Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Clarke, Edward (1730-1786)

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
1360441Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 10 — Clarke, Edward (1730-1786)1887John Westby Gibson

CLARKE, EDWARD (1730–1786), traveller and author, son of William Clarke the antiquary (1696–1771) [q. v.], and Anne, daughter of Dr. William Wotton, was born at Buxted, Sussex, where his father was rector, on 16 March 1730. He was taught by his father’s curate, Mr. Grierson, and afterwards by Jeremiah Markland [q. v.], then living at Uckfield. He entered St. John’s, Cambridge, took his B.A. degree in 1752, was elected as a fellow in 1753, and proceeded M.A. in 1755. In 1758 Viscount Midleton presented him to the rectory of Peperharow, Surrey.

Clarke's first publication was a copy of Greek hexameters, on the death of Frederick, prince of Wales, in the ‘Luctus Academiæ Cantabrigiensis,’ 1751. In 1755 he published ‘A Letter to a Friend in Italy, and Verses on reading Montfaucon,’ and about the same time he rejected, in concert with the learned printer Bowyer, an improvement of Faber’s ‘Latin Dictionary,' only one sheet of which appeared. In 1760 he went with the Earl of Bristol as chaplain to the embassy at Madrid, and during his two years’ residence collected materials for a work, published on his return in February 1762, entitled ‘Letters concerning the State of Spain … written at Madrid during the years 1760 and 1761,’ London, 1763, 4to, pp. 354. It is full of details and statistics.

In 1763 he married Anne, daughter of Thomas Grenfield of Guildford, Surrey, and soon after attended General Johnston to Minorca as chaplain and secretary. He held the same office under succeeding governors, and in 1767 published ‘A Defence of the conduct of the Lieutenant-governor of the Island of Minorca, in Reply to a Printed Libel,’ London, 8vo. In 1768 he returned to England, and was inducted to the vicarage of Willingdon and Arlington, Sussex. He also succeeded to the rectory of Buxted, his father being permitted to resign in his favour. From alleged dislike to pluralism he now gave up the Peperharow living. His health was very delicate, and he settled down to a quiet literary life, undertaking the education of Thomas Steele, well known in the Pitt administration, and his brother Robert.

In 1778 he issued 'proposals for printing by subscription, price two guineas, a folio Edition of the New Testament in Greek, with selections from the most eminent critics and commentators.' The design met with no response. He died, after gradual decay and paralysis, in November 1786. He left three sons: the Rev. James Stanier [q. v.], Edward Daniel [q. v.], and George, of the royal navy, who was drowned in the Thames in 1806. His only daughter, Anne, was married to Captain Parkinson, who was with Nelson at Trafalgar.

[Clarke's Works; Otter's Life of Edward D. Clarke, i. 41, 61; Monthly Review, vol. xxviii.; Lower's Worthies of Sussex, p. 267; Nichols's Illustr. viii. 637; Nichols's Lit. Aneod. iii. 492, iv. 279, 311, 367, 382, 467, 476, 721, viii. 406.]

J. W.-G.

Dictionary of National Biography, Errata (1904), p.67
N.B.— f.e. stands for from end and l.l. for last line

Page Col. Line  
424 i 8 f.e. Clarke, George (1660-1736): for 1660 read 1661
7 f.e. after virtuoso insert born 7 May 1661
ii 34 after he insert was M.P. for Winchester 1702-5 and
15 f.e. after but insert was M.P. for Launceston 1711-13
425 i 12 for 1684 read 1681
13 for from 1692 read in Ireland 1690-2 and in England 1692-3
22 after held it insert (1710-14)
18 f.e. after group insert by Giovanni da Bologna
16 f.e. after until insert it was sold for old lead
430 i 23 Clarke, James S.: for to the king read and royal chaplain from 1816
433 i 33 Clarke, John (1687-1734): Note that the work numbered 10—'Formulæ oratoriæ,' &c. is not by the subject of this article. Through the greater part of the seventeenth century this work was a very popular school book, being originally published before 1632, in which year it reached a fourth edition, and being often reissued (e.g. in London in 1637 and 1670, and at Zurich in 1694). Its author was John Clarke, B.D. (of Fiskerton, Lincolnshire).
435 ii 22 Clarke, Joseph: before 1776 insert 1742, second edition
437 ii 16 Clarke, Mary A.: omit J. Wilson Croker
449 ii 17 Clarke, William (1696-1771): for Haghmon read Haughmond
33 for 1738 read 1727 and after prebendary and insert in 1738 canon
40 for Chittingley read Chiddingly

|}