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HENRY ALFORD (1810–1871)

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 582 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENRY ALFORD (1810–1871)  ,
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English divine and scholar, was born in
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London on the 7th of
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October 181o . He came of a
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Somersetshire
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family, which had given five consecutive generations of clergymen to the
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Anglican church . Alford's early years were passed with his widowed
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father, who was curate of Steeple
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Ashton in Wiltshire . He was an extremely precocious lad, and before he was ten had written several Latin odes, a
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history of the Jews and a series of homiletic outlines . After a peripatetic school course he went up to Cambridge in 1827 as a scholar of Trinity . In 1832 he was 34th wrangler and 8th classic, and in 1834 was made
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fellow of Trinity . He had already taken orders, and in 1835 began his eighteen years' tenure of the vicarage of Wymeswold in Leicestershire, from which seclusion the twice-repeated offer of a colonial bishopric failed to draw him . He was Hulsean lecturer at Cambridge in 1841-1842, and steadily built up a reputation as scholar and preacher, which would have been enhanced but for his discursive ramblings in the fields of minor
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poetry and
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magazine editing . In September 1853 Alford removed to
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Quebec
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Chapel, London, where he had a large and cultured congregation . In March 1857 Viscount Palmerston advanced him to the deanery of Canterbury, where, till his
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death on the 12th of
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January 1871, he lived the same strenuous and diversified
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life that had always characterized him . The inscription on his tomb, chosen by himself, is " Diversorium Vialoris Hierosolymam Proficiscentis." Alford was a not inconsiderable artist, as his picture-
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book, The
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Riviera (187o), shows, and he had abundant musical and
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mechanical talent . Besides editing the
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works of John Donne, he published several volumes of his own verse, The School of the Heart (1835), The Abbot of Muchelnaye (1841), and a number of
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hymns, the best-known of which are " Forward!, be our watch-word," " Come, ye thankful
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people, come," and " Ten thousand times ten thousand." He translated the Odyssey, wrote a well-known
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manual of idiom, A Plea for the Queen's English (1863), and was the first editor of the Contemporary Review (1866-1870) .

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chief fame, however, rests upon his monumental edition of the New Testament in Greek (4 vols.), which occupied him from 1841 to 1861 . In this
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work he first brought before English students a careful collation of the readings of the chief
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MSS. and the researches of the ripest
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continental scholarship of his day . Philological rather than theological in character, it marked an epochal change from the old homiletic commentary, and though more
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recent research, patristic and papyral, has largely changed the method of New Testament exegesis, Alford's work is still a
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quarry where the student can dig with a good
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deal of profit . His Life, written by his widow, appeared in 1873 (Rivington) . (A . J .

End of Article: HENRY ALFORD (1810–1871)
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