Henry Edward George Rope
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Henry Edward George Rope (Father Harry Rope) (23 October 18801 March 1978) was a writer, poet, editor and priest widely known in the Roman Catholic Church in his long lifetime. He was the eldest brother of
Margaret Agnes Rope Margaret Agnes Rope (20 June 18826 December 1953) was a British stained glass artist in the Arts and Crafts movement tradition active in the first four decades of the 20th century. Her work is notable for the intensity and skill of the paintin ...
, stained-glass artist, nephew of
Ellen Mary Rope Ellen Mary Rope (1855–1934) was a British sculptor whose career stretched from 1885 until the early 1930s. Her work is notable for its range of expression and style, from the classical to the popular. She worked chiefly in bas-reliefs, in stone ...
, sculptor, and
George Thomas Rope George Thomas Rope (1846–1929) was a British painter whose productive period stretched from 1875 until 1915 and beyond. His work focused on country landscapes and animals, particularly horses, and is notable for its detailed faithfulness to loc ...
, painter and naturalist as well as cousin of
M. E. Aldrich Rope M. E. Aldrich Rope (Margaret Edith Rope) (29 July 1891 – 9 March 1988) was an English stained-glass artist in the Arts and Crafts movement tradition active between 1910 and 1964. She was a cousin of Margaret Agnes Rope of Shrewsbury, anoth ...
, another stained-glass artist. Due to his writings and his work as archivist at the Venerable English College, Rome, he was well known in his lifetime, particularly within Church circles but as a radical traditionalist he has been forgotten in modern times.


Life

Baptised 20 November 1880, eldest child of Henry John Rope, M.D., surgeon (18471899) and Agnes Maud (née Burd: 18571948) and grandson of George Rope of Grove Farm,
Blaxhall Blaxhall is a village and civil parish in the East Suffolk district of the English county of Suffolk. Located around south-west of Leiston and Aldeburgh, in 2007 its population was estimated to be 220, measured at 194 in the 2011 Census.
,
Suffolk Suffolk () is a ceremonial county of England in East Anglia. It borders Norfolk to the north, Cambridgeshire to the west and Essex to the south; the North Sea lies to the east. The county town is Ipswich; other important towns include Lowes ...
(18141912) and his wife Anne (née Pope) (18211882), he was brought up an Anglo-Catholic but joined the Roman Catholic church after the premature death of his father and in the wake of the conversion of his mother and four of his five siblings. After Shrewsbury School, he went up to
Christ Church, Oxford Christ Church ( la, Ædes Christi, the temple or house, '' ædēs'', of Christ, and thus sometimes known as "The House") is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England. Founded in 1546 by King Henry VIII, the college is uniqu ...
, University of Oxford in 1898 to read English as a Careswell Exhibitioner. He was on the staff of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1903 to 1905 and again 1908-10. Between those dates (1905–07), he was a lector in English at Breslau University, then part of Germany. He entered the Catholic Church on 6 January 1907 and in 1912 enrolled at the Pontifical Beda College in Rome to train for the priesthood. Immediately prior to that, he had been a novice at the German Benedictine
Beuronese Congregation The Beuronese Congregation, or Beuron Congregation, is a union of mostly German or German-speaking religious houses of both monks and nuns within the Benedictine Confederation. The congregation stands under the protection of Saint Martin of Tours. ...
then in exile at Erdington Abbey, Birmingham. He was ordained at St John Lateran, Rome on 27 February 1915. He served in the Shrewsbury Diocese up until 1937, in which year, on 30 October, he took up the position of Archivist to the Venerable English College, Rome. His positions as a priest included
Chester Chester is a cathedral city and the county town of Cheshire, England. It is located on the River Dee, close to the English–Welsh border. With a population of 79,645 in 2011,"2011 Census results: People and Population Profile: Chester Loca ...
St Werburgh 1915–17,
Crewe Crewe () is a railway town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East in Cheshire, England. The Crewe built-up area had a total population of 75,556 in 2011, which also covers parts of the adjacent civil parishes of Willaston ...
1917–18,
Plowden, Shropshire Plowden is a hamlet in the parish of Lydbury North, Shropshire, England. It is in the valley of the River Onny and lies 3 miles east of Bishop's Castle. Plowden was one of the stations on the Bishops Castle Railway, which closed in 1935. Plowden ...
1918–24,
Market Drayton Market Drayton is a market town and electoral ward in the north of Shropshire, England, close to the Cheshire and Staffordshire borders. It is on the River Tern, and was formerly known as "Drayton in Hales" (c. 1868) and earlier simply as "Dray ...
1924–25, chaplain
Mawley Hall Mawley Hall is a privately owned 18th-century country mansion near Cleobury Mortimer, Shropshire, England. It is a Grade I listed building. The Blount family of Sodington Hall, Mamble, Worcestershire, wealthy coalowners and ironfounders, acquired ...
(near Cleobury Mortimer) 1925–37. His tenure in Rome was interrupted by the Second World War, during which he served as chaplain at
Albrighton Hall, Shrewsbury Albrighton Hall near Shrewsbury, Shropshire, is a house which is Grade II* listed on the National Heritage List for England. It was built in 1630 for the Ireland family and remained in this family for the next five generations until 1804. It was ...
1940–44 to the Convent of the Sacred Heart, evacuated from Tunbridge Wells. He rejoined the English College in exile and, on return to Rome after the war in 1946, again served as Archivist, until 30 December 1957. Back in England, he settled at the Carmelite Monastery,
Quidenham Quidenham is a small rural village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. It covers an area of and had a population of 576 in 183 households at the 2001 census,
, Norfolk, where his sister
Margaret Agnes Rope Margaret Agnes Rope (20 June 18826 December 1953) was a British stained glass artist in the Arts and Crafts movement tradition active in the first four decades of the 20th century. Her work is notable for the intensity and skill of the paintin ...
, stained-glass artist had died some four years previously. By then a man in his late seventies and eighties, he served as chaplain at Pallotti Hall, Siddington, Cheshire 1959-69, before returning to Quidenham. Finally, in 1975, he transferred to the Catholic Nursing Institute, 80 Lambeth Road, London S.E.1. where he died three years later.


Works

Rope was a scholar, a linguist and a prolific writer, of poems, articles and books. A man of strong traditionalist opinions, an advocate of Distributism, an enemy of mechanisation and, above all, the motor car, his writings are a prolonged elegy for the ways of the past, and an elevation of time-honoured forms of Catholic faith and worship. He edited The Catholic Review quarterly in succession to its founder
Benedict Williamson Benedict Williamson (1868–1948) was an architect who designed many Romanesque Revival churches in the United Kingdom who later became a Roman Catholic priest. Early life He was born in 1868 as William Edward Williamson in London. He studied ...
, a fellow convert from Anglicanism. He took the opportunity to include poems of his own, which also appeared in several collections, detailed below. He also wrote a number of books and well as articles in a number of Catholic publications, including The Month, Ampleforth Journal, The Cross and the Plough,
G. K.'s Weekly ''G.K.'s Weekly'' was a British publication founded in 1925 (with its pilot edition surfacing in late 1924) by writer G. K. Chesterton, continuing until his death in 1936. Its articles typically discussed topical cultural, political, and socio-e ...
, The Weekly Review,
The Dublin Review ''The Dublin Review'' is a quarterly magazine that publishes essays, reportage, autobiography, travel writing, criticism and fiction. It was launched in December 2000 by Brendan Barrington, who remains the editor and publisher, assisted by Nora ...
, The
Irish Monthly The ''Irish Monthly'' was an Irish Catholic magazine founded in Dublin, Ireland in July 1873. Until 1920 it had the sub-title ''A Magazine of General Literature''. History The magazine was founded by Matthew Russell, who was its editor for al ...
and The
Catholic World ''The Catholic World'' was a periodical founded by Paulist Father Isaac Thomas Hecker in April 1865. It was published by the Paulist Fathers for over a century. According to Paulist Press, Hecker "wanted to create an intellectual journal for a g ...
and Venerabile. A typical article available online is "Martyrs and Markets" Articles in The Month included Unfounded Optimism, The Fallacy of Reunion, Tolerance In Praise of Papal Rome, The Balm of Solitude, Is Anglo-Catholicism near The Church?, La Terre Qui Meurt, Compromise no Charity, The Limitations of Richard Cobden, Elizabethan Continuity: Bishop Tunstall's Confession of the Faith, The Theory of Progress, Jewel: an Early Exponent of Anglicanism. Similarly, in The
Irish Monthly The ''Irish Monthly'' was an Irish Catholic magazine founded in Dublin, Ireland in July 1873. Until 1920 it had the sub-title ''A Magazine of General Literature''. History The magazine was founded by Matthew Russell, who was its editor for al ...
"The Real John Donne" "An English historian of Ireland" "Bella Tola, in the Valais (July, 1914)". Likewise in New Blackfriars "Lourdes and Art", "The Staleness of Novelty". Also, in the Irish Quarterly Review, "Epiphanytide" (poem), In 1940 his biography of Pope Benedict XV was published, having been started in 1938. In prefacing it, Rope stated that he hoped the biography would serve as "small effort in reparation" for the fact that few British Catholics (himself included) had listened to Benedict's message of peace during the Great War. He also noted that, as of 1938, many were now wishing they had listened to the 'Pope of Peace'. As of 2021, Rope's biography is one of a limited number of English-language biographies of Benedict XV - the other notable biography being John F. Pollard's ''The Unknown Pope: Benedict XV (1914-1922) and the Pursuit of Peace'' (1999). A range of his more secular interests is on view in "Forgotten England". On a more piecemeal level, having been on the staff of the Oxford English Dictionary in his early adulthood (as a member of Murray’s, and, from 1905, Bradley’s editorial staff), he continued to be a contributor of material throughout his life. On a campaigning front, he is quoted as being a "leader of the Catholic Land Movement" in 1931. Apart from his writings, his life was enriched by many friendships, which he nurtured with a wealth of correspondence. Apart from Benedict Williamson, on whom he wrote a two-part monograph, he is associated with
G.K.Chesterton Gilbert Keith Chesterton (29 May 1874 – 14 June 1936) was an English writer, philosopher, Christian apologist, and literary and art critic. He has been referred to as the "prince of paradox". Of his writing style, ''Time'' observed: "Wh ...
, Hilaire Belloc, John Hawes and many others.


Publications

*Religionis Ancilla, and other poems, eath Cranton, London, 1916*Soul's Belfry and Other Verses tretton Press, 1919ref>C. O'B. Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, vol. 8, no. 32, 1919, pp. 688–689. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/30092855. Accessed 21 Dec. 2020. *The City of the Grail urns, Oates & Washbourne, London, 1923*The Hills of Home, and other verses .H. Stockwell, London, 1925*Matthew Parker's witness against continuity urns Oates & Washbourne, London, 1931*Forgotten England and Other Musings eath Cranton, London 1931*Round about the Crooked Steeple, A Shropshire Harvest by Simon Evans eath Cranton, London, 1931 foreword by H.E.G.Rope *Flee to the fields :the faith and works of the Catholic land movement. A symposium eath Cranton, London, 1934Chapter X "Looking Before and After" by H.E.G.Rope *Fisher and More .Ouseley, London, 1935*Pugin epler & Sewell, Ditchling Hassocks, 1935*Benedict XV, The Pope of Peace he Catholic Book Club, London, 1940*The Schola Saxonum, the Hospice, and the English College in Rome: a brief account cuola Tipografica Miss. Domenicana S. Sisto Vecchio, Rome, 1951*Dream holiday, and other verses rthur H. Stockwell, Ilfracombe, 1964*Evolution and the Lunatic Fringe .Biddle, Ludlow, Salop, 1964


External links

*https://www.vecrome.org/college-life/venerabile *http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/kesghf.htm *http://archive-uat.catholicherald.co.uk/article/15th-may-1953/2/fr-h-e-g-rope *https://public.oed.com/history/oed-editions/contributors/ *http://distributist.blogspot.com/2008/10/miscellany-of-distributists.html


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Rope, Henry Edward George 1880 births 1978 deaths People educated at Shrewsbury School Clergy from Shrewsbury Writers from Shrewsbury