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HEBBLETHWAITE, JAMES (1857-1921), poet,
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was born at Preston, England, in 1857. His family was originally prosperous
but met with heavy financial losses, and Hebblethwaite practically educated
himself by gaining scholarships. He was at St John's College, Battersea, London
in 1877-8, and entering on a teaching life became headmaster of a board school,
and lecturer in English at the Harris Institute, Preston. In 1892 he emigrated
to Tasmania for health reasons, and obtained a position on the staff of the
Friends' School, Hobart. In 1896 a little volume, Verses, was published
at Hobart. About this time he entered the Congregational ministry, and in 1899
was principal of Queen's College, Latrobe, Tasmania. In 1900 A Rose of
Regret was published. He was ordained as a deacon in the Church of England
in 1903 and in 1904 became a priest. He was vicar of George Town, Tasmania, from
1905 to 1908, Swansea from 1908 to 1909, and D'entrecasteaux Channel from 1909
to 1916, when he retired. Another volume, Meadow and Bush, had appeared
in 1911, and a collected edition of his poems in 1920. New Poems was
published in 1921 and he died in that year. In addition to his poetry he wrote a
novel, Castle Hill, published in England in 1895. He was twice married
and left a widow and one son.
Hebblethwaite was a man of charming personality. Apparently immersed in a
world of dreams, he never allowed himself to neglect his work as a parish
clergyman. He was interested in his young men and their sports, and his own
simple and sincere piety earned him much respect and affection. As a writer of
lyrical poems he has a secure place among the Australian poets of his time.
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