John Keble (1792-1866), fellow and tutor of Oriel College and professor of poetry at Oxford (1831-41), was a founding father of the High Church Oxford Movement, also known as Tractarianism. In addition to his polemical contributions to the Tracts for the Times, he also wrote the highly influential collection of religious poetry, The Christian Year (1827), a companion to the Book of Common Prayer influenced by Wordsworth 's Romantic representation of nature. In 1836 Keble produced an edition of the sixteenth-century Anglican theology of Richard Hooker. The relationship between Keble and Ruskin, though not intimate, is not insignificant, as the latter was a student at Christ Church (1837-1840) during Keble's tenure of chair of poetry.