HENRY ALFORD
\hˈɛnɹi ɐlfˈɔːd], \hˈɛnɹi ɐlfˈɔːd], \h_ˈɛ_n_ɹ_i_ ɐ_l_f_ˈɔː_d]\
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An English poet and miscellaneous writer, philologist, critic, artist, and preacher; born in London, Oct. 7, 1810; died at Canterbury, Jan. 12, 1871. He became dean of Canterbury in 1856. An accomplished man, his literary work attracted attention in several departments. Besides sermons and university lectures, he wrote: "The School of the Heart, and Other Poems" (1835), his most popular volume of verse; "The Queen's English" (1866). He was best known by his celebrated edition of the Greek New Testament (1844-52), which, incorporating the results of German Biblical scholarship, formed a landmark in New Testament study in England and America. He was the first editor of the Contemporary Review.
By Charles Dudley Warner
Word of the day
hydromorphic
- [Greek] Structurally adapted to an aquatic environment, as organs of water plants.