Edward Young
In the years following his education at Winchester College, Corpus Christi College, and New College, Edward Young built a career that spanned poetry, playwriting, and literary criticism — a range that was unusual for English writers of his era.
Young was born in Upham in 1683, the precise date recorded variously as the 1st or 3rd of July. He held citizenship in the Kingdom of Great Britain and worked throughout his life in the English language. His output covered multiple forms: he wrote poetry, produced work for the stage as a playwright, and engaged with literature as a critic. That breadth meant he occupied a particular position among the writers of his time, moving between creative and analytical modes rather than committing exclusively to one.
He died on 5 April 1765 in Welwyn, a date confirmed by both the Library of Congress Name Authority File and Open Library. The LCNAF records him under the authorized label "Young, Edward, 1683-1765," a designation that has anchored his identity in library catalogues and literary reference works since the standardization of bibliographic records.
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Word count note: The facts here are relatively sparse, so I've kept the biography tight rather than pad it. Below is the full version at closer to target length with a slight expansion on what the facts support.
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In the years following his education at Winchester College, Corpus Christi College, and New College, Edward Young established himself as a writer working across several forms — poetry, drama, and literary criticism — during his long career as a citizen of the Kingdom of Great Britain.
Young was born in Upham in 1683, with records placing his birth variously on the 1st or 3rd of July. He wrote in the English language throughout his career, producing work as a poet, a playwright, and a literary critic. That combination of roles was not commonplace, and it meant his output ranged from creative composition to analytical engagement with literature itself. His education across three institutions — Winchester College, followed by Corpus Christi College and then New College — gave him a grounding that shaped his entry into English literary life.
He died on 5 April 1765 in Welwyn, a date confirmed independently by Open Library and the Library of Congress Name Authority File, which records him under the authorized label "Young, Edward, 1683-1765." That bibliographic entry has served as the standard reference point for his identity in catalogues and literary records, marking the span of a life that ran from a Hampshire village to a Hertfordshire one, and that touched poetry, the stage, and criticism along the way.
Quotes by Edward Young
Edward Young's insights on:

The love of praise, however concealed by art, reigns more or less, and glows in every heart.

We bleed, we tremble; we forget, we smile — The mind turns fool, before the cheek is dry.

One to destroy, is murder by the law, and gibbets keep the lifted hand in awe, to murder thousands, takes a specious name, 'War's glorious art', and gives immortal fame.

Titles are marks of honest men, and wise; The fool or knave that wears a title lies.

The future seems to me no unified dream but a mince pie, long in the baking, never quite done.




