The lives of the most famous English poets, or, The honour of Parnassus in a brief essay of the works and writings of above two hundred of them, from the time of K. William the Conqueror to the reign of His present Majesty, King James II / written by William Winstanley, author of The English worthies ...

About this Item

Title
The lives of the most famous English poets, or, The honour of Parnassus in a brief essay of the works and writings of above two hundred of them, from the time of K. William the Conqueror to the reign of His present Majesty, King James II / written by William Winstanley, author of The English worthies ...
Author
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698.
Publication
London :: Printed by H. Clark for Samuel Manship ...,
1687.
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Subject terms
Poets, English.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66698.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The lives of the most famous English poets, or, The honour of Parnassus in a brief essay of the works and writings of above two hundred of them, from the time of K. William the Conqueror to the reign of His present Majesty, King James II / written by William Winstanley, author of The English worthies ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66698.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

Page 164

THOMAS MAY.

THomas May was one in his time highly esteem∣ed, not only for his Translation of Virgils Georgicks, and Lucans Pharfalia into English, but what he hath written Propria Minerva, as his Sup∣plement to Lucan, till the Death of Julius Caesar: His History of Henry the Second in Verse; besides what he wrote of Dramatick, as his Tragedies of Antigone, Agrippina, and Cleopatra; The Heir, a Tragi-Comedy; the Old Couple, and The Old Wives Tale, Comedies; and the History of Orlan∣do Furioso; of these his Tragi-Comedy of The Heir is done to the life, both for Plot and Lan∣guage; and good had it been for his Memory to Po∣sterity, if he had left off Writing here; but taking disgust at Court for being frustrated in his Expe∣ctation of being the Queens Poet, for which he stood Candidate with Sir William Davenant, who was preferred before him, out of meer Spleen, as it is thought for his Repulse, he vented his Spite in his History of the late Civil Wars of England; wherein he shews all the Spleen of a Male con∣tented Poet, making thereby his Friends his Foes, and rendring his Fame odious to Posterity; such is the Nature of Malice, that as the Poet saith,

Impoison'd with the Drugs of cruel Hate, Draw on themselves an unavoided Fate.

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