posted 4 months ago
Herrick, an Anglican cleric, is not known to have himself married. He also wrote "Upon Julia's Clothes" ("Whenas in silks my Julia goes..."). In "Her Legs", he also remarks admiringly that Julia's legs are "white and hairless as an egg".
The majority opinion seems to be that his muses - including Julia - may have been entirely theoretical and likely existed only in his mind.
It seems he may not have taken his own advice "to make much of time"!
I remember my maternal grandfather reciting "Gather ye rosebuds" to me. He also sang Christmas carols in Latin, in season. He graduated from high school during the Great Depression, largely due to the principal of his local school, who arranged some sort of maintenance and cleaning job for him to do at the school, after the end of the school day. His parents really would have preferred for him to leave school and find a full time job - they needed the money - but the after school job was enough for him to be allowed to remain for his last year and finish school to get his diploma. After graduating, he worked as a farm hand for some years, then got a "town job" when my mother was a young girl. For the rest of his working life, he unloaded lumber at the Grand Haven, Michigan, Story and Clark piano factory. But, even after he retired (and that's the only way I remember him), he could still quote poetry in English and Latin. He also managed to coax an extensive garden from what was basically beach sand, using (among other things) a high wheel cultivator, and was very good at fixing bicycles and roller skates and such. Anyway, he was my introduction to Herrick, and a lot more.
"Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp,
Or what's a heaven for?"
Andrea del Sarto by Robert Browning