William Godwin's Diary

Geddes, Dr Alexander

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This person is mentioned in the diary a total of 17 times, and was a venue (V) 0 times.

You may also examine their meals and meetings in more detail.

1789

30  May  1789

1790

1  February  1790 13  February  1790 14  July  1790

1791

11  January  1791

1792

26  April  1792

1794

22  November  1794

1795

30  March  1795

1797

31  January  1797 14  March  1797 2  June  1797

1798

13  January  1798 14  August  1798

1799

12  February  1799 22  August  1799 24  December  1799

1802

26  February  1802

  • Name: Geddes, Dr Alexander
  • Gender: Male
  • Birth Date: 4  September  1737
  • Death Date: 26  February  1802
  • Occupation: Roman Catholic priest
  • Occupation: biblical scholar

The identification has been made according to his DNB entry (abolitionist, published poetry anon in the Morning Chronicle, member of the society for constitutional reform and the Joseph Johnson circle) and from Geddes involvement in Johnson's circle.

Geddes was one of the circle of Joseph Johnston [sic], who published much of his work, and was intimate with many of the most revolutionary whigs, as well as with the most radical romantic artists, especially William Blake and Samuel Taylor Coleridge’ (DNB - see also Tyson on Johnson, A Liberal Publisher, p. 66 for a note on Geddes and the formation of JJ's circle). Godwin first records his name in 1792, as Dr Geddes – he sees him from afar at one point (at the ‘Str’ – possibly the Strand?) and reads his work on slavery, which was probably Geddes’s 1792 satirical pamphlet Apology for Slavery, an application of Paine’s principles in aid of the abolitionist cause (DNB).

Subsequently, he’s referred to as Geddes, with the exception of his death-day, which Godwin records using his title. In 1790, he is included in a Diary list of Anti-Tests and also the London French Revolution Society that Godwin marks as, simply, ‘French Revolution’. This date corresponds with Geddes’s poetic sequence Carmen seculare pro Gallica gente tyrannidi aristocraticae erepta (1790), which was ‘intended to be read in French to the assembly of deputies in Paris as an exercise in assuring the assembly of continuing international intellectual support for the revolution’ (DNB). This established Geddes as a radical whig and Foxite, according to the DNB. Many of the later meetings are not tied to a society, but take place at the home of B Hollis.

Godwin records his death.

  • DNB
  • Gerald P. Tyson, Joseph Johnson: A Liberal Publisher (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1979).

This table lists the people this person is most frequently noted with in the diary.

Name Number of Meetings
Hollis, Thomas Brand 8
Disney, John 5
Lindsey, Theophilus 3
White, 2
Shore, Samuel 2
Kippis, Andrew 2
Belsham, Thomas 2
Heywood, Samuel 2
Fuseli, Henry (Johann Heinrich Füssli) 2
Johnson, Joseph 2
Stone, John Hurford 2
Taylor, Thomas 2
Thorkelin, Grímur Jónsson 2
Price, Richard 2
2
Lister, Dr William 1
Paradise, John 1
O'Bryen, Dennis (O'Brien) 1
Vaughan, William 1
Fox, Charles James 1
Beaufoy, Henry Hanbury 1
Horne Tooke, John 1
Hoghton, Sir Harry 1
Watson, Richard 1
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley 1
Vaughan, 1
Stanhope, Charles (third earl of Harrington) 1
Wodhull, Michael 1
Fell, John 1
Morgan, George Cadogan 1
Towers, Joseph Lomas 1
Barbauld, Anna Letitia (née Aikin) 1
Barbauld, Rochemont 1
Dyer, George 1
Smith, George 1
Jerningham, 1
Piozzi, Hester Lynch (Thrale) (née Salusbury) 1
Bannister, John 1
Crosdill, John 1
Zenobio, Count Alvise 1
Wakefield, Gilbert 1
Jennings, Joseph Clayton (Jennyns) 1
Nichols, John 1
Romilly, Sir Samuel 1
1
Rees, Abraham 1