Richard Polwhele


Richard Polwhele was a Cornish clergyman, poet and historian of Cornwall and Devon.

Biography

Richard Polwhele's ancestors long held the manor of Treworgan, 4 3/4 miles south-east of Truro in Cornwall, which family bore as arms: Sable, a saltire engrailed ermine. He was born at Truro, Cornwall, and met literary luminaries Catharine Macaulay and Hannah More at an early age. He was educated at Truro Grammar School, where he precociously published The Fate of Llewellyn. He went on to Christ Church, Oxford, continuing to write poetry, but left without taking a degree. In 1782 he was ordained a curate, married Loveday Warren, and moved to a curacy at Kenton, Devon. On his wife's death in 1793, Polwhele was left with three children. Later that year he married Mary Tyrrell, briefly taking up a curacy at Exmouth before being appointed to the small living of Manaccan in Cornwall in 1794. From 1806, when he took up a curacy at Kenwyn, Truro, he was non-resident at Manaccan: Polwhele angered Manaccan parishioners with his efforts to restore the church and vicarage. He maintained epistolary exchanges with Samuel Badcock, Macaulay, William Cowper, Erasmus Darwin, and Anna Seward.
When in Devon, Polwhele had edited the two-volume work Poems Chiefly by Gentlemen of Devonshire and Cornwall for an Exeter literary society. However, Essays by a Society of Gentlemen at Exeter caused a rift between Polwhele and other society members. Polwhele had by this time begun the first of his two major county histories, the History of Devonshire. This appeared in 3 volumes, 1793–1806, but his coverage was uneven and subscribers deserted. His seven-volume History of Cornwall appeared 1803–1808, with a new edition in 1816.
Polwhele's volumes of poetry included The Art of Eloquence, a didactic poem, The Idylls, Epigrams, and Fragments of Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus, with the elegies of Tyrtaeus, The English Orator, Influence of Local Attachment, and Poetic Trifles. However, The Unsex'd Females, a Poem, a defensive reaction to women's literary self-assertion, is today perhaps Polwhele's most notorious poetic production: in the poem Hannah More is Christ to Mary Wollstonecraft's Satan.
Polwhele contributed to the Gentleman's Magazine and to the Anti-Jacobin Review. He published sermons, theological essays for the Church Union Society, and attacks on Methodism. At the end of his life, after retiring to his manor house of Polwhele, he worked to produce Traditions and Recollections and Biographical Sketches.
He died at Truro on 12 March 1838. He was buried at St Clement, Cornwall.

Legacy

His name survives in Polwhele House School, an independent preparatory school two miles from Truro.

Works