HENRY KIRKE WHITE BIOGRAPHY

HENRY KIRKE WHITE BIOGRAPHY from the Biographical Dictionary of English Literature by John Cousin.

WHITE, HENRY KIRKE (1785-1806). —Poet, s. of a butcher at Nottingham. At first assisting his f. , next a stocking weaver, he was afterwards placed in the office of an attorney. Some contributions to a newspaper introduced him to the notice of Capel Lofft, a patron of promising youths, by whose help he brought out a vol. of poems, which fell into the hands of Southey, who wrote to him. Thereafter friends raised a fund to send him to Camb., where he gave brilliant promise. Overwork, however, undermined a constitution originally delicate, and he d. at 21. Southey wrote a short memoir of him with some additional poems. His chief poem was the Christiad , a fragment. His best known production is the hymn, "Much in sorrow, oft in Woe."