Poetry Selections
George Herbert (1593–1633)
Come, my Way, my Truth, my Life:
    Such a way as gives us breath;
    Such a truth as ends all strife,
    Such a life as killeth death.
Come, my Light, my Feast, my Strength:
    Such a light as shows a feast,
    Such a feast as mends in length,
    Such a strength as makes his guest.
Come, my Joy, my Love, my Heart:
    Such a joy as none can move,
    Such a love as none can part,
    Such a heart as joys in love.
Born to a noble family in Wales, George Herbert was only three when his father
    died, leaving his mother (a friend and patron of John Donne) to raise him
    and his nine siblings. After graduation from Cambridge, he served the university
    as its “Public Orator,” an important post in which he gave voice
    to the university sentiments on public occasions. Later elected to Parliament,
    Herbert anticipated a distinguished career in politics and public service,
    but that was not to be. When King James I, some important patrons, and
    then his mother all died, he gave up his political ambitions to enter the
    parish. His friends objected, suggesting that the life of a pastor was beneath
    his dignity and skills as a scholar and statesman. To this Herbert replied, 
     
    It hath been formerly judged that the domestic servants of the King of Heaven
    should be of the noblest families on earth. And though the iniquity of the
    late times have made clergymen meanly valued, and the sacred name of priest
    contemptible; yet I will labour to make it honourable, by consecrating all
    my learning, and all my poor abilities to advance the glory of that God that
    gave them. . . . And I will labour to be like my Saviour, by making humility
    lovely in the eyes of all men, and by following the merciful and meek example
    of my dear Jesus. 
     
    In 1629 Herbert became the rector at Bemerton, a small village near Salisbury,
    where he spent the rest of his short life.
   
    In Bemerton he preached, wrote poetry,
    served the pastoral needs of his people with loving distinction, cared for
    the poor, and even helped to rebuild the church using his own resources. By
    all accounts Herbert was a deeply pious man, known in his village as “Holy Mr. Herbert.” His book,
    A Priest to the Temple (1652), offers practical advice to country pastors.
    Four years later, a month before his fortieth birthday, Herbert died of tuberculosis.
   
    None
    of Herbert's poems had been published when he died, but upon his deathbed
    he gave them to his friend Nicholas Ferrar, asking them to be published only
    if they might help “any dejected poor soul.” This “little
    book,” as he called it, contained “a picture of the many spiritual
    conflicts that have passed betwixt God and my soul, before I could subject
    mine to the will of Jesus my Master: in whose service I have found perfect
    freedom.” Ferrar did publish the poems under the title The Temple, and
    they became an enormous success. Published in 1633, by 1680 the
    book had gone through 13 editions. The poems reflect his lifelong struggle
    between his privileged background and worldly ambitions as a Member of Parliament
    and the Cambridge faculty, and his choice to live as a poor country cleric
    in rural England. Today scholars esteem Herbert as one of the most skilled
    and important poets of his day, some even suggesting that his work surpasses
    that of John Donne.

