The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 353 pages of information about The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753).

The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 353 pages of information about The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753).

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The

Lives

Ofthe i>

Poets

AnthonyBrewer,

A poet who flourished in the reign of Charles I. but of whose birth and life we can recover no particulars.  He was highly esteemed by some wits in that reign, as appears from a Poem called Steps to Parnassus, which pays him the following well turned compliment.

Let Brewer take his artful pen in hand,
Attending muses will obey command,
Invoke the aid of Shakespear’s sleeping clay,
And strike from utter darkness new born day.

Mr. Winstanley, and after him Chetwood, has attributed a play to our author called Lingua, or the Contention of the Tongue and the Five Senses for Superiority, a Comedy, acted at Cambridge, 1606; but Mr. Langbaine is of opinion, that neither that, Love’s Loadstone, Landagartha, or Love’s Dominion, as Winstanley and Philips affirm, are his; Landagartha being written by Henry Burnel, esquire, and Love’s Dominion by Flecknoe.  In the Comedy called Lingua, there is a circumstance which Chetwood mentions, too curious, to be omitted here.  When this play was acted at Cambridge, Oliver Cromwel performed the part of Tactus, which he felt so warmly, that it first fired his ambition, and, from the possession of an imaginary crown, he stretched his views to a real one; to accomplish which, he was content to wade through a sea of blood, and, as Mr. Gray beautifully expresses it, shut the Gates of Mercy on Mankind; the speech with which he is said to have been so affected, is the following,

    Roses, and bays, pack hence:  this crown and robe,
  My brows, and body, circles and invests;
  How gallantly it fits me! sure the slave
  Measured my head, that wrought this coronet;
  They lie that say, complexions cannot change! 
  My blood’s enobled, and I am transform’d
  Unto the sacred temper of a king;
  Methinks I hear my noble Parasites
  Stiling me Caesar, or great Alexander,
  Licking my feet,—­&c.

Mr. Langbaine ascribes to Brewer the two following plays,

Country Girl, a Comedy, often acted with applause, printed in 4to. 1647.  This play has been revived since the Restoration, under the title of Country Innocence, or the Chamber-maid turned Quaker.

Love-sick King, an English Tragical History, with the Life and Death of Cartesmunda, the Fair Nun of Winchester; printed in 4to.  London, 1655; this play was likewise revived 1680, and acted by the name of the Perjured Nun.  The historical part of the plot is founded upon the Invasion of the Danes, in the reign of King Ethelred and Alfred.

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The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.