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  1. William Julius Mickle (29 September 1734 – 28 October 1788) was a Scottish poet. Biography [ edit ] Born in Langholm on 29 September 1738 to a minister, he was for some time a brewer in Edinburgh , but failed.

  2. Personally, Mickle was a reserved and solitary figure, devoted to his work and permitting himself few distractions. Retiring some ten years before his death, he lived in Bayswater until, on his health breaking down, he decided to join relatives in Toronto, where he died. G H Brown [Presidential Address to R.C.P., 1918, (MS.)]

  3. William Julius Mickle. Knowledge or wealth to few are given, But mark how just the ways of Heaven: True joy to all is free. Nor wealth nor knowledge grant the boon: 'Tis thine, O conscience, thine alone, It all belongs to thee. William Julius Mickle ( 29 September 1734 – 28 October 1788) was a Scottish poet .

  4. William Julius Mickle,1734 or 1735-1788. William Julius Mickle (1734 or 1735-1788), was born William Meikle in Scotland and inherited his father's Edinburgh brewery in 1757. After it failed financially in 1763, Mickle secretly moved to London, changed the spelling of his last name, and embarked on a literary career.

  5. Quick Reference. (1734–88) William Julius Mickle was born on 29 September 1734, near Kelso in the Scottish borders. He died on 28 October 1788. He was born into a medical and literary ... From: Mickle, William Julius in The Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophy ».

  6. William Julius Mickle (1734 or 1735-1788), was born William Meikle in Scotland and inherited his father's Edinburgh brewery in 1757. After it failed financially in 1763, Mickle secretly moved to London, changed the spelling of his last name, and embarked on a literary career. He was corrector for the Clarendon Press, Oxford, from 1765 to 1772.

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