James Beresford (writer)

James Beresford
Born (1764-05-28)28 May 1764
Died 29 November 1840(1840-11-29) (aged 76)
Occupation writer, clergyman
Notable work The Miseries of Human Life (180607)

James Beresford (28 May 1764 – 29 September 1840) was a writer and clergyman. He was born in Upham in Hampshire and educated at Charterhouse School and became a fellow of Merton College, Oxford. He made translations and wrote religious books, but was chiefly known as the author of a satirical work, The Miseries of Human Life, considered to be a "minor classic in the genre".[1] He was rector of Kibworth from 1812 until his death.

Bibliography

This list of works is taken from Beresford's obituary, published in the May 1841 edition of The Gentleman's Magazine.[2]

  • The Æneid of Virgil (1794)
  • The Song of the Sun (1805)
  • The Battle of Trafalgar (1805)
  • The Miseries of Human Life (1806)
  • A Discourse on Cruelty to the Brute Creation (1809)
  • Bibliosophia, or Book-Wisdom (1810)
  • A Thanksgiving Sermon (1814)
  • Does Faith Insure Good Works? (1814)
  • A Letter to Philo, in Answer to his Objections Against an Essay on Faith and Works (1815)
  • An Examination of the Doctrines of Calvin (1818)
  • On the Objects and Services of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge and its Diocesean and District Committees (1819)
  • The Cross and the Crescent, an Heroic Metrical Romance (1824)
  • Stand! An Earnest Address to the Friends of an Embodied Church in England and Ireland (1835)

References

  1. Anon (2004), "Beresford, James (1764–1840)", Dictionary of National Biography, Revised by Matthew, H. C. G., Oxford University Press, retrieved 4 May 2010 (subscription required)
  2. "Obituary: Rev. James Beresford, M.A.", The Gentleman's Magazine, archive.org, p. 574, May 1841, retrieved 4 May 2010


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