Kilverts Diary 1870-1879Selections from the Diary of The Rev.
Francis Kilvert Chosen, Edited Introduced by WILLIAM PLOMER
INTRODUCTION ROBERT FRANCIS KILVERT was born at Hardenhuish, or
Harnish, near Chippenham in Wiltshire, on die 3rd December, 1840.
He was the second child of the rector of the parish, the Rev.
Robert Kilvert, and of Thermuthis, daughter of Walter Coleman of
Langley Ktzurse and Thermuthis Ashe of Langley Burrell. The
Kilverts, originally a Shropshire family, had migrated to Bath in
the eighteenth century the Colemans and Ashes had been long settled
in Wiltshire. Francis Kilvert spent his early years at Harden
huish, was educated privately, went in due course to Wadham
College, Oxford, and entered the Church. Here is a brief outline of
his brief career. His first curacy was at Langley Burrell 186364,
of which place his father had become rector. In 1865 he went to
Clyro in Radnorshire, and was curate there for seven years. From
1872 to 1876 he was back at Langley Burrell, again as curate to his
father. In the latter year he was presented to the living of St.
Harmons in Radnorshire, and in November, 1877, became vicar of
Bredwardine, on the Wye in Herefordshire. On the 20th August, 1879,
he married Elizabeth Anne 18461911, daughter of John Rowland, of
Holly Bank, Wootton, near Woodstock: he had met her during a visit
to Paris. They spent their honeymoon in Scotland, and on tie 23rd
Septem ber he died suddenly of peritonitis. He was buried at
Bredwardine. Ttere were no children of the marriage, and Mrs.
Kilvert, who returned to Wootton and devoted herself to good works,
did not marry again. The Diary, which paints a unique picture of
country life in mid Victorian times, has come to be recognized as a
minor classic: its author has been compared to Dorothy Wordsworth,
whom he admired, and even to Pepys. It was kept no doubt
continuously, from January, 1870, until March, 1879, but two
portions are missing the first covering the period between
September, 1875, and March, 1876, and the second that between June,
1876, and December, 1877. It is closely written in 22 notebooks,
from which a selection, made by the present editor, was published
by Jonathan Cape in three volumes in 193 8,1939 and 1940. Had the
whole Diary been printed, it would have filled nine printed
volumes. Since the present selection amounts to such a small part
of the whole it cannot be said to give more than a partial view of
Kilverts life, character and environment: it does not, for example,
do justice to his assiduity as a parish priest, but it does include
many of the best entries in the Diary and it gives much detail
about Clyro and Langley Burrell, the two places now chiefly
associated with his name. A few notes on some of the persons
mentioned in the Diary may be of interest to the reader. Francis
Kilvert familiarly known as Frank had one brother, Edward Newton
Teddy or Perch, and four sisters Thermuthis Thersie, who married
the Rev. W. R.
General
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