thumb|right|200px|George Croly

George Croly (17 August 1780 – 24 November 1860) was an Irish poet, novelist, historian, and Anglican priest. He was rector of St Stephen Walbrook in the City of London from 1835 until his death.

Early life

Croly was born in Dublin. His father was a physician. He graduated from Trinity College Dublin with an MA in 1804. The college was to award him an honorary LLD in 1831.

He was ordained in 1804, and served as a curate at a parish in the diocese of Meath until around 1810. Then, accompanied by his widowed mother, his brother Henry and his sisters, he moved to London. Finding himself unable to obtain preferment in the church, he dedicated himself to a literary career.

Literary career

Croly was a leading contributor to the Literary Gazette and Blackwood's Magazine, from the establishment of both in 1817, In 1835, however, through the influence of Lord Brougham, a distant relative of his wife He usually preached extemporare. S.C. Hall described him as having "'a sort of rude and indeed angry eloquence that would have stood him in better stead at the bar than in the pulpit."

Family

In 1819 Croly married Margaret Helen Begbie, whom he had come to know though his work for the Literary Gazette, to which she was also a contributor. They had five sons and a daughter.

Death

thumb|Memorial

He died suddenly on 24 November 1860 while walking near his home in Bloomsbury, and was buried in St Stephen's.

  • Paris in 1815, a poem, 1817.
  • The Angel of the World, 1820.
  • May Fair, 1820.
  • Catiline, a tragedy, 1822.
  • Tales of the Saint Bernard
  • The Apocalypse of St. John (1827).
  • The Beauties of the British Poets, With a Few Introductory Observations, 1828. Historicist interpretation.
  • Salathiel, a novel, 1828.
  • Anonymous [George Croly], "Colonna, the Painter," Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, vol. XXVI, no. CLVI (September, 1829), pp. 351–385.
  • Divine Providence, or the Three Cycles of Revelation, Showing the Parallelism of the Patriarchal, Jewish, and Christian Dispensations : Being a New Evidence of the Divine Origin of Christianity, 1834.
  • Life and times of George IV (1830). This is described by Richard Garnett in the Dictionary of National Biography as "a work of no historical value, but creditable to his independence of spirit."
  • A Sketch of the Life and Times of Bishop Taylor (1838). Preface to The Rule and Exercises of Holy Living, Jeremy Taylor, D.D., 1860, Philadelphia: J.W. Bradley
  • Marston, a novel, 1846,
  • The Modern Orlando, a poem, 1846.
  • The Holy Land, Syria, Idumea, Arabia, Egypt, and Nubia, 1855
  • The Book of Job, published posthumously in 1863.