A lifelong friend of
Mary Russell Mitford
who knew her from their childhood in the 1790s, Harness launched the first
major effort to collect and edit Mitford’s letters into a series of volumes,
which was completed by his assistant,
Alfred Guy
Kingan L’Estrange a year after Harness’s death, and published
as
The Life of Mary Russell Mitford, Related
in a Selection from her Letters to her Friends. This collection
was originally intended to be six volumes, but was cut back to three by the
publishers, to Harness’s distress. Harness and
Byron were also friends from
their schooling at Harrow, as Byron sympathized with Harness’s experience of
a disabled foot, crushed in an accident in early childhood. Byron considered
dedicating
the first two cantos of Childe Harold’s
Pilgrimage
to Harness, but refrained so as not to taint Harness’s reputation as
he was taking orders as an Anglican curate. Harness admired and encouraged
Mitford’s playwrighting in particular, and she commented that he was one of
the few of her friends who thought she should prioritize the drama over
prose. When
William Macready was
attacked in
an anonymous Blackwood’s Magazine piece
in 1825 for his demands and rudeness to Mitford over revisions to
Rienzi, Macready assumed that Harness was
the author of the anonymous piece, though in
1839
after many years of distance, Harness assured Macready in person that he was
not the writer, though he may have shared word of the poor treatment his
friend had endured. William Harness was the son of John
Harness, M.D. and Sarah Dredge; he was baptized at Whitchurch, Hampshire on
April 13, 1790. He received his B.A. in 1812 and his M.A. in 1816 from
Christ’s College, Cambridge. He served as curate at Kelmeston, Hampshire
(1812) and Dorking (1814-1816). He was preacher at Trinity Chapel, Conduit
Street, London and minister and lecturer at St. Anne’s in Soho. He was Boyle
lecturer in London (1822) and was curate at Hampstead from 1828 to 1844. In
1825, he published an eight-volume edition of Shakespeare, including a
biography; his friends would later endow a prize in his name at Cambridge
for the study of Shakespearean literature. He also authored numerous essays
and reviews, some for the
Quarterly Review. From 1844 to 1847 he was
minister of Brompton Chapel in London. He undertook to raise the funds to
build the church of All Saints, Knightsbridge, in the parish of St.
Margaret’s Westminster, which opened in 1849, and he then became perpetual curate
of
that congregation. At the 1851 and 1861 censuses, he lived at 3 Hyde Park
Terrace, Westminster St. Margaret, Middlesex, with his sister
Mary Harness
and his first cousin
Jemima Harness, daughter of his uncle William. He died
while on a visit to one of his former curates in
Battle, Sussex. At the time of his death he living at the same address at 3
Hyde Park Terrace; he is buried in Bath.Sources:
Duncan-Jones, Miss Mitford and Mr. Harness
(1955); Lord Byron and His Times: