George Herbert (3 April 1593 – 1 March 1633) was an English poet, orator, and priest of the Church of England. His poetry is associated with the writings of the metaphysical poets, and he is recognised as "one of the foremost British devotional lyricists."

While at Bemerton, Herbert revised and added to his collection of poems entitled The Temple. He also wrote a guide to rural ministry, entitled A Priest to the Temple or, The Country Parson His Character and Rule of Holy Life, which he himself described as "a Mark to aim at", and which has remained influential to the present day. Having married shortly before taking up his post, he and his wife gave a home to three orphaned nieces. Together with their servants, they crossed the lane for services in the small St Andrew's church twice every day. Twice a week Herbert made the short journey into Salisbury to attend services at the cathedral, and afterwards would make music with the cathedral musicians.

Death

Herbert's time at Bemerton was short. Having suffered for most of his life from poor health, in 1633 he died of consumption, only three years after taking holy orders. the capitalised words "MY LIFE IS HID IN HIM THAT IS MY TREASURE" move across successive lines and demonstrate what is spoken of in the text. Opposites are brought together in "Bitter-Sweet" for the same purpose. Echo and variation are also common. The exclamations at the head and foot of each stanza in "Sighs and Grones" are one example. The diminishing truncated rhymes in "Paradise" are another. There is also an echo-dialogue after each line in "Heaven", other examples of which are found in the poetry of his brother Lord Herbert of Cherbury. Alternative rhymes are offered at the end of the stanzas in "The Water-Course", while the "Mary/Army Anagram" is represented in its title. In "The Collar", Joseph Summers argues, Herbert goes so far as to use apparent formlessness as a formal and thematic device: "the poem contains all the elements of order in violent disorder" until the end, when the final four lines' regularity restores the reader's sense of "the necessity of order".

Once the taste for this display of Baroque wit had passed, the satirist John Dryden was to dismiss it as so many means to "torture one poor word ten thousand ways." George Herbert played the lute and viol, and "sett his own lyricks or sacred poems". Musical pursuits interested him all through his life and his biographer, Izaak Walton, records that he rose to play the lute during his final illness. Walton also gave it as his opinion that he composed "such hymns and anthems as he and the angels now sing in heaven", while Walton's friend Charles Cotton described him as a "soul composed of harmonies".

More than ninety of Herbert's poems have been set for singing over the centuries, some of them multiple times. In his own century, there were settings of "Longing" by Henry Purcell and "And art thou grieved" by John Blow. Some forty were adapted for the Methodist hymnal by the Wesley brothers, among them "Teach me my God and King", which found its place in one version or another in 223 hymnals. Another poem, "Let all the world in every corner sing", was published in 103 hymnals, of which one is a French version. Other languages into which his work has been translated for musical settings include Spanish, Catalan and German.

In the 20th century, "Vertue" alone achieved ten settings, one of them in French. Among modern composers who set his work were Ralph Vaughan Williams, who used four by Herbert in Five Mystical Songs (1911), of which "Easter" was the first and "Antiphon II" the last; Edmund Rubbra, who set "Easter" as the first of his Two songs for voice and string trio (op. 2, 1921); Eva Ruth Spalding ('Easter Words' from Three Melodies, 1929); Robin Milford, who used the original Fitzwilliam manuscript's setting of the second part of "Easter" for his cantata Easter Morning (1932), set in two parts for soprano soloist and choir of children’s or women's voices; Benjamin Britten and William Walton, both of whom set "Antiphon" too. Ned Rorem included one Herbert setting in his "10 poems for voice, oboe and strings" (1982), and Judith Weir set three poems in her 2005 choral work Vertue.

Legacy

thumb|left|upright|Memorial window to Herbert and [[Nicholas Ferrar in St Andrew's Church, Bemerton]]

The earliest portrait of Herbert was engraved long after his death by Robert White for Walton's biography of the poet in 1674. Now in London's National Portrait Gallery, it served as basis for later engravings, such as those by White's apprentice John Sturt and by Henry Hoppner Meyer in 1829.

Among later artistic commemorations is William Dyce's oil painting of "George Herbert at Bemerton" (1860) in the Guildhall Art Gallery, London. The poet is pictured in his riverside garden, prayerbook in hand. Over the meadows is Salisbury Cathedral, where he used to join in the musical evensong; his lute leans against a stone bench and against a tree a fishing rod is propped, a reminder of his first biographer, Isaac Walton. There is also a musical reference in Charles West Cope's "George Herbert and his mother" (1872), which is in Gallery Oldham: the mother points a poem out to him in a room that has a virginals in the background.

Most representations of Herbert, however, are in stained glass windows, of which there are several in churches and cathedrals. They include Westminster Abbey, Salisbury Cathedral and All Saints' Church, Cambridge. and the Episcopal Church on 27 February; also on 1 March in, for example, the Calendar of Saints of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, being the day of his death. There are various collects for the day, of which one is based on his poem "The Elixir":

<blockquote>Our God and King, who called your servant George Herbert from the pursuit of worldly honors to be a pastor of souls, a poet, and a priest in your temple: Give us grace, we pray, joyfully to perform the tasks you give us to do, knowing that nothing is menial or common that is done for your sake ... Amen.</blockquote>

The quote "All may have, if they dare try, a glorious life, or a grave" from Herbert's "The Church Porch" is inscribed on the outer wall of St. John's Church, Waterloo.

Works

  • 1623: Oratio Qua auspicatissimum Serenissimi Principis Caroli.
  • 1627: Memoriae Matris Sacrum, printed with A Sermon of commemoracion of the ladye Danvers by John Donne... with other Commemoracions of her by George Herbert (London: Philemon Stephens and Christopher Meredith). reissued in 1651 under the title Jacula Prudentum [Arrows of the Wise]. Or Outlandish Proverbs, Sentences, &c.
  • 1652: Herbert's Remains, Or, Sundry Pieces Of that sweet Singer of the Temple consisting of his collected writings from A Priest to the Temple, Jacula Prudentum, Sentences, & c., as well as a letter, several prayers, and three Latin poems (London: Printed for Timothy Garthwait).

Sources

Further reading

Editions

  • 1941: The Works of George Herbert, ed. F. E. Hutchinson.
  • 2007: The English Poems of George Herbert, ed. Helen Wilcox. Cambridge University Press

Studies

  • Clarke, Elizabeth, Theory and Theology in George Herbert's Poetry: "Divinitie, and Poesie, Met", Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997.
  • Falloon, Jane, Heart in Pilgrimage: a study of George Herbert, Milton Keynes: AuthorHouse, 2007.
  • Grant, Patrick, 1974. The Transformation of Sin: Studies in Donne, Herbert, Vaughan, and Traherne. Montreal:McGill-Queen's University Press.
  • Lewis-Anthony, Justin, "If You Meet George Herbert on the Road, Kill Him": Radically re-thinking priestly ministry, an exploration of the life of George Herbert as a take-off for a re-evaluation of the ministry within the Church of England. Mowbray, August 2009.
  • Sullivan, Ceri, The Rhetoric of the Conscience in Donne, Herbert, and Vaughan. Oxford University Press, 2008.
  • Orrick, Jim, A Year with George Herbert: a guide to fifty-two of his best loved poems. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2011.
  • Sheldrake, Philip (2009), Heaven in Ordinary: George Herbert and his writings. Canterbury Press.
  • Oakley, Mark, "My Sour-Sweet Days: George Herbert and the Journey of the Soul". SPCK, 2019.
  • Jackson, Simon, George Herbert and Early Modern Musical Culture. Cambridge University Press, 2022.
  • Vendler, Helen, The Poetry of George Herbert. Harvard University Press, 1975.
  • The Works of George Herbert, at luminarium.org
  • George Herbert and Bemerton – his priesthood and parish, at georgeherbert.org.uk
  • The Life of Mr. George Herbert by Izaak Walton (1593–1683), at bartelby.com
  • George Herbert at the Cambridge Authors Project, University of Cambridge
  • George Herbert at poetseers.org, archived in 2005
  • Selected Poetry of George Herbert at Representative Poetry Online, archived in 2006
  • Lives of John Donne, Henry Wotton, Richard Hooker, George Herbert, &c, Vol. 2, Project Gutenberg
  • A Short introduction to George Herbert's verse, Bijan Omrani
  • "The Call" by George Herbert in Ralph Vaughan Williams' arrangement from Five Mystical Songs. YouTube video (2:24 min.)
  • "Easterwings" (poem by George Herbert), commentary and images at Christian Classics Ethereal Library
  • His poem "My Elixir" as hymn "Teach Me, My God and King" at CCEL
  • The Remains of that Sweet Singer of The Temple, ed. Barnabas Oley
  • Outlandish Proverbs Selected by Mr. G. H.