Richard Corbet: Difference between revisions

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Corbet, Richard}}
[[Category:Church of England clergy]]
[[Category:Church of England clergy]]
[[Category:Poets from England]]
[[Category:Poets from England]]
[[Category:1582 births]]
[[Category:1635 deaths]]

Revision as of 12:58, 26 June 2024

Richard Corbet (or Corbett; 1582 – 28 July 1635) was an English clergyman who rose to be Bishop of Norwich in the Church of England. He is also remembered as a humourist and as a poet, although his work was not published until after his death.

Quotes

  • Let others write for glory or reward,
    Truth is well paid when she is sung and heard.
    • "Elegy on Lord Howard, Baron of Effingham"
  • I wish thee, Vin, before all wealth,
    Both bodily and ghostly health. ...
    I wish thee all thy mother’s graces,
    Thy father’s fortunes, and his places.
    I wish thee friends, and one at Court,
    Not to build on, but support;
    To keep thee, not in doing many
    Oppressions, but from suffering any.
    • "To Vincent Corbet, his Son"
  • Farewell, Rewards and Faeries,
      Good Housewives now may say,
    For now foule Slutts in Dairies
      Doe fare as well as they;
    And though they sweepe theyr Hearths no less
      Than Maydes were wont to doe,
    Yet who of late for Cleaneliness
      Finds sixe-pence in her Shoe?
    • "The Faeryes Farewell", st. 1
  • But, since of late, Elizabeth,
      And later James, came in,
    They never daunc’d on any heath
      As when the Time hath bin.
    By which wee note the Faries
      Were of the old Profession;
    Theyre Songs were Ave Maryes,
      Theyre Daunces were Procession.
    • "The Faeryes Farewell", sts. 4–5
  • Boldly I preach, hate a cross, hate a surplice,
      Mitres, copes, and rotchets:
    Come hear me pray nine times a day,
      And fill your heads with crotchets.
    • "The Distracted Puritan"