Trisha Shetty (Editor)

William Thompson (poet)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

Rev. William Thompson (1712 - 1766) was an 18th-century English poet.

Contents

Life

William Thompson was the son of Rev. Francis Thompson, vicar of Brough in Westmoreland, NW England, who died in 1735; William's date of birth is not known. William Thompson studied at Queen's College, Oxford, which his father had also attended, and graduated with a Master of Arts in 1738, afterwards becoming a fellow of the college.

Thompson became rector of Hampton Poyle with South Weston in Oxfordshire. He published his collected poems in two volumes in 1757.

Work

He is best known for the long poem Sickness (1746), which discusses various illnesses including melancholy, fever, consumption, and variola. Other poems include Epithalamium, Nativity, and Hymn to May, as well as a panegyric to Alexander Pope.

References

William Thompson (poet) Wikipedia


Similar Topics