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・ Joseph Brannigan
・ Joseph Brannon Dooley
・ Joseph Blackburn
・ Joseph Blackburn (cricketer)
・ Joseph Blackburn (painter)
・ Joseph Blacklock
・ Joseph Blair
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・ Joseph Blake (governor)
・ Joseph Blake, 1st Baron Wallscourt
・ Joseph Blake, 3rd Baron Wallscourt
・ Joseph Blakesley
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Joseph Blanco White
・ Joseph Blandisi
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・ Joseph Blumenthal (printer)
・ Joseph Blunt


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Joseph Blanco White : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Blanco White

Joseph Blanco White, born ''José María Blanco Crespo'' (11 July 1775 – 20 May 1841), was a Spanish theologian and poet.
White was born in Seville, Spain. He had Irish ancestry and was the son of the merchant Guillermo Blanco (alias White, an English viceconsul who had established himself in Seville during the reign of Fernando VI) and María Gertrudis Crespo y Neve.
White was educated for the Roman Catholic priesthood but, after his ordination in 1800, religious doubts led him to escape from Spain to England (1810). There he ultimately entered the Anglican Church, having studied theology at Oxford and made the friendship of Thomas Arnold, John Henry Newman and Richard Whately. He became tutor in Whately's family when Whately became the Archbishop of Dublin in 1831. While in this position White embraced Unitarian views. He found asylum amongst the Unitarians of Liverpool, and he died in the city on 20 May 1841.
White edited ''El Español'', a monthly Spanish magazine in London, from 1810 to 1814. Afterwards he received a civil list pension of £250. His principal writings are ''Doblado's Letters from Spain'' (1822) (under the pseudonym of "Don Leucado Doblado", and written in part at Holland House in London), ''Evidence against Catholicism'' (1825), ''Second Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion'' (2 vols., 1834) and ''Observations on Heresy and Orthodoxy'' (1835). They all show literary ability and were extensively read in their day. He also translated Paley's ''Evidences'' and the ''Book of Common Prayer'' into Spanish.
White is best remembered, however, for his sonnet "Night and Death" ("Mysterious Night! when our first parent knew"), which was dedicated to Samuel Taylor Coleridge on its appearance in the ''Bijou'' for 1828 and has since found its way into several anthologies. Three versions are given in the ''Academy'' of 12 September 1891.
==References==

*''Life of the Rev. Joseph Blanco White'', written by himself, with portions of his ''Correspondence'', edited by John Hamilton Thom (London, 3 vols., 1845).
*''Blanco White: Self-banished Spaniard'', Martin Murphy (Yale, 1989).

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