Poetical Works of Edmund 
Waller and Sir John Denham 
 
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Title: Poetical Works of Edmund Waller and Sir John Denham 
Author: Edmund Waller; John Denham 
Release Date: May 10, 2004 [EBook #12322] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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POETICAL WORKS 
OF 
EDMUND WALLER 
AND 
SIR JOHN DENHAM.
WITH MEMOIR AND DISSERTATION, 
BY THE 
REV. GEORGE GILFILLAN. 
M.DCCC.LVII. 
 
THE 
LIFE OF EDMUND WALLER. 
It is too true, after all, that the lives of poets are not, in general, very 
interesting. Could we, indeed, trace the private workings of their souls, 
and read the pages of their mental and moral development, no 
biographies could be richer in instruction, and even entertainment, than 
those of our greater bards. The inner life of every true poet must be 
poetical. But in proportion to the romance of their souls' story, is often 
the commonplace of their outward career. There have been poets, 
however, whose lives are quite as readable and as instructive as their 
poetry, and have even shed a reflex and powerful interest on their 
writings. The interest of such lives has, in general, proceeded either 
from the extraordinary misfortunes of the bard, or from his extremely 
bad morals, or from his strange personal idiosyncrasy, or from his 
being involved in the political or religious conflicts of his age. The life 
of Milton, for instance, is rendered intensely interesting from his 
connexion with the public affairs of his critical and solemn era. The life 
of Johnson is made readable from his peculiar conformation of body, 
his bear-like manners, his oddities, and his early struggles. You devour 
the life of Gifford, not because he was a poet, but because he was a 
shoemaker; and that of Byron, more on account of his vices, his 
peerage, and his domestic unhappiness, than for the sake of his poetry. 
And in Waller, too, you feel some supplemental interest, because he 
united what are usually thought the incompatible characters of a poet 
and a political plotter, and very nearly reached the altitudes of the 
gallows as well as those of Parnassus. 
March 1605 was the date, and Coleshill, in Hertfordshire, the place, of 
the birth of our poet. He was of an ancient and honourable family 
originally from Kent, some members of which were distinguished for 
their wealth and others for the valour with which, at Agincourt and 
elsewhere, they fought the battles of their country. Robert Waller, the 
poet's father, inherited from Edmund, his father, the lands of
Beaconsfield, in Bucks, and other territory in Hertfordshire. These had 
been in 1548-9 left by Francis Waller, in default of issue by his own 
wife, to his brothers Thomas and Edmund, but Thomas dying, Edmund 
inherited the whole. Robert, on receiving his estates, quitted the 
profession of the law, to which he had attached himself, and spent the 
rest of his life chiefly at Beaconsfield, employed in the manly business 
and healthy amusements of a country gentleman. He died in August 
1616, and left a widow and a son--the son, Edmund, being eleven years 
of age. It was at Beaconsfield. We need hardly remind our readers, that 
a far greater Edmund--Edmund Burke--spent many of his days. It was 
there that he composed his latest and noblest works, the "Reflections on 
the French Revolution," and the "Letters on a Regicide Peace;" and 
there he surrendered to the Creator one of the subtlest, strongest, 
brightest, and best of human souls. Shortly after Burke's death, the 
house of Beaconsfield was burnt down, and no trace of it is now, we 
believe, extant. 
Mrs. Waller's brother, William, was the father of John Hampden. His 
wife, Elizabeth Cromwell, the aunt of the great Oliver, was, however, 
and continued to the end, a violent Royalist; and Cromwell, although 
he treated both her and her son with kindness, and on the terms of their 
relationship, was so provoked at hearing that she carried on a secret 
correspondence with the Stewart party, that he confined her under a 
very strict watch in the house of her daughter, Mrs. Price, whose 
husband was on the side of the Parliament. It is exceedingly probable 
that from the "mother's milk" of early prejudice was derived that spirit 
of partisanship which distinguished alike the writings and the life of the 
poet. It is possible, too, that contact with    
    
		
	
	
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