Short Name: | John Denham |
Full Name: | Denham, Sir John, 1615-1668 |
Birth Year: | 1615 |
Death Year: | 1668 |
Denham, Sir John, only son of Sir John Denham, Chief Baron of the Exchequer, and afterwards Chief Justice of the King's Bench, Ireland, born in Dublin, 1615, and educated at Trinity College, Oxford. In 1641 he was made governor of Fareham Castle for Charles I., and subsequently attended Charles II. in his exile. At the Restoration he was rewarded for his devotion to the Crown, and created a Knight of the Bath. Died in London, 1668, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. His poem, Cooper's Hill, is well known. The manly energy and nervous force of his verse was much more popular with Pope and Johnson and the 18th century school, than it is at the present time. His Version of the Psalms was written about 1668, but not published until 1714.
-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
Texts by John Denham (3)![]() | As | Authority Languages | Instances |
---|---|---|---|
From depths of sadness and distress | John Denham (Author) | 3 | |
Great is the Lord, what tongue can frame [tell] | John Denham (Author) | 20 | |
Out of the depth of sad distress | John Denham (Author) | 8 |