James Montgomery (poet)
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James Montgomery (4 November 1771 – 30 April 1854) was a Scottish-born hymn writer, poet and editor, who eventually settled in Sheffield. He was raised in the Moravian Church and theologically trained there, so that his writings often reflect concern for humanitarian causes, such as the abolition of slavery and the exploitation of child chimney sweeps.


Early life and poetry

Montgomery was born at
Irvine Irvine may refer to: Places On Earth Antarctica *Irvine Glacier *Mount Irvine (Antarctica) Australia *Irvine Island *Mount Irvine, New South Wales Canada *Irvine, Alberta * Irvine Inlet, Nunavut United Kingdom *Irvine, North Ayrshire, Scotla ...
in south-west Scotland, the son of a pastor and missionary of the Moravian Brethren. He was sent to be trained for the ministry at the Moravian School at
Fulneck Fulneck Moravian Settlement is a village in Pudsey in the City of Leeds metropolitan borough, West Yorkshire, England. The village (grid reference ) lies on a hillside overlooking a deep valley. Pudsey Beck flows along the bottom of the ...
, near Leeds, while his parents left for the West Indies, where both died within a year of each other. At Fulneck, secular studies were banned, but James still found means of borrowing and reading a good deal of poetry and made ambitious plans to write epics of his own. On failing to complete his schooling, Montgomery was apprenticed to a baker in Mirfield, then to a store-keeper at Wath-upon-Dearne. After further efforts, including an unsuccessful attempt at a literary career in London, he moved north again to Sheffield in 1792 as an assistant to Joseph Gales, auctioneer, bookseller and printer of the '' Sheffield Register'', who introduced him into the local Lodge of Oddfellows, to which he later addressed a song. In 1794, Gales left England to avoid political prosecution and Montgomery took the paper in hand, changing its name to the ''Sheffield Iris''. These were times of political repression. Montgomery was twice imprisoned on charges of sedition, first in 1795 for printing a poem to celebrate the fall of the Bastille in revolutionary France, and secondly in 1796 for criticising a magistrate for forcibly dispersing a political protest in Sheffield. Turning his jail experiences to some profit, he then published a pamphlet of poems written during his captivity: ''Prison Amusements'' (1797). His later prose account of the period appeared in 1840. For some time the ''Iris'' was the only newspaper in Sheffield, but beyond an ability to produce fairly creditable articles from week to week, Montgomery lacked the journalistic skills to take full advantage of his position. Other newspapers arose to fill the place which his might have held and in 1825 he sold out to a local bookseller, John Blackwell. Meanwhile, Montgomery continued to write poetry. He achieved some fame with ''The Wanderer of Switzerland'' (1806), a poem in six parts written in seven-syllable cross-rhymed
quatrain A quatrain is a type of stanza, or a complete poem, consisting of four lines. Existing in a variety of forms, the quatrain appears in poems from the poetic traditions of various ancient civilizations including Persia, Ancient India, Ancient Greec ...
s. It addressed the French annexation of Switzerland and quickly went through two editions. When it was denounced the following year in the conservative ''
Edinburgh Review The ''Edinburgh Review'' is the title of four distinct intellectual and cultural magazines. The best known, longest-lasting, and most influential of the four was the third, which was published regularly from 1802 to 1929. ''Edinburgh Review'', ...
'' as a poem that would be speedily forgotten, Lord Byron came to its defence in the satire ''English Bards and Scotch Reviewers''. Nevertheless, within 18 months a fourth impression of 1500 copies was issued from the very presses that had printed the criticism, and several more would follow. This success brought Montgomery a commission from the printer Bowyer to write a poem on the abolition of the slave trade, to be published with other poems on the subject by Elizabeth Benger and James Grahame in a handsome illustrated volume. The subject appealed to the poet's philanthropic enthusiasm and his own family associations with the West Indies. The four-part poem in heroic couplets appeared in 1809 as ''The West Indies''. Montgomery also used heroic couplets for ''The World before the Flood'' (1812), a piece of historical reconstruction in ten cantos. He then turned to attacking the lottery in ''Thoughts on Wheels'' (1817) and took up the cause of chimney sweeps' apprentices in ''The Climbing Boys' Soliloquies''. His next major poem was ''Greenland'' (1819) in five cantos of heroic couplets. It was prefaced by a description of the ancient Moravian church, its 18th-century revival and its mission to Greenland in 1733. The poem was noted for the beauty of its descriptions:


Later career

Montgomery's only other long poem, after retiring from newspaper editorship, was ''The Pelican Island'' (1828): nine cantos of descriptive blank verse, which garnered mixed responses, ranging between the summarily dismissive and ''Blackwood's Magazines "the best of all Montgomery's poems: in idea the most original, in execution the most powerful." Montgomery himself expected that his name would live, if at all, in his hymns. Some of these, such as "Hail to the Lord's Anointed", "Prayer is the Soul's Sincere Desire", "Stand up and Bless the Lord" and the carol " Angels from the Realms of Glory", are still sung. "The Lord Is My Shepherd" is a popular hymn with many denominations, based on Psalm 23. " A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief" has been adopted as a favourite in the Latter Day Saint movement. The earliest of his hymns dates from his days in Wath on Dearne and he added to their number over the years. The main boost came when the Rev. James Cotterill arrived at the parish church St Paul's, a chapel of ease to St Peter's, Sheffield's only parish church, in 1817. Cotterill had compiled and published ''A Selection of Psalms and Hymns Adapted to the Services of the Church of England'' in 1810, but to his disappointment and concern he found that his new parishioners did not take kindly to using it. He therefore enlisted the help of James Montgomery to help him revise the collection and improve it by adding some hymns of the poet's own composition. This new edition, meeting with the approval of the Archbishop of York (and eventually of the parishioners at St Paul's), was finally published in 1820. In 1822 Montgomery published his own ''Songs of Zion: Being Imitations of Psalms'', the first of several more collections of hymns. During his life he composed some 400 hymns, although less than a hundred of them are commonly sung today. From 1835 until his death, Montgomery lived at The Mount in Glossop Road, Sheffield.''"Sheffield's Remarkable Houses"'', Roger Redfern, , p. 12. He was well regarded in the city and played an active part in its philanthropy and religious life. He died on 30 April 1854, was honoured by a public funeral, and buried in Sheffield General Cemetery. He had remained unmarried.


Legacy

In 1861, a monument designed by John Bell (1811–1895) was erected over his grave in the Sheffield cemetery at a cost of £1000, raised by public subscription on the initiative of the Sheffield Sunday School Union, of which he was among the founding members. On its granite pedestal is inscribed: "Here lies interred, beloved by all who knew him, the Christian poet, patriot, and philanthropist. Wherever poetry is read, or Christian hymns sung, in the English language, 'he being dead, yet speaketh' by the genius, piety and taste embodied in his writings." There are also extracts from his poems "Prayer" and "The Grave". After the statue fell into disrepair it was moved in 1971 to the precincts of Sheffield Cathedral, where there is also a memorial window to him. Elsewhere in Sheffield there are various streets named after Montgomery, as is a Grade II-listed drinking fountain on Broad Lane. The Surrey Street meeting hall of the Sunday Schools Union (now known as The Montgomery) was named in his honour in 1886. It houses a 420-seat theatre, which also bears his name. Elsewhere, Wath-upon-Dearne, flattered by being called "the queen of villages" in his work, has repaid the compliment by naming after him a community hall, a street and a square. His birthplace in Irvine was renamed Montgomery House after he had paid the town a return visit in 1841, but it has since been demolished.


Other works

* *''Poetical Works'', four editions in 1821, 1836, 1841, and 1854 *Editor
''The Chimney-Sweeper's Friend and Climbing-Boy's Album''
London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, 1824 *Editor: ''The Christian Psalmist; or, Hymns, Selected and Original'', Glasgow: Chalmers and Collins, 1825. sixth edn. 1829; Read Books, 2008, *Editor: ''The Christian poet; or, selections in verse on sacred subjects'', Wm Collins, Glasgow, 1825 *''An Essay on the Phrenology of the Hindoos and Negroes'', London: Printed for E. Lloyd, 1829 *''Original Hymns For Public, Private, and Social Devotion'', London: Longman, Brown, Green, 1853 * *''Prose by a Poet'', 2 vols, London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, 1824 * *


References


External links

* *
The 1854 illustrated edition of Montgomery's poemsJohn Holland and James Everett, ''Memoirs of the life and writings of James Montgomery: including selections from his correspondence, remains in prose and verse, and conversations on various subjects'', London, 1855
* * James Montgomery Collection. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. {{DEFAULTSORT:Montgomery, James 1771 births 1854 deaths History of Sheffield Burials at Sheffield General Cemetery Christian hymnwriters Writers of the Moravian Church British people of the Moravian Church People educated at Fulneck School Hymnal editors