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The following "Life of Herrick" by Alfred W. Pollard is excerpted from
Herrick, Robert. The Works of Robert Herrick. Vol. I. Alfred W. Pollard, Ed.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1891. xv-xxvi.
No additions have been made, and the only editing that has been made
is the changing of the capital " I " to the number "1" in the dates.
The notes are Mr. Pollard's own, including the references to the poems
by page number, which the current web editor has made hyperlinks to
the poems on the Web for ease of use to the reader.
Luminarium reserves all rights to this hypertext, save for the distribution
of a print copy in the classroom for educational purposes.
Anniina Jokinen.
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LIFE OF HERRICK.
OF the lives of many poets we know too much;
of some few too little. Lovers of Herrick are
almost ideally fortunate. Just such a bare
outline of his life has come down to us as is
sufficient to explain the allusions in his poems,
and, on the other hand, there is no temptation to substitute chatter about his relations
with Julia and Dianeme for enjoyment of his
delightful verse. The recital of the bare outline need detain us but a few minutes: only
the least imaginative of readers will have any
difficulty in filling it in from the poems themselves.
From early in the fourteenth century onwards
we hear of the family of Eyrick or Herrick at
Stretton, in Leicestershire. At the beginning
of the sixteenth century we find a branch of
them settled in Leicester itself, where John
Eyrick, the poet's grandfather, was admitted a
freeman in 1535, and afterwards acted as Mayor.
This John's second son, Nicholas, migrated to
London, became a goldsmith in Wood Street,
Cheapside, and, according to a licence issued
by the Bishop of London, December 8, 1582,
married Julian, daughter of William Stone,
sister of Anne, wife of Sir Stephen Soame,
Lord Mayor of London in 1598. The marriage
was not unfruitful. A William* Herrick was
baptised at St. Vedast's, Foster Lane, November
24, 1585; Martha, January 22, 1586; Mercy,
December 22, 1586; Thomas, May 7, 1588;
Nicholas, April 22, 1589; Anne, July 26, 1590;
and Robert himself, August 24, 1591.
Fifteen months after the poet's birth, on
November 7, 1592, Nicholas Herrick made his
will, estimating his property as worth £3000,
and devising it, as to one-third to his wife,
and as to the other two-thirds to his children in equal shares. In the will he described himself as "of perfect memorye in
sowle, but sicke in bodye". Two days after
its execution he was buried, having died, not
from disease, but from a fall from an upper
window. His death had so much the appear-
ance of self-destruction that £220 had to be
paid to the High Almoner, Dr. Fletcher, Bishop
of Bristol, in satisfaction of his official claim to
the goods and chattels of suicides. Herrick's
biographers have not failed to vituperate the
Bishop for his avarice, but dues allowed by
law are hardly to be abandoned because a
baby of fifteen months is destined to become
a brilliant poet, and no other exceptional
circumstances are alleged. The estate of
Nicholas Herrick could the better afford the
fine inasmuch as it realized £2000 more than
was expected.
By the will Robert and William Herrick
were appointed "overseers," or trustees for
the children. The former was the poet's godfather, and in his will of 1617 left him £5.
To William Herrick, then recently knighted
for his services as goldsmith, jeweller, and
moneylender to James I., the young Robert
was apprenticed for ten years, September 25,
1607. An allusion to "beloved Westminster,"
in his Tears to Thamysis, has been taken to
refer to Westminster school, and alleged as
proof that he was educated there. Dr. Grosart
even presses the mention of Richmond, Kingston,
and Hampton Court to support a conjecture
that Herrick may have travelled up
and down to school from Hampton. If so, one
wonders what his headmaster had to say to the
"smooth-soft virgins, for our chaste disport"
by whom he was accompanied. But the references
in the poem are surely to his courtierlife in London,
and after his father's death
the apprenticeship to his uncle in 1607 is
the first fact in his life of which we can be
sure.
On 1607, Herrick was fifteen, and, even
if we conjecture that he may have been
allowed to remain at school some little time
after his apprenticeship nominally began, he
must have served his uncle for five or six
years. Sir William had himself been bound
apprentice in a similar way to the poet's
father, and we have no evidence that he
exacted any premium. At any rate, when in
1614, his nephew, then of age, desired to leave
the business and go to Cambridge, the ten
years' apprenticeship did not stand in his way,
and he entered as a Fellow Commoner at St.
John's. His uncle plainly still managed his
affairs, for an amusing series of fourteen letters
has been preserved at Beaumanor, until lately
the seat of Sir William's descendants, in which
the poet asks sometimes for payment of a
quarterly stipend of £10, sometimes for a
formal loan, sometimes for the help of his
avuncular Mæcenas. It seems a fair inference
from this variety of requests that, since Herrick's
share of his father's property could
hardly have yielded a yearly income of £40,
he was allowed to draw on his capital for this
sum, but that his uncle and Lady Herrick
occasionally made him small presents, which
may account for his tone of dependence.
The quarterly stipend was paid through various
booksellers, but irregularly, so that the poor
poet was frequently reduced to great straits,
though £40 a-year (£200 of our money) was no
bad allowance. After two years he migrated
from St. John's to Trinity Hall, to study law
and curtail his expenses. He took his Bachelor's
degree from there in January, 1617, and his
Master's in 1620. The fourteen letters show
that he had prepared himself for University life
by cultivating a very florid prose style which
frequently runs into decasyllabics, perhaps a
result of a study of the dramatists. Sir William
Herrick is sometimes addressed in them as his
most "careful" uncle, but at the time of his
migration the poet speaks of his "ebbing
estate," and as late as 1629 he was still
in debt to the College Steward.
We can thus hardly imagine that he was
possessed of any considerable private income
when he returned to London, to live practically
on his wits, and a study of his poems suggests
that, the influence of the careful uncle removed,
whatever capital he possessed was soon likely
to vanish.* His verses to the Earl of Pembroke,
to Endymion Porter and to others, show
that he was glad of "pay" as well as "praise,"
but the system of patronage brought no discredit with it, and though the absence of any
poetical mention of his uncle suggests that the
rich goldsmith was not well-pleased with his
nephew, with the rest of his well-to-do relations
Herrick seems to have remained on excellent
terms.
Besides patrons, such as Pembroke, Westmoreland, Newark, Buckingham, Herrick had
less distinguished friends at Court, Edward
Norgate, Jack Crofts and others. He composed the words for two New Year anthems
which were set to music by Henry Lawes, and
he was probably personally known both to the
King and Queen. Outside the Court he
reckoned himself one of Ben Jonson's disciples,
"Sons of Ben" as they were called,
had friends at the Inns of Court, knew the
organist of Westminster Abbey and his pretty
daughters, and had every temptation to live an
amusing and expensive life. His poems were
handed about in manuscript after the fashion
of the time, and wherever music and poetry
were loved he was sure to be a welcome guest.
Mr. Hazlitt's conjecture that Herrick at this
time may have held some small post in the
Chapel at Whitehall is not unreasonable, but
at what date he took Holy Orders is not known.
In 1627 he obtained the post of chaplain to the
unlucky expedition to the Isle of Rhé, and two
years later (September 30, 1629) he was presented
by the King to the Vicarage of Dean
Prior, in Devonshire, which the promotion of
its previous incumbent, Dr. Potter, to the
Bishopric of Carlisle, had left in the royal gift.
The annual value of the living was only £50
(£250 present value), no great prize, but the
poem entitled Mr. Robert Hericke: his farwell
unto Poetrie (not printed in Hesperides, but
extant in more than one manuscript version)
shows that the poet was not unaware of the
responsibilities of his profession. " But unto
me," he says to his Muse:
"But unto me be only hoarse, since now
(Heaven and my soul bear record of my vow)
I my desires screw from thee and direct
Them and my thoughts to that sublime respect
And conscience unto priesthood. 'Tis not need
(The scarecrow unto mankind) that doth breed
Wiser conclusions in me, since I know
I've more to bear my charge than way to go;
Or had I not, I'd stop the spreading itch
Of craving more: so in conceit be rich;
But 'tis the God of nature who intends
And Shapes my function for more glorious ends."
Perhaps it was at this time too that Herrick
wrote his Farewell to Sack, and although he
returned both to sack and to poetry we should
be wrong in imagining him as a "blind mouth,"
using his office merely as a means of gain.
He celebrated the births of Charles II and his
brother in verse, perhaps with an eye to future
royal favours, but no more than Chaucer's good
parson does he seem to have "run to London
unto Seynte Poules" in search of the sixteenth
century equivalent for a chauntry, and many
of his poems show him living the life of a contented
country clergyman, sharing the contents
of bin and cruse with his poor parishioners,
and jotting down sermon-notes in verse.
The great majority of Herrick's poems cannot
be dated, and it is idle to enquire which were
written before his ordination and which afterwards.
His conception of religion was medieval
in its sensuousness, and he probably repeated
the stages of sin, repentance and renewed assurance
with some facility. He lived with an old
servant, Prudence Baldwin, the "Prew" of
many of his poems; kept a spaniel named
Tracy, and, so says tradition, a tame pig.
When his parishioners annoyed him he seems
to have comforted himself with epigrams on
them; when they slumbered during one of his
sermons the manuscript was suddenly hurled
at them with a curse for their inattention.
In the same year that Herrick was appointed
to his country vicarage his mother died while
living with her daughter, Mercy, the poet's
dearest sister (see 820), then for some time
married to John Wingfield of Brantham in
Suffolk (see 592), by whom she had three sons
and a daughter, also called Mercy. His eldest
brother, Thomas, had been placed with a Mr.
Massam, a merchant, but as early as 1610 had
retired to live a country life in Leicestershire
(see 106). He appears to have married a wife
named Elizabeth, whose loss Herrick laments
(see 72). Nicholas, the next brother was more
adventurous. He had become a merchant
trading to the Levant, and in this capacity had
visited the Holy Land (see 1102). To his wife
Susanna, daughter of William Salter, Herrick
addresses two poems (524 and 979). There
were three sons and four daughters in this
family, and Herrick wrote a poem to one of the
daughters, Bridget (564), and an elegy on
another, Elizabeth (377). When Mrs. Herrick
died the bulk of her property was left to
the Wingfields, but William Herrick received a
legacy of £100, with ten pounds apiece to his
two children, and a ring of twenty shillings to
his wife. Nicholas and Robert were only left
twenty shilling rings, and the administration of
the will was entrusted to William Herrick and
the Wingfields. The will may have been the
result of a family arrangement, and we have no
reason to believe that the unequal division gave
rise to any ill-feeling. Herrick's address to
"his dying brother, Master William Herrick"
(186), shows abundant affection and there is
every reason to believe that it was addressed
to the William who administered to Mrs. Herrick's will.
While little nephews and nieces were springing
up around him, Herrick remained unmarried,
and frequently congratulates himself on his
freedom from the yoke matrimonial. He imagined
how he would bid farewell to his wife, if he had
one (467), and wrote magnificent
epithalamia for his friends, but lived and died
a bachelor. When first civil troubles and then
civil war cast a shadow over the land, it is not
very easy to say how he viewed the contending
parties. He was devoted to Charles and Henrietta Maria and the young Prince of Wales,
and rejoiced at every Royalist success. Many
also of his poems breathe the spirit of unquestioning
loyalty, but in others he is less
certain of kingly wisdom. Something, however,
must be allowed for his evident habit of
versifying any phrase or epigram which impressed
him, and not all his poems need be
regarded as expressions of his personal opinions.
But with whatever doubts his loyalty
was qualified, it was sufficiently obvious to
procure his ejection from his living in 1648;
and, making the best of his loss, he bade farewell
to Dean Prior, shook the dust of "loathed
Devonshire" off his feet, and returned gaily to
London, where he appears to have discarded
his clerical habit and to have been made abundantly
welcome by his friends.
Free from the cares of his incumbency, and
free also from the restraints it imposed,
Herrick's thoughts turned to the publication
of his poems. As we have said, in his old
Court-days these had found some circulation
in manuscript, and in 1635 one of his fairy
poems was printed, probably without his
leave (see Appendix). In 1639 his poem (577)
The Apparition of his Mistress calling him
to Elysium was licensed at Stationers' Hall
under the title of His Mistress' Shade, and it
was included the next year in an edition of
Shakespeare's Poems (see Notes). On April
29, 1640, "The severall poems written by
Master Robert Herrick," were entered as to be
published by Andrew Crook, but no trace of
such a volume has been discovered, and it was
only in 1648 that Hesperides at length appeared.
Two years later upwards of seventy of the
poems in it were printed in the 1650 edition of
Witt's Recreations, but a small number of these
show considerable variations from the Hesperides
versions, and it is probable that they were
printed from the poet's manuscript. Compilers
of other miscellanies and song books laid Herrick
under contribution, but, with the one
exception of his contribution to the Lacrymæ
Musarum in 1649, no fresh production of his
pen has been preserved, and we know nothing
further of his life save that he returned to
Dean Prior after the Restoration (August 24,
1662), and that according to the parish register
"Robert Herrick, Vicker, was buried ye 15th
day October, 1674."
ALFRED W. POLLARD.
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