Roden Noel


Roden Berkeley Wriothesley Noel, also known as Noël, was an English poet. He was a Cambridge Apostle.

Career

The son of Charles Noel, 1st Earl of Gainsborough and Lady Frances Jocelyn, he was educated at Windlesham House School, Harrow School and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he obtained his M.A. in 1858. He then spent two years travelling in the East. In 1863, he married Alice de Broë, daughter of the director of the Ottoman Bank in Beirut. Their third child, Eric, who died aged five, is commemorated in Roden Noel's best-known book of verse, A Little Child's Monument.
The latter part of his life was spent at Brighton, but he died in the train station of Mainz in Germany. His son Conrad Noel became a Christian Socialist, famous as the "turbulent priest of Thaxted".
Roden Noel's versification was unequal and sometimes harsh, but he has a genuine feeling for nature, and the work is permeated by philosophic thought.
His other works include a drama in verse, The House of Ravensburg, an epic on David Livingstone's expedition in Africa, a Life of Byron, an edition of Edmund Spenser's poems, a selection of Thomas Otway's plays for the Mermaid series, and critical papers on literature and philosophy.
His Collected Poems were edited by his sister, Victoria Buxton, with a notice by John Addington Symonds, which had originally appeared in the Academy as a review of The Modern Faust. The selection in the series of Canterbury Poets has an introduction by Robert Buchanan.
His poem "Sea Slumber Song" was set to music by Sir Edward Elgar as the first song of his song-cycle Sea Pictures.
Noel was a spiritualist and interested in parapsychology. He was a founding vice-president of the Society for Psychical Research.

Publications