Edward Hamley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward Hamley (bap. 1764, d. 1834), poet.
Hamley, elder son of the Rev. Thomas Hamley of St. Columb, Cornwall, who was buried at Bodmin 11 June 1766, was baptised at St. Columb Major 25 Oct. 1764. He matriculated from New College, Oxford, 6 Nov. 1783, and took his B.C.L. degree in 1791. He was elected a fellow of his college 5 Nov. 1785, and then spent some time in Italy.
While residing in the Inner Temple, London, in 1795, he published a volume entitled Poems of Various Kinds, 1795. At this period he was in correspondence with Dr. Samuel Parr, by whom he was called »the learned Mr. Hamley of New College« (Cat. of the Library of S. Parr, 1827, pp. 489, 521).
In 1795 he also printed anonymously Translations, chiefly from the Italian of Petrarch and Metastasio. In the same year he wrote seventeen sonnets, which were afterwards inserted in the Poetical Register and Repository of Fugitive Poetry, at intervals between 1805 and 1809. He became rector of Cusop, Herefordshire, in 1805, and of Stanton St. John, Oxfordshire, in 1806, which benefices he held to his death.
He died at Stanton 7 Dec. 1834.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Dictionary of National Biography (1885–1900), a publication now in the public domain.