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Digby Mackworth Dolben

Digby Augustus Stewart Mackworth Dolben (8 February 1848 - 28 June 1867) was an English poet who died young in an accident. He owes his poetic reputation to Robert Bridges, who edited a partial edition Poems of his verse, in 1911.

He was born in Guernsey, and brought up at Finedon Hall in Northamptonshire. He was educated at Eton College, where Bridges was his senior and took him under his wing.

Dolben caused considerable scandal at school by exhibitionistic behaviour. He marked his romantic attachment to another pupil, Martin Le Marchant Gosselin, by writing love poetry. He also defied his strict Protestant upbringing by joining a High Church, in fact Puseyite , group of pupils. He then claimed allegiance to the Order of St. Benedict , and affected a monk's habit . He was in fact considering a conversion to Catholicism.

In 1865 he was introduced by Bridges, by then an undergraduate at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, to Gerard Manley Hopkins who was at Balliol. This encounter caused Hopkins a great deal of perturbation subsequently, in the account given by his biographer Norman White, and in the evidence of two poems Hopkins wrote for Dolben. Not only was Hopkins at the time torn up in the process of his own conversion to Catholicism: Dolben, it appears, was directly attractive to him.

Dolben was drowned in the River Welland, near Luffenham , aged 19 and before he could go up to Oxford himself. Also involved was Walter Prichard, son of his tutor, who could not swim.

Bridges guaranteed Dolben's reputation with Three Friends: Memoirs of Digby Mackworth Dolben, Richard Watson Dixon, Henry Bradley (1932), as well as the careful editing of his poetry. Subsequently The Poems and Letters of Digby Mackworth Dolben 1848-1867 (1981), edited by Martin Cohen, has given a less selective picture.

Reference

  • Hopkins: A Literary Biography (1992, OUP) Norman White
Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
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