Online Encyclopedia

GEORGE HERBERT (1593-1633)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 340 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

GEORGE HERBERT (1593-1633)  ,
See also:
English poet, was born at Montgomery Castle on the 3rd of
See also:
April 1593 . He was the fifth son of
See also:
Sir Richard Herbert and a
See also:
brother of Lord Herbert of Cherbury . His
See also:
mother, Lady Magdalen Herbert, a woman of
See also:
great good sense and sweetness of character, and a friend of John Donne, exercised great influence over her son . Educated privately until 1605, he was then sent to Westminster School, and in 1609 he became a scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was made B.A. in 1613, M.A. and major
See also:
fellow of the college in 1616 . In 1618 he became Reader in Rhetoric, and in 1619 orator for the university . In this capacity he was several times brought into contact with King James . From Cambridge he wrote some Latin satiric verses in defence of the
See also:
universities and the English Church against Andrew Melville, a Scottish Presbyterian minister . He numbered among his friends Dr 1 Printed in 16621 as an appendix to J . Vivian's Ecclesiastes Solomonis . Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Izaak Walton, Bishop Andrewes and Francis Bacon, who dedicated to him his
See also:
translation of the Psalms . Walton tells us that " the love of a court conversation, mixed with a laudable ambition to be something more than he was, drew him often from Cambridge to attend the king wheresoever the court was," and James I. gave him in 1623 the sinecure
See also:
lay rectory of Whitford, Flintshire, worth £120 a
See also:
year . The
See also:
death of his patrons, the duke of Richmond and the marquess of Hamilton, and of King James put an end to his hopes of
See also:
political preferment; moreover he probably distrusted the conduct of affairs under the new reign .

Largely influenced by his mother, he decided to take

See also:
holy orders, and in
See also:
July 1626 he was appointed prebendary of Layton Ecclesia (Leighton Bromswold), Huntingdon . Here he was within two miles of Little Gidding, and came under the influence of Nicholas Ferrar . It was at Ferrar's
See also:
suggestion that he undertook to rebuild the church at Layton, an undertaking carried through by his own gifts and the generosity of his friends . There is little doubt that the close friendship with Ferrar had a large share in Herbert's adoption of the religious
See also:
life . In 163o Charles I., at the instance of the
See also:
earl of Pembroke, whose kinsman Herbert was, presented him to the living of Fugglestone with Bemerton, near Salisbury, and he was ordained priest in September . A year before, after three days' acquaintance, he had married Jane
See also:
Danvers, whose
See also:
father had been set on the
See also:
marriage for a long time . He had often spoken of his daughter Jane to Herbert, and " so much commended Mr Herbert to her, that Jane became so much a Platonic as to fall in love with Mr Herbert unseen." The story of the poet's life at Bemerton, as told by Walton,. is one of the most exquisite pictures in
See also:
literary biography . He devoted much time to explaining the meaning of the various parts of the Prayer-
See also:
Book, and held services twice every day, at which many of the parishioners attended, and some " let their plough rest when Mr Herbert's saints-bell
See also:
rung to prayers, that they might also offer their devotions to
See also:
God with him." Next to
See also:
Christianity itself he loved the English Church . He was passionately fond of
See also:
music, and his own
See also:
hymns were written to the accompaniment of his lute or
See also:
viol . He usually walked twice a week to attend the
See also:
cathedral at Salisbury, and before returning home. would " sing and
See also:
play his
See also:
part " at a meeting of music lovers . Walton illustrates Herbert's kindness to the poor by many touching anecdotes, but he had not been three years in Bemerton when he succumbed to consumption . He was buried beneath the altar of his church on the 3rd of March 1633 .

None of Herbert's English poems was published during his lifetime . On his death-

bed he gave to Nicholas Ferrar a
See also:
manuscript with the title The Temple: Sacred Poems and Private Ejaculations . This was published at Cambridge, apparently for private circulation, almost immediately after Herbert's death, and a second imprint followed in the same year . On the title-page of both is the
See also:
quotation " In his Temple doth every man speak of his honour." The Temple is a collection of religious poems connected by unity of sentiment and inspiration . Herbert tried to interpret his own devout meditations by applying images of all kinds to the ritual and beliefs of the Church . Nothing in his own church at Bemerton was too
See also:
commonplace to serve as a starting-point for the epigrammatic expression of his piety . The church key reminds him that " it is my sin that locks his handes," and the stones of the floor are
See also:
patience and humility, while the cement that binds them together is love and charity . The chief faults of the book are obscurity, verbal conceits and a forced ingenuity which shows itself in grotesgir'e puns, odd metres and occasional want of taste . But the quaint beauty of Herbert's style and its musical quality give The Temple a high place . " The Church Porch," " The Agony," " Sin," "
See also:
Sunday," " Virtue," " Man," " The
See also:
British Church," " The Quip," " The
See also:
Collar," " The
See also:
Pulley," " The Flower," "
See also:
Aaron " and " The Elixir " are among the best known of these poems . Herbert and Keble are the poets of
See also:
Anglican
See also:
theology . No book is fuller of devotion to the Church of England than The Temple, and no poems in our language exhibit more of the spirit of true Christianity .

Every page is marked by transparent sincerity, and reflects the beautiful character of " holy

George Herbert." Nicholas Ferrar's translation (Oxford, 1638) of the
See also:
Hundred and Ten Considerations ... of Juan de Valdes contained a letter and notes by Herbert . In 1652 appeared Herbert's Remains; or, Sundry Pieces of that Sweet Singer of the Temple, Mr George Herbert . This included A Priest to the Temple; or, The Country
See also:
Parson, his Character, and
See also:
Rule of Holy Life, in
See also:
prose; Jacula prudentum, a collection of proverbs with a
See also:
separate title-page dated 1651, which had appeared in a shorter form as Outlandish Proverbs in 1640; and some
See also:
miscellaneous
See also:
matter . The completest edition of his
See also:
works is that by Dr A . B . Grosart in 1874, this edition of the Poetical works being reproduced in the " Aldine edition " in 1876 . The English Works of George Herbert ... (3 vols., 1905) were edited in much detail by G . H . Palmer . A contemporary account of Herbert's life by
See also:
Barnabas Oley was prefixed to the Remains of 1652, but the classic authority is Izaak Walton's Life of Mr George Herbert, published in 1670, with some letters from Herbert to his mother . See also A .

G .

Hyde, George Herbert and his Times (1907), and the " Oxford " edition of his poems by A . Waugh (19o8) .

End of Article: GEORGE HERBERT (1593-1633)
[back]
1ST BARON SIDNEY HERBERT HERBERT OF LEA (181b-1861)...
[next]
HENRY WILLIAM HERBERT

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.