Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 25.djvu/345

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lery in Spring gardens. During the extensive tour throughout Great Britain which the work necessitated, Hearne studied nature with care, investing his topographical drawings with effects of light and atmosphere seldom attempted by previous draughtsmen in water-colour. He may thus be said to have done much to revive attention to Gothic architecture, and to have been one of the founders of the English school of water-colours. His art had much influence on Girtin and Turner, both of whom copied his drawings at the houses of Dr. Thomas Munro [q. v.] and John Henderson, senior, the well-know connoisseurs and patrons of young artists. From 1781 to 1802 he exhibited drawings of landscape and antiquarian remains at the Royal Academy. He was a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. He died in Macclesfield Street, Soho, on 13 April 1817, and was buried at Bushey.

There Is a fine collection of his drawings in the British Museum, and there are others at South Kensington.

[Redgrave's Dict.; Bryan's Dict., ed. Graves; Graves's Dict ; Monkhouse's Earlier English Water-colour Painters]

C. M.

HEATH, BENJAMIN (1704–1766), critic and book-collector, born at Exeter on 20 April 1704, was eldest son of Benjamin Heath, fuller and merchant of Exeter (born at Exeter about 1672, and died 28 May 1728), who married Elizabeth Kelland (buried at St. Leonard's, Exeter, in October 1723). His parents were probably nonconformists, as he was not baptised in St. Leonard's Church until 11 Oct. 1729, when both of them had died. He was educated at the Exeter grammar school, and is said to have been admitted as a student of the Middle Temple in 1721, and again in 1729. The family records assert that he completed his education at the university of Oxford, but his name does not appear in the printed matriculation lists. On his father's death he inherited the handsome fortune of 30,000l., and about 1730 set out on the ‘grand tour.’ His travels took him to Geneva, where he married Rose Marie, daughter of Jean Michelet, a Genevese merchant, on 12 Aug. 1732, less than two months after she had passed the age of fourteen. In 1725 he had been sworn as a freeman of the Weavers' Company at Exeter, but his taste was not for business or a profession, and when he returned to England he abandoned his intention of being called to the bar, and settled in Exeter, where his chief pleasures lay in literature and book-collecting. Dibdin prints in the ‘Bibliomania’ (pp. 554–62) a long letter written by Heath from that city in 1738, with a lengthy list of books that he wished to buy. In 1740 he made his first appearance as an author with ‘An Essay towards a Demonstrative Proof of the Divine Existence, Unity, and Attributes,’ dedicated to William Oliver, a physician at Bath. It is said to have followed the lines laid down in the ‘Living Temple’ of John Howe, the puritan divine. He was elected on 23 March 1752 to the post of town clerk of Exeter, and held it until his death. All his life he studied the classical writers, and the fruit of his labours was shown in the volume of ‘Notæ, sive Lectiones ad Æschyli, Sophoclis, Euripidis quæ supersunt dramata deperditorumque relliquias,’ which was published at Oxford in 1762. On 31 March in the same year the university of Oxford conferred on him the degree of D.C.L. Parr, in a letter to Gilbert Wakefield (Wakefield, Memoirs, ii. 439), speaks with indignation of the ‘arrogant and contemptuous’ terms applied to Heath by the German scholar Hermann in his ‘Observationes Criticæ’ (p. 59), and his note on verse 1002 of the ‘Hecuba.’ Heath's object was to restore the metre of the Greek tragedies. At home his observations were highly valued, and he was asked to furnish the notes for the Greek tragedies in use at Eton.

The cider-producing districts were much agitated at the imposition of an excise duty on the producer of 4s. a hogshead by the ministry of Lord Bute in 1763. Popular meetings were held throughout Devonshire, Herefordshire, and Worcestershire, and violent attacks were made on the ministry. Heath took a prominent part in the controversy, and was the author of ‘The Case of the County of Devon with respect to the consequences of the new Excise Duty on Cyder and Perry’ (1763), to which many have ascribed the repeal of the act in 1766. The freeholders of Devonshire presented him with ‘a very large waiter and two pair of candlesticks’ in 1764 to mark their appreciation of his exertions. For some time he retained his interest in politics, and contemplated contesting the city of Exeter, but though he spent 1,000l. in preliminary expenses, he did not proceed to the poll. Heath issued anonymously in 1765 ‘A Revisal of Shakespear's Text, wherein the alterations introduced into it by the more modern Editors and Critics are particularly considered.’ He praises Theobald, and severely censures Warburton's conjectural emendations. His stock of critical appliances was scanty. He did not possess a copy of either of the folio editions of Shakespeare, nor had he seen Sir Thomas Hanmer's edition, but his natural acuteness ‘produced a number of very sensible