[English Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History by Henry Coppee]@TWC D-Link bookEnglish Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History CHAPTER XII 17/18
He also wrote a sketch of the reign of Elizabeth. _George Buchanan_, 1506-1581: celebrated as a Latin writer, an historian, a poet, and an ecclesiastical polemic.
He wrote a _History of Scotland_, a Latin version of the Psalms, and a satire called _Chamaeleon_.
He was a man of profound learning and indomitable courage; and when told, just before his death, that the king was incensed at his treatise _De Jure Regni_, he answered that he was not concerned at that, for he was "going to a place where there were few kings." Thomas Sackville, Earl Dorset, Lord Buckhurst, 1536-1608: author, or rather originator of "The Mirror for Magistrates," showing by illustrious, unfortunate examples, the vanity and transitory character of human success.
Of Sackville and his portion of the Mirror for Magistrates, Craik says they "must be considered as forming the connecting link between the Canterbury Tales and the Fairy Queen." _Samuel Daniel_, 1562-1619: an historian and a poet.
His chief work is "The Historie of the Civile Warres between the Houses of York and Lancaster," "a production," says Drake, "which reflects great credit on the age in which it was written." This work is in poetical form; and, besides it, he wrote many poems and plays, and numerous sonnets. Michael Drayton, 1563-1631: a versatile writer, most favorably known through his _Polyolbion_, a poem in thirty books, containing a detailed description of the topography of England, in Alexandrine verses.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|