White, Henry Kirke, a gifted English poet
who died early in life, was born in Nottingham,
England, March 21, 1785. Very early
he manifested a remarkable love for books
and a decided talent for composition. But
his parents were poor, and he was apprenticed
in early boyhood to a stocking weaver,
from which uncongenial servitude he escaped
as soon as he could and began the
study of law; but later he was converted
and felt called to the ministry. The story
of his conversion from deism to Christianity
is briefly but beautifully told in the
poem titled "The Star of Bethlehem." He
entered St. John's College, Cambridge, in
1805 as a servitor; but died October 19,
1806, in the second year of his college
course, when only twenty-one years of age.
In 1803 he published a small volume of
poems. Some of them are very fine, but no
doubt he would have produced others far
better if he had lived to the ordinary age
of man. His rare poetic genius, his victory
over skepticism and subsequent faith
and piety, his hard struggle with poverty
and early death invest the story of his life
with more than ordinary pathos. His
hymns, ten in number, appeared in
Collyer's
Collection, 1812.
| Oft in danger, oft in woe |
412 |
| The Lord our God is clothed with |
99 |
| When marshaled on the mighty |
124 |
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