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Henry Francis Lyte
   
Life
1793-1847; son of Captain Thomas Lyte, an army officer settled at Dunmore,
Co. Galway, and later at Ballyshannon with Anna Marie Oliver, mother of
his three sons; abandoned by his father aged nine, Capt. Lyte marrying
Eliza Naghten in Roscommon, and leaving his supposed first wife to cater
to his debts before removing to Jersey, where he had eight more children;
next abandoned by his mother Anna Marie, who returned to England; became
object of charitable interest of Rev. Robert Burrowes, head of Portora
Royal School, Enniskillen, formerly archdeacon of Ferns and rector of
Adamstown, Co. Wexford (to 1798), who paid for his education; elected
scholar; studied medicine but turned to divinity; ord. deacon 1814 and
priest 1815; curate to Rev. Simon Little at St. Munns Church, Tagmon,
Co. Wexford, 1815-16; deeply distressed by death of Rev. Abraham Swanne,
the pious rector of Killurin parish, whose ministry he assumed, 1816;
left Ireland for convalesence on the continent; visited Jersey and acted
as god-f. to his half-brother Thomas Henry Lyte; settled in south of England,
m. Anne Maxwell, dg. a Monaghan clergyman and kinswoman of the Maxwell-Barry
famly of Newtownbarry (now Bunclody), Co. Wexford; received thereby a
legacy enabling him to settle his debt to Burrowes and live in comfort
thereafter; held parish of All Saints, Brixham, 1824-47; wrote Praise
my Soul, the King of Heaven, God of Mercy, God of Grace,
and Pleasant are Thy Courts Alone; spent winters in Naples,
the Tyrol, and Switzerland, away from family and parish; for reasons of
health, wrote the celebrated him Abide with Me (written in
his last illness); descendent of Henry Lyte (1529?-1907), the botanist;
Poems, Chiefly Religious (1833); his hymns in most hymnals. d.
of TB, 20 Nov., at Nice; plaques in St. Munns, Westminster Abbey,
Portora, and Kelso, Scotland, nr. his birthplace; Cited in OG as Irish;
also DNB, but no entries in DIB, DIW; comm, biographical account in Patrick
Comerford, Irishmans Diary, Irish Times [?]August
1997. DNB OG.
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Notes
John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1892), b. son of army Capt.,
at Ednam near Kelso, ed. Portora, Enniskillen, and TCD; 3 times English
prize poem and schol.; ord. 1815; 1st curacy at Wexford; to Marazion,
Cornwall, 1817 ; great spiritual change caused by illness and death of
his brother, a clergyman, 1818; Lymington, 1819; Tales of the Lords
Prayer, verse (published 1829); Perpetual Curate of Lwr. Brixham,
Devon; Poems of Henry Vaughan with a memoir (1846); Poetical works,
Poems Chiefly Religious (1833, enl. ed. 1845); The Spirit of
the Psalms (1834, enl. 1836); Miscellaneous Poems (posthumous,
1868, being a rep. of Poems, 1845, with the add. of Abide
with Me; Remains (1850); 1845 ed. contains 81 psalms; Lytes
versions of the psalms are full of sadness, tenderness and beauty ...
and rearely swell out into joy or gladness.
Hymns incl. in Church of Ireland Hymnal (1960, 1987) incl. Nos.
417 ["God of Mercy, God of Grace"]; 462 ["Sweet in the
solemn voice that calls"]; also 481, 481, et al.
Dictionary of National Biography,
bio-data: born Ednam, Roxburgshire [Scotland], ed. Portora, Co. Fermanagh,
and TCD. ordained, 1815; curate of Taghmon, Co. Wexford; m. dg. of Rev.
W. Maxwell DD, of Falkland, who wrote 24th chap. of Boswells Life
of Johnson; curacy in Hampshire and Devonshire; his hymns include
Abide with Me and Jesus, I My Cross have Taken; secular
poems include On A Naval Officer; Spirit of the Psalms
(1834) is a metrical version of the Psalter; Remains (1850); Poems,
chiefly Religious (1833), reprinted as Miscellaneous Poems
(1868); Biographical Sketch of Henry Vaughan (1847).
Music Facility ded. to Lyte in Portora Royal School, Sept. 1993 [comm, Enniskillen Impartial Reporter] Bishop Hannon said, Lytes
poetic talent was recognised by Portoras headmaster Rev. Robert
Burrowes, who educated the young Henry as part of his own family after
the child was virtually abandoned by his father when he started boarding
at the age of 10; Lyte entered TCD at 16 and won the [Vice]-chancellors
annual prize on 3 successive occasions; his hymns set to music by different
musicians. A great-grand-daughter, Eve Maxwell-Lyte, was represented
by her husband. A seated waist-length port. is shown.
Henry Francis Lyte, connected with
Enniskillen, orig. from Scotland (Comm, Seamus MacAnnaidh, Shpayke
... &c., in The Spark, Fermanagh/WEA Spring 1992.
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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