Hewson Clarke (bapt. 18 March 1787 – bur. 21 May 1817) was an English author, known for historical works. In literary circles he became unpopular by satirising Lord Byron.
Clarke attacked characters so different as Joanna Southcott and Lord Byron. In The Satirist, Clarke libelled Byron, who in return wrote that he was "a living libel on mankind".
From April to August 1811, he was committed to a debtors' prison in London. London, England, King's Bench and Fleet Prison Discharge Books and Prisoner Lists, 1734–1862 He died six years later in London. He was buried at St Dunstan-in-the-West Church on Fleet Street. London, England, Church of England Deaths and Burials, 1813–2003
There was doubt at the time as to the date of Clarke's death, with Eneas Mackenzie in 1827 asserting that he was already dead, "unnoticed and unlamented". Richard Welford in Men of Mark 'twixt Tyne and Tweed (1895) claimed he died in 1817, "seized with madness." Letters to Richard Alfred Davenport from Canada falsely claim he had emigrated, and was in Chambly, Quebec in 1845.
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