Carpenter And Abbot Woz Here As Well
Aug. 28th, 2021 12:31 pmAnother notable Guildfordian is the writer and activist Edward Carpenter- who worked for almost every progressive cause you care to name- including socialism, vegetarianism, Vedic philosophy and gay rights- and for a generation or two influenced almost every progressive thinker you care to name. He has been called the English Tolstoy- and if he is now rather less well known it's because he failed to anchored himself in the canon by producing a War and Peace or an Anna Karenina. If we absolutely have to have statues of famous persons then Carpenter is a famous person of whom we absolutely ought to have statues. He is buried in the same cemetery as Charles Lutwidge Dodgson- and next time we go anywhere near Guildford I mean to make a visit to both their graves...
Yet another notable Guildfordian is George Abbot- who was archbishop of Canterbury under James I and Charles I. History records him as a man of narrow Calvinist principles- who stuck to them even if it meant displeasing the reigning monarch. Until Robert Runcie came along he was believed to be the only archbishop of Canterbury who ever had committed homicide. In George's case- unlike Robert's (where the killings were done in wartime)- the act was accidental; he was out hunting deer (was that really a Calvinist thing to do?), shot at one with his crossbow and hit a keeper instead- an event which plunged him into what we would now call a fit of depression that lasted years. His lasting fame rests on his having supervised and contributed to the Authorised Version (King James Version) of the New Testament- which means that most of us are familiar with his work without knowing that it's his. His statue stands on a plinth at the top of Guildford High Street, from whence he presides over the Saturday night revels at the very historic-looking Three Pigeons across the road
It's nice to see that someone has thought of him when they were getting in a round.
What's your tipple, George?
Sherris sack.
Sorry, don't think they do that any more. Here, have a nice glass of Chardonnay.

Yet another notable Guildfordian is George Abbot- who was archbishop of Canterbury under James I and Charles I. History records him as a man of narrow Calvinist principles- who stuck to them even if it meant displeasing the reigning monarch. Until Robert Runcie came along he was believed to be the only archbishop of Canterbury who ever had committed homicide. In George's case- unlike Robert's (where the killings were done in wartime)- the act was accidental; he was out hunting deer (was that really a Calvinist thing to do?), shot at one with his crossbow and hit a keeper instead- an event which plunged him into what we would now call a fit of depression that lasted years. His lasting fame rests on his having supervised and contributed to the Authorised Version (King James Version) of the New Testament- which means that most of us are familiar with his work without knowing that it's his. His statue stands on a plinth at the top of Guildford High Street, from whence he presides over the Saturday night revels at the very historic-looking Three Pigeons across the road
It's nice to see that someone has thought of him when they were getting in a round.
What's your tipple, George?
Sherris sack.
Sorry, don't think they do that any more. Here, have a nice glass of Chardonnay.
