Jump to content

Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Shepherd, Richard (1732?-1809)

From Wikisource
610880Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 52 — Shepherd, Richard (1732?-1809)1897William Prideaux Courtney

SHEPHERD, RICHARD (1732?–1809), versifier and theologian, born about 1732, son of Henry Shepherd (d. 1764), vicar of Mareham-le-Fen, Lincolnshire, matriculated from Corpus Christi College, Oxford, on 1 Dec. 1749, at the age of seventeen. He graduated B.A. 1753, M.A. 1757, B.D. 1765, and D.D. 1788, and was elected probationary fellow of his college in 1760. His first intention was to follow a military life, but he took orders in the English church. After residing for many years at Oxford, he became chaplain to Thomas Thurlow [q. v.], successively bishop of Lincoln and Durham, by whose nomination he was installed on 26 July 1783 in the archdeaconry of Bedford. In 1788 he was Bampton lecturer at Oxford, publishing his lectures as ‘Ground and Credibility of the Christian Religion,’ 1788. ‘Additional Discourses’ thereto were published by him in 1792, and three were republished by his son in 1848, with the title ‘Salvation is of the Jews.’ By the gift of Lord-chancellor Thurlow he was instituted in 1792 to the rectory of Wetherden and Helmingham in Suffolk, and held these preferments until his death at Wetherden, on 3 Jan. 1809, in his seventy-eighth year. He had been elected F.R.S. on 10 May 1781.

The numerous works of Shepherd included, in addition to sermons and charges:

  1. ‘Ode to Love’ (anon.), 1756; this was afterwards reissued under the title of ‘The Philologist.’
  2. ‘Review of a Free Enquiry [by Soame Jenyns] into the Nature and Origin of Evil’ (anon.), 1759; 2nd ed. 1768.
  3. ‘Odes, Descriptive and Allegorical’ (anon.), 1761.
  4. ‘The Nuptials, a didactic Poem in three books’ (anon.), 1761.
  5. ‘Hector, a dramatic Poem’ (anon.), 1770.
  6. ‘Bianca, a Tragedy,’ 1772 (most of the above were reprinted in ‘Miscellanies,’ 2 vols. 1776).
  7. ‘Reflections on Materialism, addressed to Priestley; by Philalethes Rusticans,’ 1779.
  8. ‘Examination of the Socinian Exposition of the Prefatory Verses of St. John's Gospel,’ 1781.
  9. ‘Essay on Education, in a Letter to William Jones,’ 1782.
  10. ‘Polyænus's Stratagems of War,’ translated from the original Greek, 1793; this had lain in his desk for more than thirty years, when Lord Cornwallis advised its publication.
  11. ‘Notes on the Gospel and Epistles of St. John,’ 1796; new ed. 1841, edited by his son.
  12. ‘The new Boethius; or of the Consolation of Christianity,’ 1806.
  13. ‘Religious Union perfective, and the support of Civil Union’ (anon.), 1807.
  14. ‘No False Alarm, or a Sequel to Religious Union,’ 1808.

[Foster's Alumni Oxon. 1715–1886; Nichols's Lit. Anecdotes, ii. 328–9, 361; Gent. Mag. 1809, i. 91–2; Halkett and Laing's Anon. Lit. pp. 1080, 1761, 1802–3, 2109, 2183, 2194.]