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Richard Chenevix Trench

Richard Chenevix Trench (Richard Trench until 1873;[citation needed] 9 September 1807 – 28 March 1886) was an Anglican archbishop and poet.


Richard Chenevix Trench
Archbishop of Dublin
Primate of Ireland
ChurchChurch of Ireland
ProvinceDublin
DioceseDublin and Glendalough
In office1864-1884
PredecessorRichard Whately
SuccessorWilliam Plunket, 4th Baron Plunket
Orders
Ordination5 July 1835
Consecration1 January 1864
by Marcus Beresford
Personal details
Born(1807-09-09)9 September 1807
Died28 March 1886(1886-03-28) (aged 78)
Eaton Square, London
BuriedWestminster Abbey
NationalityIrish
DenominationAnglican
SpouseFrances Mary Trench
Previous post(s)Dean of Westminster (1856–1864)
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Signature
Richard Chenevix Trench circa 1860

Life edit

He was born in Dublin, Ireland, the son of Richard Trench (1774–1860), barrister-at-law, and the Dublin writer Melesina Chenevix (1768–1827).[1][2] His elder brother was Francis Chenevix Trench.[3] He went to school at Harrow, went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, and graduated in 1829.[4] In 1830 he visited Spain.[5] While incumbent of Curdridge Chapel near Bishop's Waltham in Hampshire, he published (1835) The Story of Justin Martyr and Other Poems, which was favourably received, and was followed in 1838 by Sabbation, Honor Neale, and other Poems, and in 1842 by Poems from Eastern Sources. These volumes revealed the author as the most gifted of the immediate disciples of Wordsworth, with a warmer colouring and more pronounced ecclesiastical sympathies than the master, and strong affinities to Alfred Lord Tennyson, John Keble and Richard Monckton Milnes.[6]

In 1841 he resigned his living to become curate to Samuel Wilberforce, then rector of Alverstoke, and upon Wilberforce's promotion to the deanery of Westminster Abbey in 1845 he was presented to the rectory of Itchenstoke. In 1845 and 1846 he preached the Hulsean lecture, and in the former year was made examining chaplain to Wilberforce, now Bishop of Oxford. He was shortly afterwards appointed to a theological chair at King's College London.[6]

Trench joined the Canterbury Association on 27 March 1848, on the same day as Samuel Wilberforce and Wilberforce's brother Robert.[2]

In 1851 he established his fame as a philologist by The Study of Words, originally delivered as lectures to the pupils of the Diocesan Training School, Winchester. His stated purpose was to demonstrate that in words, even taken singly, "there are boundless stores of moral and historic truth, and no less of passion and imagination laid up"—an argument which he supported by a number of apposite illustrations. It was followed by two little volumes of similar character—English Past and Present (1855) and A Select Glossary of English Words (1859). All have gone through numerous editions and have contributed much to promote the historical study of the English tongue. Another great service to English philology was rendered by his paper, read before the Philological Society, On some Deficiencies in our English Dictionaries (1857), which gave the first impulse to the great Oxford English Dictionary.[7] Trench envisaged a totally new dictionary that was a "lexicon totius Anglicitatis".[8] As one of the three founders of the dictionary, he expressed his vision thus: it would be 'an entirely new Dictionary; no patch upon old garments, but a new garment throughout'.[9]

His advocacy of a revised translation of the New Testament (1858) helped promote another great national project. In 1856 he published a valuable essay on Calderón, with a translation of a portion of Life is a Dream in the original metre. In 1841 he had published his Notes on the Parables of our Lord, and in 1846 his Notes on the Miracles, popular works which are treasuries of erudite and acute illustration.[6]

In 1856 Trench became Dean of Westminster Abbey, a position which suited him. Here he introduced evening nave services.

Later career and death edit

In January 1864 he was advanced to the post of Archbishop of Dublin. Arthur Penrhyn Stanley had been first choice, but was rejected by the Irish Church, and, according to Bishop Wilberforce's correspondence, Trench's appointment was favoured by neither the prime minister nor the lord-lieutenant. It was, moreover, unpopular in Ireland, and a blow to English literature; yet it turned out to be fortunate. Trench could not prevent the disestablishment of the Irish Church, though he resisted with dignity. But, when the disestablished communion had to be reconstituted under the greatest difficulties, it was important that the occupant of his position should be a man of a liberal and genial spirit.[6]

This was the work of the remainder of Trench's life; it exposed him at times to considerable abuse, but he came to be appreciated, and, when in November 1884 he resigned his archbishopric because of poor health, clergy and laity unanimously recorded their sense of his "wisdom, learning, diligence, and munificence." He had found time for Lectures on Medieval Church History (1878); his poetical works were rearranged and collected in two volumes (last edition, 1885). From 1872 and during his successor's incumbency the post of Dean of Christ Church, Dublin was held with the archbishopric.

He died on 28 March 1886 at Eaton Square, London after a lingering illness, and was buried at Westminster Abbey.[2]

George W. E. Russell described Trench as "a man of singularly vague and dreamy habits" and recounted the following anecdote of his old age:

He once went back to pay a visit to his successor, Lord Plunket. Finding himself back again in his old palace, sitting at his old dinner-table, and gazing across it at his wife, he lapsed in memory to the days when he was master of the house, and gently remarked to Mrs Trench, "I am afraid, my love, that we must put this cook down among our failures."[10]

Trench's Letters and Memorial edit

  • Richard Chenevix Trench, Archbishop: Letters and Memorials, Edited by the Author of “Charles Lowder” (Maria Trench), Volume 1 (1888).
  • Chenevix Trench, Archbishop: Letters and Memorials, Edited by the Author of “Charles Lowder” (Maria Trench), Volume 2 (1888).

Family edit

Richard Chenevix Trench married his cousin, Hon. Frances Mary Trench, daughter of Francis Trench and Mary Mason, and sister of the 2nd Lord Ashtown, on 1 June 1832.[2] They had 14 children; 8 sons and 6 daughters:[citation needed]

  • Francis William Trench (1833–1841)
  • Melesina Mary Chenevix Trench (1834–1918)
  • Richard Trench (1836–1861)
  • Frederic Chenevix Trench (1837–1894) (Major General Trench)
  • Charles Chenevix Trench (1839–1933)
  • Arthur Julius Trench (1840–1860)
  • Emily Elizabeth Trench (1842–1842)
  • Philip Chenevix Trench (1843–1848)
  • Edith Chenevix Trench (1844–1942), married in 1889 Reginald Stephen Copleston (1845–1925), Bishop of Colombo and later Bishop of Calcutta
  • Helen Emily Chenevix Trench (1846–1935)
  • Frances Harriet Chenevix Trench (1847–1941)
  • Rose Julia Chenevix Trench (1848–1902)
  • Alfred Chenevix Trench (1849–1938)
  • Herbert Francis Chenevix Trench (1850–1900)

Works edit

  • The Story of Justin Martyr and other Poems (1835).
  • The Story of Justin Martyr and other Poems (2nd Edition, 1835).
  • Sabbation; Honor Neale, and other Poems (1838).
  • Poems (1841).
  • Poems from Eastern Sources: the Steadfast Prince, and other Poems (1842).
  • Genoveva: a Poem, (1842).
  • Story of Justin Martyr: Sabbation and Other Poems (1844).
  • The Fitness of Holy Scripture for Unfolding the Spiritual Life of Man (1845 & 1856).
  • Christ the Desire of all Nations: Being The Hulsean Lectures (1846).
  • The Hulsean Lectures: Christ the Desire of all Nations for 1845 and 1846: 2nd ed., rev. (1847).
  • on the Parables of Our Lord (1847).
  • Sacred Latin Poetry (1849).
  • on the Miracles of Our Lord (1850).
  • Star of the Wise Men (1850).
  • of the Sermon on the Mount: Second Edition Revised and Improved (1851).
  • from Eastern Sources, Genoveva, and other Poems (1851).
  • the Lessons in Proverbs: Five Lectures (1853).
  • On the Study of Words: Five Lectures, Fourth Edition Revised (1853).
  • Fitness of the Holy Scripture (1854).
  • Alma: and Other Poems (1855).
  • Calderon, his Life and Genius, with Specimens of his Plays (1856).
  • Life's a Dream: The Great Theatre of the World trans from the Spanish of Calderon, with an Essay on His Life and Genius (1856 & 1860).
  • Poems (1856).
  • On Some Deficiencies in our English Dictionaries (1857).
  • Preached Before the University of Cambridge (1857).
  • the Authorized Version of the New Testament (1858).
  • Brands Plucked Out of the Fire: A Sermon (1858).
  • the English Language, Past and Present: Five Lectures (1858).
  • Select Glossary of English Words (1860).
  • Preached in Westminster Abbey (1860).
  • of the New Testament: Fifth Edition Revised (1860).
  • and their Lessons (1861).
  • Every Good Gift from Above (1864).
  • Collected and Arranged Anew (1865).
  • Studies in the Gospels (1867).
  • A Household Book of English Poetry (1868).
  • Plutarch, his life, and his Lives and his Morals (1873).
  • Preached for the Most Part in Ireland (1873).
  • Synonyms of the New Testament: 9th ed., improved (1880).
  • Brief Thoughts and Meditations on some Passages in Holy Scripture (1884).
  • on Medieval Church History (1886).
  • New and Old (1886).
  • Shipwrecks of Faith: Three Sermons (1886).
  • Sonnets and Elegiacs (1910).
  • Study of Words: Condensed by Grenville Kleiser (1911).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Boylan, Henry (1998). A Dictionary of Irish Biography, 3rd Edition. Dublin: Gill and MacMillan. p. 429. ISBN 0-7171-2945-4.
  2. ^ a b c d Blain, Rev. Michael (2007). The Canterbury Association (1848–1852): A Study of Its Members' Connections (PDF). Christchurch: Project Canterbury. pp. 82–83. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  3. ^ Carlyle, Edward Irving (1899). "Trench, Francis Chenevix" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 57. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  4. ^ "Trench, Richard Chenevix (TRNC825RC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  5. ^ Reilly, Catherine (2000). "Trench, Richard Chenevix, 1807-86." In: Mid-Victorian Poetry, 1860-1879. London & New York: Mansell, p. 446.
  6. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911.
  7. ^ Winchester, Simon (2004). The Meaning of Everything: The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press, p. 39.
  8. ^ Ogilvie, Sarah (2012). Words of the World: A Global History of the Oxford English Dictionary. Cambridge University Press. pp. 29, 49. ISBN 9781107021839.
  9. ^ Ogilvie, Sarah (2012). Words of the World: A Global History of the Oxford English Dictionary. Cambridge University Press. p. 29. ISBN 9781107021839.
  10. ^ Russell, George W.E. (1898). Collections & Recollections. London: Smith, Elder & Co, p. 403.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Downing, Gregory M. (1998). "Richard Chenevix Trench and Joyce's Historical Study of Words," Joyce Studies Annual, Vol. IX, pp. 37–68.
  • Sperling, Matthew (2014). "Richard Chenevix Trench." In: Visionary Philology: Geoffrey Hill and the Study of Words. Oxford University Press, pp. 40–72.
  • Wiersbe, Warren W. (2009). “Richard Chenevix Trench” in 50 People Every Christian Should Know: Learning from Spiritual Giants of the Faith . BakerBooks, pp. 67–73

External links edit

0010010010101000111010010101

richard, chenevix, trench, richard, trench, until, 1873, citation, needed, september, 1807, march, 1886, anglican, archbishop, poet, most, reverendarchbishop, dublinprimate, irelandchurchchurch, irelandprovincedublindiocesedublin, glendaloughin, office1864, 18. Richard Chenevix Trench Richard Trench until 1873 citation needed 9 September 1807 28 March 1886 was an Anglican archbishop and poet The Most ReverendRichard Chenevix TrenchArchbishop of DublinPrimate of IrelandChurchChurch of IrelandProvinceDublinDioceseDublin and GlendaloughIn office1864 1884PredecessorRichard WhatelySuccessorWilliam Plunket 4th Baron PlunketOrdersOrdination5 July 1835Consecration1 January 1864by Marcus BeresfordPersonal detailsBorn 1807 09 09 9 September 1807Dublin Ireland United Kingdom of Great Britain and IrelandDied28 March 1886 1886 03 28 aged 78 Eaton Square LondonBuriedWestminster AbbeyNationalityIrishDenominationAnglicanSpouseFrances Mary TrenchPrevious post s Dean of Westminster 1856 1864 Alma materTrinity College CambridgeSignature Richard Chenevix Trench circa 1860 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Later career and death 1 2 Trench s Letters and Memorial 2 Family 3 Works 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife editHe was born in Dublin Ireland the son of Richard Trench 1774 1860 barrister at law and the Dublin writer Melesina Chenevix 1768 1827 1 2 His elder brother was Francis Chenevix Trench 3 He went to school at Harrow went up to Trinity College Cambridge and graduated in 1829 4 In 1830 he visited Spain 5 While incumbent of Curdridge Chapel near Bishop s Waltham in Hampshire he published 1835 The Story of Justin Martyr and Other Poems which was favourably received and was followed in 1838 by Sabbation Honor Neale and other Poems and in 1842 by Poems from Eastern Sources These volumes revealed the author as the most gifted of the immediate disciples of Wordsworth with a warmer colouring and more pronounced ecclesiastical sympathies than the master and strong affinities to Alfred Lord Tennyson John Keble and Richard Monckton Milnes 6 In 1841 he resigned his living to become curate to Samuel Wilberforce then rector of Alverstoke and upon Wilberforce s promotion to the deanery of Westminster Abbey in 1845 he was presented to the rectory of Itchenstoke In 1845 and 1846 he preached the Hulsean lecture and in the former year was made examining chaplain to Wilberforce now Bishop of Oxford He was shortly afterwards appointed to a theological chair at King s College London 6 Trench joined the Canterbury Association on 27 March 1848 on the same day as Samuel Wilberforce and Wilberforce s brother Robert 2 In 1851 he established his fame as a philologist by The Study of Words originally delivered as lectures to the pupils of the Diocesan Training School Winchester His stated purpose was to demonstrate that in words even taken singly there are boundless stores of moral and historic truth and no less of passion and imagination laid up an argument which he supported by a number of apposite illustrations It was followed by two little volumes of similar character English Past and Present 1855 and A Select Glossary of English Words 1859 All have gone through numerous editions and have contributed much to promote the historical study of the English tongue Another great service to English philology was rendered by his paper read before the Philological Society On some Deficiencies in our English Dictionaries 1857 which gave the first impulse to the great Oxford English Dictionary 7 Trench envisaged a totally new dictionary that was a lexicon totius Anglicitatis 8 As one of the three founders of the dictionary he expressed his vision thus it would be an entirely new Dictionary no patch upon old garments but a new garment throughout 9 His advocacy of a revised translation of the New Testament 1858 helped promote another great national project In 1856 he published a valuable essay on Calderon with a translation of a portion of Life is a Dream in the original metre In 1841 he had published his Notes on the Parables of our Lord and in 1846 his Notes on the Miracles popular works which are treasuries of erudite and acute illustration 6 In 1856 Trench became Dean of Westminster Abbey a position which suited him Here he introduced evening nave services Later career and death edit In January 1864 he was advanced to the post of Archbishop of Dublin Arthur Penrhyn Stanley had been first choice but was rejected by the Irish Church and according to Bishop Wilberforce s correspondence Trench s appointment was favoured by neither the prime minister nor the lord lieutenant It was moreover unpopular in Ireland and a blow to English literature yet it turned out to be fortunate Trench could not prevent the disestablishment of the Irish Church though he resisted with dignity But when the disestablished communion had to be reconstituted under the greatest difficulties it was important that the occupant of his position should be a man of a liberal and genial spirit 6 This was the work of the remainder of Trench s life it exposed him at times to considerable abuse but he came to be appreciated and when in November 1884 he resigned his archbishopric because of poor health clergy and laity unanimously recorded their sense of his wisdom learning diligence and munificence He had found time for Lectures on Medieval Church History 1878 his poetical works were rearranged and collected in two volumes last edition 1885 From 1872 and during his successor s incumbency the post of Dean of Christ Church Dublin was held with the archbishopric He died on 28 March 1886 at Eaton Square London after a lingering illness and was buried at Westminster Abbey 2 George W E Russell described Trench as a man of singularly vague and dreamy habits and recounted the following anecdote of his old age He once went back to pay a visit to his successor Lord Plunket Finding himself back again in his old palace sitting at his old dinner table and gazing across it at his wife he lapsed in memory to the days when he was master of the house and gently remarked to Mrs Trench I am afraid my love that we must put this cook down among our failures 10 Trench s Letters and Memorial edit Richard Chenevix Trench Archbishop Letters and Memorials Edited by the Author of Charles Lowder Maria Trench Volume 1 1888 Chenevix Trench Archbishop Letters and Memorials Edited by the Author of Charles Lowder Maria Trench Volume 2 1888 Family editRichard Chenevix Trench married his cousin Hon Frances Mary Trench daughter of Francis Trench and Mary Mason and sister of the 2nd Lord Ashtown on 1 June 1832 2 They had 14 children 8 sons and 6 daughters citation needed Francis William Trench 1833 1841 Melesina Mary Chenevix Trench 1834 1918 Richard Trench 1836 1861 Frederic Chenevix Trench 1837 1894 Major General Trench Charles Chenevix Trench 1839 1933 Arthur Julius Trench 1840 1860 Emily Elizabeth Trench 1842 1842 Philip Chenevix Trench 1843 1848 Edith Chenevix Trench 1844 1942 married in 1889 Reginald Stephen Copleston 1845 1925 Bishop of Colombo and later Bishop of Calcutta Helen Emily Chenevix Trench 1846 1935 Frances Harriet Chenevix Trench 1847 1941 Rose Julia Chenevix Trench 1848 1902 Alfred Chenevix Trench 1849 1938 Herbert Francis Chenevix Trench 1850 1900 Works editThe Story of Justin Martyr and other Poems 1835 The Story of Justin Martyr and other Poems 2nd Edition 1835 Sabbation Honor Neale and other Poems 1838 Poems 1841 Poems from Eastern Sources the Steadfast Prince and other Poems 1842 Genoveva a Poem 1842 Story of Justin Martyr Sabbation and Other Poems 1844 The Fitness of Holy Scripture for Unfolding the Spiritual Life of Man 1845 amp 1856 Christ the Desire of all Nations Being The Hulsean Lectures 1846 The Hulsean Lectures Christ the Desire of all Nations for 1845 and 1846 2nd ed rev 1847 on the Parables of Our Lord 1847 Sacred Latin Poetry 1849 on the Miracles of Our Lord 1850 Star of the Wise Men 1850 of the Sermon on the Mount Second Edition Revised and Improved 1851 from Eastern Sources Genoveva and other Poems 1851 the Lessons in Proverbs Five Lectures 1853 On the Study of Words Five Lectures Fourth Edition Revised 1853 Fitness of the Holy Scripture 1854 Alma and Other Poems 1855 Calderon his Life and Genius with Specimens of his Plays 1856 Life s a Dream The Great Theatre of the World trans from the Spanish of Calderon with an Essay on His Life and Genius 1856 amp 1860 Poems 1856 On Some Deficiencies in our English Dictionaries 1857 Preached Before the University of Cambridge 1857 the Authorized Version of the New Testament 1858 Brands Plucked Out of the Fire A Sermon 1858 the English Language Past and Present Five Lectures 1858 Select Glossary of English Words 1860 Preached in Westminster Abbey 1860 of the New Testament Fifth Edition Revised 1860 and their Lessons 1861 Commentary on the Epistles to the Seven Churches in Asia Revelation II III 1863 Every Good Gift from Above 1864 Collected and Arranged Anew 1865 Studies in the Gospels 1867 A Household Book of English Poetry 1868 Plutarch his life and his Lives and his Morals 1873 Preached for the Most Part in Ireland 1873 Synonyms of the New Testament 9th ed improved 1880 Brief Thoughts and Meditations on some Passages in Holy Scripture 1884 on Medieval Church History 1886 New and Old 1886 Shipwrecks of Faith Three Sermons 1886 Sonnets and Elegiacs 1910 Study of Words Condensed by Grenville Kleiser 1911 See also edit nbsp Poetry portal Parables of Jesus Miracles of JesusNotes edit Boylan Henry 1998 A Dictionary of Irish Biography 3rd Edition Dublin Gill and MacMillan p 429 ISBN 0 7171 2945 4 a b c d Blain Rev Michael 2007 The Canterbury Association 1848 1852 A Study of Its Members Connections PDF Christchurch Project Canterbury pp 82 83 Retrieved 2 April 2013 Carlyle Edward Irving 1899 Trench Francis Chenevix In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 57 London Smith Elder amp Co Trench Richard Chenevix TRNC825RC A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Reilly Catherine 2000 Trench Richard Chenevix 1807 86 In Mid Victorian Poetry 1860 1879 London amp New York Mansell p 446 a b c d Chisholm 1911 Winchester Simon 2004 The Meaning of Everything The Story of the Oxford English Dictionary Oxford University Press p 39 Ogilvie Sarah 2012 Words of the World A Global History of the Oxford English Dictionary Cambridge University Press pp 29 49 ISBN 9781107021839 Ogilvie Sarah 2012 Words of the World A Global History of the Oxford English Dictionary Cambridge University Press p 29 ISBN 9781107021839 Russell George W E 1898 Collections amp Recollections London Smith Elder amp Co p 403 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Trench Richard Chenevix Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press Bayne Ronald 1899 Trench Richard Chenevix In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 57 London Smith Elder amp Co Milne Kenneth Trench Richard Chenevix 1807 1886 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 27702 Subscription or UK public library membership required Church of Ireland titles Preceded byRichard Whately Archbishop of Dublin1864 1884 Succeeded byWilliam PlunketFurther reading editDowning Gregory M 1998 Richard Chenevix Trench and Joyce s Historical Study of Words Joyce Studies Annual Vol IX pp 37 68 Sperling Matthew 2014 Richard Chenevix Trench In Visionary Philology Geoffrey Hill and the Study of Words Oxford University Press pp 40 72 Wiersbe Warren W 2009 Richard Chenevix Trench in 50 People Every Christian Should Know Learning from Spiritual Giants of the Faith BakerBooks pp 67 73External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Richard Chenevix Trench nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard Chenevix Trench nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Richard Chenevix Trench Works by Richard Chenevix Trench at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Richard Chenevix Trench at Internet Archive Works by Richard Chenevix Trench at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp New Testament Synonyms on Trench s tomb in Westminster Abbey permanent dead link Richard C Trench Loved Words A Brief Biography Chenevix Trench Poems permanent dead link biography and poems used as hymns permanent dead link 0010010010101000111010010101 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Chenevix Trench amp oldid 1198229839, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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