Henry Luttrell
- Born:
- c. 1765
- Died:
- Dec. 19, 1851, London, Eng.
Henry Luttrell (born c. 1765—died Dec. 19, 1851, London, Eng.) was an English poet of light verse and a London society wit.
Luttrell was an illegitimate son of Henry Lawes Luttrell, 2nd earl of Carhampton, who in 1798 used his influence in securing his son a seat in the Irish Parliament and a post in the Irish government, which the young Luttrell commuted for a pension. After a brief try at managing his father’s estates in the West Indies (about 1802), Luttrell returned to London, where he was introduced into society by the duchess of Devonshire. He became popular as a fashionable wit and conversationalist, often in narrow financial straits but nevertheless successful as one of the most accomplished and entertaining men of his day. In 1820 he published his Advice to Julia, of which a third edition, altered and amplified, appeared in 1822 as Letters to Julia, in Rhyme. This poem, suggested by the ode to Lydia in the first book of Horace’s Odes, was his most important work. His literary contemporaries nicknamed it “Letters of a Dandy to a Dolly.”