- John Barclay (poet)
John Barclay (
January 28 ,1582 —August 15 ,1621 ) was a Scottishsatirist andneo-Latin poet .He was born in
Pont-à-Mousson , Lorraine,France , where his father, William Barclay, held the chair of civil law. His mother was aFrenchwoman . His early education was obtained at theJesuit College . While there, at the age of nineteen, he wrote a commentary on the "Thebais " ofStatius . In 1603 he crossed with his father toLondon . Barclay had persistently maintained hisScottish nationality in his French surroundings, and probably found in James VI and I's accession an opportunity which he would not let slip.He did not remain long in
England , where he is supposed to have published the first part of his "Euphormionis Satyricon" against theJesuits , for in 1605 when a second edition of that book appeared inParis , he was there, having already spent some time inAngers , and being now the husband of a French girl,Louise Debonaire . He returned to London with his wife in 1606, and there published his "Sylvae ", a collection of Latin poems. In the following year the second part of the "Satyricon " appeared in Paris.In 1609 he edited the "
De Potestate Papae ", ananti-papal treatise by his father, who had died in the preceding year, and in 1611 he issued an "Apologia " or "third part" of the "Satyricon", in answer to the attacks of the Jesuits. A so-called "fourth part," with the title of "Icon Animorum ", describing the character and manners of the European nations, appeared in 1614. James VI is said to have been attracted by his scholarship, but particulars of this, or of his life in London generally, are not available. In 1616 he went toRome , for some reason unexplained, and there resided till his death on the 15th of August 1621.He appears to have been on better terms with the Church and notably with Bellarmine; for in 1617 he issued, from a press at
Cologne , a "Paraeneis ad Sectarios ", an attack on the position ofProtestantism . The literary effort of his closing years was his best-known work the "Argenis ", a political romance, resembling in certain respects the "Arcadia " ofSidney , and the "Utopia " ofMore , completed about a fortnight before his death, which has been said to have been hastened bypoison .Bibliography
*"John Barclay Argenis, edited by Mark Riley and Dorothy Pritchard Huber" (Assen 2004) is a modern edition with facing translation of the "Argenis".
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