William Mason
MASON, WILLIAM (1724-1797).--Poet, s. of a clergyman, was b. at Hull,
and ed. at Camb. He took orders and rose to be a Canon of York. His
first poem was Musæus, a monody on the death of Pope, and his other
works include Elfrida (1752), and Caractacus (1759), dramas--an
Heroic Epistle to Sir William Chambers, the architect, in which he
satirised some modern fashions in gardening, The English Garden, his
largest work, and some odes. He was a close friend of Gray, whose Life he
wrote. His language was too magnificent for his powers of thought, but he
has passages where the rich diction has a pleasing effect.
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