Skip to main content
Birth date
1714
Death date
1763
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 31 - 40 of 199
Title Post date Rating Comments
The Halcyon
No votes yet
0
On a Statue of Venus de Medicis
No votes yet
0
Epitaph, in Hales-Owen Churchyard, on Miss Anne Powel
No votes yet
0
On the Back of a Gothic Seat
No votes yet
0
On a Seat, at the Bottom of a Large Root
No votes yet
0
Impromptu to Miss Utrecia Smith, on Her Not Dancing
No votes yet
0
A Pastoral Ode
No votes yet
0
Verses Written Towards the Close of the Year 1748
No votes yet
0
Ode to a Young Lady, Somewhat too Solicitous about Her Manner of Expression
No votes yet
0
Written in a Flower Book of My Own Colouring
No votes yet
0
Born in 1714 in Halesowen (now Worcestershire) England living at the family home 'The Leasowes'. Halesowen, which, up to the early years of the 18th century was in part of Shropshire. He was educated at Solihull Grammar School, where he met and became firm friends with the future poet Richard Jago, before going on to study at Pembroke College, Oxford, but without taking a degree. On inheriting 'The Leasowes' he spent much time and money on landscaping the estate.
He was a poet of diverse taste, his father recognising his talent when a young boy, had strived to send his son to Oxford to study theology but William showed no real interest, preferring poetry, odes, elegies, ballads and correspondence of which he was particularly proud.
Shenstone's work is somewhat self-conscious and pretty and is scarcely remembered today, with the possible exception of the pastoral poem The Schoolmistress (1742), written in the style of Edmund Spenser. This was praised by Dr. Johnson and Thomas Gray, the latter's Elegy written in a country churchyard (1751) being in a similar style.

William Shenstone died in 1763.