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George Herbert, 1593-1633, wrote Latin poetry of extraordinary quality and and in great quantity.
It is for his English devotional poems, unpublished in his lifetime, that he's been especially treasured.
Towards his death, Herbert handed these to a friend in case they might offer comfort to others.
And they vividly show Herbert enduring the pain as well as feeling the joy of his faith and working through his relationship with God.
And his book soon found readers on all sides in the coming civil wars.
Before entering the fabric of poetry in English to be taken up by Coleridge, Eliot and and Heaney, among others, and set to music still sung in parish churches up and down the country.
We meet to discuss George Herbert, poet, orator and priest.
Osama Jackson, Director of Music and Director of Studies in English at Peterhouse University of Cambridge, Victoria Merle, formerly Professor of Early Modern Latin and English at UCL and Helen Wilcox, Professor Emerita of English Literature at Bangor University.
Helen, what do we need to know about George Herbert's early years?
Well, as you said, he was born in 1593.
He was the seventh of 10 children and he was born in Wales, in Montgomery.
And I think his Welshness is something that we shouldn't overlook.
Both his family's mother and father were distinguished Welsh families, although his mother was recently from Shropshire, so he was from the borders of Wales and England.
I think an important fact to remember is that he lost his father when he was only three years old.