- Edmund Waller
Edmund Waller, FRS (3 March 1606 – 21 October 1687) was an English
poet andPolitician .Early life
Edmund Waller was the eldest son of Robert Waller of Coleshill, Herts, and Anne Hampden, his wife; thus he was first cousin to
John Hampden . He was descended from the Waller family ofGroombridge Place , Kent. Early in his childhood his father moved the family toBeaconsfield . Of Waller's early education all we know is his own account that he "was bred under several ill, dull and ignorant schoolmasters, until he went to Mr Dobson at Wycombe, who was a good schoolmaster and had been an Eton scholar." Robert Waller died in 1616, and Anne, a lady of rare force of character, sent him to Eton and to theUniversity of Cambridge . He was admitted a fellow-commoner ofKing's College, Cambridge on 22 March 1620, he left without a degree.As a member of Parliament during the political turmoil of the 1640s, he was arrested for his part in a plot to establish London as a stronghold of the king; by betraying his colleagues and by lavish bribes, he avoided death. He later wrote poetic tributes to both Oliver Cromwell (1655) and Charles II (1660). Rejecting the dense intellectual verse of Metaphysical poetry, he adopted generalizing statement, easy associative development, and urbane social comment. With his emphasis on definitive phrasing through inversion and balance, he prepared the way for the emergence of the heroic couplet. By the end of the 17th century the heroic couplet was the dominant form of English poetry. Waller's lyrics include the well-known “Go, lovely Rose!”Early parliamentary career
It is believed that in 1621, at the age of only sixteen, he sat as member for Agmondesham (Amersham) in the last Parliament of James I.
Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon says that Waller was "nursed in parliaments." In the parliament of 1624 he represented Ilchester, and in the first parliament of Charles I, Chipping Wycombe.Marriage
Waller's first notable action was his surreptitious marriage with a wealthy ward of the Court of Aldermen, in 1631. He was brought before the
Star Chamber for this offence, and heavily fined. But his own fortune was large, and all his life Waller was a wealthy man. After bearing him a son and a daughter at Beaconsfield, Mrs Waller died in 1634. It was about this time that the poet was elected into the "Club" ofLucius Cary, 2nd Viscount Falkland .In about 1635 he met Lady Dorothy Sidney, eldest daughter of
Robert Sidney, 2nd Earl of Leicester , who was then eighteen years of age. He formed a romantic passion for this girl, whom he celebrated under the name of Sacharissa. She rejected him, and marriedHenry Spencer, 1st Earl of Sunderland in 1639. Disappointment is said to have made Waller temporarily insane. However, he wrote a long, graceful and eminently sober letter to the bride's sister on the occasion of the wedding.Speeches
In 1640 Waller was again
Member of Parliament for Amersham, and made certain speeches which attracted wide attention; later, in theLong Parliament , he represented St Ives inCornwall . Waller had hitherto supported the party ofJohn Pym , but he now left him for the group of Falkland and Hyde. His speeches were much admired, and were separately printed; they are academic exercises very carefully prepared. Clarendon says that Waller spoke "upon all occasions with great sharpness and freedom.""Waller's Plot"
An extraordinary and obscure conspiracy against Parliament, in favour of the king, which is known as "Waller's Plot," occupied the spring of 1643, but on
30 May he and his friends were arrested. In the terror of discovery, Waller was accused of testifying against the others. He was called before the bar of the House in July, and made an abject speech of recantation. His life was spared and he was committed to theTower of London , but, on paying a fine of £10,000, he was released and banished from the realm in November 1643.Banishment
He married a second wife, Mary Bracey of
Thame , and went over to Calais, afterwards taking up his residence atRouen . In 1645 the "Poems" of Waller were first published in London, in three different editions; there has been much discussion of the order and respective authority of these issues, but nothing is decidedly known. Many of the lyrics were already set to music byHenry Lawes .In 1646 Waller travelled with
John Evelyn inSwitzerland andItaly . During the worst period of his exile Waller managed to "keep a table" for the Royalists inParis , although in order to do so he was obliged to sell his wife's jewels.Return to England
At the close of 1651 the
British House of Commons revoked Waller's sentence of banishment, and he was allowed to return to Beaconsfield, where he lived very quietly until the Restoration. In 1655 he published "A Panegyric to my Lord Protector", and was made a Commissioner for Trade a month or two later, he followed this, in 1660, with a poem "To the King, upon his Majesty's Happy Return". Being challenged by Charles II to explain why this latter piece was inferior to the eulogy of Cromwell, the poet smartly replied, "Sir, we poets never succeed so well in writing truth as in fiction".Waller entered the House of Commons again in 1661, as MP for Hastings, and Burnet has recorded that for the next quarter of a century "it was no House if Waller was not there". His sympathies were tolerant and kindly, and he constantly defended the
Nonconformist s.One famous speech of Waller's was: "Let us look to our Government, fleet and trade, 'tis the best advice the oldest Parliament man among you can give you, and so God bless you."
Later life
After the death of his second wife, in 1677, Waller retired to Hall Barn, the house he had designed and owned in Beaconsfield, and though he returned to London, he became more and more attached to the retirement of his woods, "where," he said, "he found the trees as bare and withered as himself." In 1661 he had published his poem, "St James' Park"; in 1664 he had collected his poetical works; in 1666 appeared his "Instructions to a Painter"; and in 1685 his "Divine Poems". The final collection of his works is dated 1686, but there were further posthumous additions made in 1690.
Waller bought a cottage at
Coleshill , where he was born, meaning to die there; "a stag," he said, "when he is hunted, and near spent, always returns home." He actually died, however, at Hall Barn, with his children and his grandchildren about him, on 21 October 1687, and was buried in woollen (in spite of his expressed wish), in the churchyard of Beaconsfield.Verse
Waller's lyrics were at one time admired to excess, but with the exception of "Song"(Go, lovely Rose) and one or two others, they have lost their popularity. He lacked imaginative invention, but resolutely placed himself in the forefront of reaction against the violence and "conceit" into which the baser kind of English poetry was descending.
Waller was regarded by some as the pioneer in introducing the classical couplet into English verse. It is, of course, obvious that Waller could not "introduce" what had been invented, and admirably exemplified, by
Geoffrey Chaucer . But those who have pointed to smoothdistich s employed by poets earlier than Waller have not given sufficient attention to the fact (exaggerated, doubtless, by critics arguing in the opposite camp) that it was he who earliest made writing in the serried couplet the habit and the fashion. Waller was writing in the regular heroic measure, afterwards carried to so high a perfection byJohn Dryden andAlexander Pope , perhaps even in 1621.References
*1911
Trivia
Edmund Waller Primary School is in
New Cross , South East London.External links
*
** Full text of " [http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/12322 Poetical Works of Edmund Waller and Sir John Denham] " fromProject Gutenberg
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