with critics such as Donald Davie and Geoffrey Grigson lauding Smart's influence on later innovators like T.S. Eliot.[8] The 1980 Clarendon Press edition of Jubilate Agno, meticulously reconstructed by Karina Williamson from surviving fragments (approximately 1,320 lines of "let" and 780 of "for"), established a definitive text and fueled analyses of its Hebraic parallelism and natural theology. By mid-century, Smart's oeuvre was integrated into studies of eighteenth-century religious poetry, with monographs like Clement Hawes's Man's Place in the Universe (1985) exploring his cosmological themes, cementing his status as a bridge between neoclassical restraint and Romantic enthusiasm.[40] This resurgence owed much to archival diligence, countering earlier biographical biases that conflated Smart's institutionalization with creative invalidity.Modern Scholarship and Enduring Impact
The recovery and critical analysis of Christopher Smart's Jubilate Agno in the late 20th century paved the way for 21st-century scholarship that emphasizes the poem's formal experimentation and thematic depth, often reframing his confinement from 1757 to 1763 not solely as a symptom of mental illness but as a catalyst for visionary composition.[41] Scholars have applied interdisciplinary approaches, including disability studies to explore creativity amid perceived madness, animal studies to examine the celebrated lines on his cat Jeoffry as an act of praising divine creation through everyday observation, and theological inquiry to underscore the poem's Hebraic-inspired litany of praise.[41] A 2013 collection of essays captures this breadth, drawing on established and emerging researchers to analyze Smart's works in contexts of print culture, religious ecstasy, and linguistic play, positioning him as a paradoxical figure of exuberant devotion amid personal adversity.[42] Recent studies further illuminate Jubilate Agno's structural innovations, such as its fragmentary, associative form and alphabetical organization, as precursors to avant-garde techniques; a 2022 analysis invokes the "stuplime"—a fusion of sublime aspiration and bathetic absurdity—to argue that Smart anticipates modern experimental poetry's embrace of disruption and excess.[43] Scholarship also extends to Smart's translations and lyrics, with works like Rosalind Powell's 2014 examination of his English renderings of Horace and Psalms highlighting his role in mediating classical and biblical traditions for an 18th-century audience, influencing perceptions of translation as interpretive creation.[44] Smart's enduring impact manifests in his influence on 20th- and 21st-century poets seeking ecstatic or prophetic modes, notably Allen Ginsberg, who drew on Jubilate Agno's rhythmic praise and confinement-born intensity for the visionary style of "Howl" (1956), viewing Smart as a model of possessed utterance.[45] The Jeoffry fragment, with its precise catalog of feline behaviors as emblems of divine order—"For he counteracts the powers of darkness by his electrical skin and glaring eyes"—remains a staple in anthologies and classrooms, exemplifying Smart's fusion of empirical observation and religious ontology, and inspiring contemporary explorations of anthropomorphism and nonhuman agency in poetry.[26] This resonance underscores his niche but persistent legacy in literary studies, where his unorthodox piety challenges secular narratives of enlightenment rationality, affirming the causal link between fervent faith and linguistic vitality.[29]Major Works
Chronological Listing and Brief Descriptions
- Carmen Alexandri Pope in Sanctam Caeciliam Latine Redditum (1743): A translation of Alexander Pope's "Ode to St. Cecilia" into Latin elegiac verse, Smart's early scholarly work demonstrating his classical proficiency.
- On the Eternity of the Supreme Being (1750): First of Smart's Seatonian Prize poems awarded by the University of Cambridge, a meditative piece exploring divine eternity through natural imagery and theological reflection.[1]
- On the Immensity of the Supreme Being (1751): Second Seatonian Prize poem, contemplating God's vastness in creation, blending biblical allusions with philosophical inquiry into infinite space.[1]
- On the Omniscience of the Supreme Being (1752): Third Seatonian Prize-winning work, addressing divine knowledge and providence, noted for its rhythmic structure and integration of scientific observations with religious devotion.[8]
- Poems on Several Occasions (1752): Collection including "The Hop-Garden," a georgic poem in blank verse depicting Kentish hop cultivation, agricultural labor, and rural life as metaphors for moral and spiritual order.[1]
- On the Goodness of the Supreme Being (1755): Fourth Seatonian Prize poem, praising divine benevolence evident in nature's harmony and human experience.[1]
- On the Power of the Supreme Being (1756): Fifth and final Seatonian Prize-winning poem, focusing on God's creative and sustaining force in the universe.[1][46]
- A Song to David (1763): Exuberant religious ode modeled on the Psalms, celebrating King David's poetic and prophetic gifts, composed during Smart's confinement and admired for its intricate liturgical structure and ecstatic praise.[47]
- Jubilate Agno (composed 1758–1763, published 1939): Fragmentary liturgical poem written in a madhouse, featuring antiphonal lines praising God through cataloguing creation, notably the famous section on his cat Jeoffry, emphasizing joy in divine order.[1][48]
- The Paraphrase of the Psalms of David (1765): Metrical translation of the biblical Psalms into English verse, aiming for rhythmic fidelity to the originals while adapting for devotional use.
- The Parables of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ (1768): Verse renderings of Christ's parables, intended to illuminate moral and spiritual teachings through poetic form.