MACKAY,
CHARLES (1814-1889), Scottish writer, was born at Perth,
on the -27th of March 1814, and educated at the Caledonian Asylum,
London, and in Brussels.
In 1830, being then private secretary to a Belgian ironmaster, he
began writing verses and articles for local newspapers. Returning
to London, he devoted himself to literary and journalistic work,
and was attached to the Morning Chronicle (1835-1844).
He published Memoirs of Extraordinary Public Delusions (1841), and
gradually made himself known as an industrious and prolific journalist.
In 1844 he was made editor of the Glasgow Argus.
His literary reputation was made by the publication in 1846 of a
volume of verses, Voices from the Crowd, some of which were set
to music by Henry Russell and became very popular.
In 1848 Mackay returned to London and worked for the Illustrated
London News, of which he became editor of in 1852. In it he published
a number of songs, set to music by Sir Henry Bishop and Henry Russell,
and in 1855 they were collected in a volume; they included the popular
Cheer, Boys! Cheer! After his severance from the Illustrated London
News, in 1859, Mackay started two unsuccessful periodicals, and
acted as special correspondent for The Times in America during the
Civil War. He edited A Thousand and One Gems of English Poetry (1867).
Marie Corelli was Born Mary Mackay on May 1, 1855 in London, England,
she was the illegitimate daughter of a well known Scottish poet
and songwriter, Dr. Charles Mackay, and his servant, Elizabeth Mills.
In 1866, the very young Mary Mackay was sent to a Paris, France
convent to further her education. She would only return to England
four years later in 1870.
Charles Mackay died in London on the 24th of December 1889. His
son, Eric Mackay (1851-1899), was known as a writer of verse, particularly
by his Love Letters of a Violinist (1886).
|