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Edward Garrard Marsh

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Name
  
Edward Marsh

Education
  
Wadham College, Oxford

Parents
  
John Marsh


Died
  
1862

Role
  
Poet

Books
  
The Old Man

Edward Garrard Marsh (1783–1862) was an English poet and Anglican clergyman.

Contents

He was son of the composer John Marsh. He was a good friend of William Hayley, and associated with him and William Blake.

He studied at Wadham College, Oxford, and on graduating became a Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford. He was a curate at Nuneham, and then bought a chapel in Hampstead. He became Residentiary Canon at Southwell. He was vicar of Sandon, Hertfordshire and then Aylesford, Kent. He was Bampton Lecturer in 1848.

At 7 July 1813 he married Lydia Williams (Gosport, England, 17 January 1788 - 13 December 1859) at Southwell, England. She was a sister of Rev. Henry Williams and Rev. William Williams. Their grandfather Rev. Thomas Williams was a Congregational minister.

While he had connections to non-conformist family members, Edward's beliefs followed that of low church evangelical Anglicanism.

He was also from 1821 a prebend of Woodborough, Nottinghamshire, an office suppressed in 1841 by the Church Commissioners.

He was a member of the Church Missionary Society (CMS) and was described as 'influential' in the decision of Henry Williams and William Williams to convert to Anglicanism in February 1818, and then to join the CMS.

The South Africa and Patagonia missionary Allen Francis Gardiner's second wife was Marsh's daughter.

Works

  • The Book of Psalms translated into English Verse (1832)
  • Account of the slavery of Friends in the Barbary States, towards the close of the seventeenth century
  • The Christian Doctrine of Sanctification (Bampton Lecture of 1848)
  • Literature

  • Robert N. Essick, "Blake, Hayley, and Edward Garrard Marsh: 'An Insect of Parnassus.'" Explorations: The Age of Enlightenment. Special Series 1 (1987): 58-84.
  • Ed. Brian Robins, "The John Marsh Journals: The Life and Times of Gentleman Composer (1752-1828)", Stuyvesant, NJ (1998 and 2011)
  • References

    Edward Garrard Marsh Wikipedia