66-) English Literature
Samuel Daniel
Samuel
Daniel (1562–1619) was an English poet, playwright and historian in the
late-Elizabethan and early-Jacobean eras. He was an innovator in a wide range
of literary genres. English contemplative poet, marked in both verse and prose
by his philosophic sense of history.His best-known works are the sonnet cycle
Delia, the epic poem The Civil Wars Between the Houses of Lancaster and York,
the dialogue in verse Musophilus, and the essay on English poetry A Defense of
Rhyme. He was considered one of the preeminent authors of his time and his
works had a significant influence on contemporary writers, including William
Shakespeare. Daniel's writings continued to influence authors for centuries
after his death, especially the Romantic poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and
William Wordsworth. C. S. Lewis called Daniel "the most interesting man of
letters" whom the sixteenth century produced in England.
Life
and literary career
Daniel
was born in Somersetshire in 1562 or 1563, and little is known of his early
life. His father is said to have been John Daniel, a musician. He matriculated
at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, on 17 November 1581 and left three years later,
apparently without taking a degree. During parts of 1585-1590 he traveled on
the Continent, likely developing the knowledge of French and Italian literature
which was to influence his dramatic work. His first published work, The Worthy
Tract of Paulus Jovius (essentially a translation of Paolo Giovio's Dialogo
dell' imprese militari et amorose), appeared in 1585, revealing an interest in
emblems which was to surface later in The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses.
Daniel
entered Oxford in 1581. After publishing a translation in 1585 for his first
patron, Sir Edward Dymoke, he secured a post with the English ambassador at
Paris; later he travelled in Italy, visiting the poet Battista Guarini in
Padua. After 1592 he lived at Lincoln in the service of Sir Edward Dymoke, at
Wilton as tutor to William Herbert, later earl of Pembroke, and at Skipton
Castle, Yorkshire, as tutor to Lady Anne Clifford. In 1604 Queen Anne chose him
to write a masque, The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses, in which she danced. She
awarded him the right to license plays for the boy actors at the Blackfriars
Theatre and a position as a groom, and later gentleman, of her privy chamber.
Early
life, education, and relationship with John Florio
Little
is known about Samuel Daniel's early life. Biographer Thomas Fuller in
Histories of the Worthies of England (1662) states that he "was born not
far from Taunton" in Somerset. The earliest evidence providing definitive
details of his life is an entry in the signature book of Oxford University
documenting his matriculation at Magdalen Hall (now Hertford College) on
"17 Nov., 1581, aged 19". Daniel did not complete his degree at
Oxford; Anthony à Wood in Athenae Oxonienses (1691) states that he "was
more prone to easier and smoother studies, than in pecking and hewing at
logic".
While
at Oxford, Daniel met the author and translator John Florio, who was an Italian
tutor at the university at the time. In 1582, Daniel contributed a Latin verse
to Florio's Giardino di Recreatione. Daniel maintained a relationship with
Florio for years thereafter. He wrote a dedicatory poem that was included in
Florio's translation of Michel de Montaigne's Essays in 1603. The second
edition of Florio's Montaigne, published in 1613, included a revised version of
Daniel's dedication in which the poet referred to Florio as "my dear
friend and brother". This has led to the inference that either Florio had
married Daniel's sister or Daniel had married Florio's sister, an inference
that has never been proven.
1585–1591:
First published work and patronage of Sir Edward Dymoke
Daniel's
first published work was The Worthy Tract of Paulus Jovius, a translation of an
Italian treatise on impresa or emblems by historian Paolo Giovio. This emblem
book was published in 1585 by Simon Waterson, who would remain Daniel's friend
and principal publisher for the rest of his life. The Worthy Tract of Paulus
Jovius was dedicated to Sir Edward Dymoke, the Queen's Champion. Daniel's
association with Dymoke was the first of a series of close relationships with
noble patrons that came to characterise the author's literary career.
Dymoke
wrote a letter of introduction on Daniel's behalf which allowed the young
student to live in the English embassy in France between 1585 and 1586 as he
advanced his studies. Between 1590 and 1591, he returned to the continent,
travelling part of the time accompanied by Dymoke. Daniel and Dymoke met the
poet Giovanni Battista Guarini in Italy and defended English as a language
worthy of poetry and great writers.
1591–1593:
Patronage of Mary Sidney, Delia, Rosamond, and Cleopatra
Daniel's
literary career was effectively launched in late 1591 with the unauthorized
inclusion of some of his Delia sonnets in the posthumous first edition of Sir
Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella. Sidney's sister, Mary Sidney, the
Countess of Pembroke, objected to the surreptitious publication of her
brother's work, and the edition was recalled by the Stationers Company. In 1592,
Daniel published the first authorized edition of his own poetic works, the
sonnet cycle Delia, and the historical poem The Complaint of Rosamond. Daniel
dedicated Delia to Mary Sidney and begged her forgiveness for the inclusion of
his poems in the unauthorized edition of her brother's work, claiming that he
had been "betrayed by the indiscretions of a greedy printer." Soon
after the publication of Delia and Rosamond, Daniel was invited to join the
Pembroke household, serving the family in some capacity, perhaps as tutor to
the twelve-year-old William Herbert. He also joined a group of writers
encouraged by Mary Sidney that has come to be referred to as the Wilton Circle,
a group that included Edmund Spenser, Michael Drayton, Sir John Davies, and
Abraham Fraunce.
Immediately
upon the publication of Delia and Rosamond, Daniel began receiving praise from
English poets and scholars, including Thomas Nashe, Thomas Churchyard, and
Gabriel Harvey. Edmund Spenser, at the time England's most highly regarded
living author, endorsed Daniel in Colin Clouts Come Home Again (1595), stating
that "there is a new shepherd late upsprung, / The which doth all afore
him far surpass" and imploring his fellow poet to "rouse thy feathers
quickly, Daniel, / And to what course thou please thyself advance".
From
1592 to 1593, under the patronage of Mary Sidney, Daniel completed The Tragedy
of Cleopatra, which was published in 1594. The play was written at the request
of Sidney as a sequel to Robert Garnier's French tragedy Marc-Antoine, a play
she had translated into English as The Tragedy of Antony and published in 1592.
Both plays were written in the style of classical closet drama, plays more
intended to be read than performed. During the early to mid-twentieth century
literary critics postulated that the plays were part of Mary Sidney's effort to
reform English theater, returning it to classical standards espoused by her
brother, Philip Sidney, in his Defense of Poesy. This view of Mary Sidney's
work was advanced by T. S. Eliot in his 1932 essay, "Apology for the
Countess of Pembroke". Subsequent literary criticism, however, has
suggested that Sidney's literary efforts were not part of a campaign against
English drama, but rather were efforts to adapt continental works on history for
an English audience and use them for contemporary political commentary.
1594–1601:
Mountjoy, Civil Wars, Poetical Essays, and Works
After
the publication of Cleopatra, Daniel parted ways with Mary Sidney and
experienced financial difficulties. He was taken in by Charles Blount, Baron
Mountjoy, as described in the first edition of Daniel's epic poem about the
Wars of the Roses, The First Four Books of the Civil Wars Between the Two
Houses of Lancaster and York, published in 1595. The poem included complimentary
references to Mountjoy and a section praising him and his close friend Robert
Devereux, the Earl of Essex. Daniel had worked at Essex's estate, Wanstead, as
he wrote the initial version of his poem.
Between
1595 and 1599, Daniel added a fifth book to The Civil Wars and included the
expanded poem in The Poetical Essays of Samuel Daniel, a collection of his
works dedicated to Mountjoy and published in 1599. The collection included
revised versions of Delia, Rosamond, and Cleopatra, as well as two new works,
Musophilus and A Letter From Octavia to Marcus Antonius. Musophilus was
dedicated to Daniel's friend and fellow poet Fulke Greville, whose discussions
with Daniel had inspired the dialogue in verse, a debate between a poet and a
courtier on the value of writing poetry relative to more worldly pursuits. A
Letter from Octavia was dedicated to Margaret Clifford, the Countess of
Cumberland, whose relationship with her philandering husband inspired Daniel's
sympathetic portrayal of Mark Antony's wife, Octavia. The use of the word
"Essays" in the title of the collection may have been inspired by
Montaigne's French work that had used the same word in its title. Like
Montaigne's writings, Daniel's collection included works that debated topics in
a contemplative, self-reflective style.
During
the late 1590s to first years of the 1600s, Daniel took on the role of tutor to
the young Anne Clifford, daughter of the Countess of Cumberland, the woman to
whom he had dedicated A Letter to Octavia. Anne Clifford maintained a sense of
gratitude and affection toward Daniel through the rest of her life. She
included his portrait and volumes of his works in the family triptych she
commissioned that has come to be known as The Great Picture.
In
1601, a new collection of Daniel's writings was published titled The Works of
Samuel Daniel, Newly Augmented. Once again, the collection contained revised
editions of his earlier works, including an expanded version of The Civil Wars
that now extended to a sixth book. The Civil Wars was newly dedicated to Queen
Elizabeth, likely reflecting Daniel's elevated stature as one of the leading
poets of the day, regarded by some as the successor to Edmund Spenser, who had
died in 1599.
1603–1607:
Royal patronage, Philotas, and the death of Mountjoy
After
Queen Elizabeth's death and King James's accession in 1603, Daniel quickly
became associated with the new court. Through the support of Lucy Russell,
Countess of Bedford, he presented his Panegyrick Congratulatory to the King's
Most Excellent Majesty to the new king in April of that year.[34] A revised
version of the poem was published later in 1603, along with Daniel's Epistles
addressed to various members of the nobility and his essay A Defense of Rhyme.
Daniel
became closely associated with King James's queen, Anne (or Anna) of Denmark,
who commissioned him to write a masque, The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses,
which was performed at Hampton Court in January 1604. In February of that year,
Daniel was appointed the licenser of plays for the Children of the Queen's
Revels, giving him the responsibility of reviewing the plays presented to the
court. This appointment ultimately led to the only known significant difficulty
and embarrassment that Daniel encountered in his literary career. Two controversial
plays The Dutch Courtesan and Eastward Ho! were both performed by the Children
of the Queen's Revels after having been approved by Daniel. More disturbingly
for Daniel, his own play, The Tragedy of Philotas, performed before King James
in January 1605, was believed to include political commentary on the seditious
end of the Earl of Essex, who had been executed in 1601. Daniel was called
before the Privy Council to defend himself. Although he was acquitted of any
charges, the incident caused him great embarrassment, resulting in written
apologies to his longtime friend Charles Blount (formerly Baron Mountjoy, then
the Earl of Devonshire), whom he had inadvertently pulled into the affair, and
to Robert Cecil, King James's advisor and Secretary of State. In an epistle to
Prince Henry, that accompanied the 1605 printed version of Philotas, Daniel
reflected his new world-weary perspective, stating that "years hath done
this wrong, / To make me write too much, and live too long."
If
the controversy surrounding Philotas damaged Daniel's reputation with King
James, the damage was short-lived. In 1605, the play was included in the
published collection of his works, Certain Small Poems, and in August his
pastoral tragicomedy The Queen's Arcadia was performed before Queen Anne and
Prince Henry at Christ Church in Oxford.
In
April 1606, Daniel's friend and patron, Charles Blount, died. Daniel wrote a
funeral poem to his longtime supporter that was printed as A Funeral Poem Upon
the Death of the Noble Earl of Devonshire and included in the 1607 edition of
Daniel's Certain Small Works. The title page of that collection of Daniel's
works was the first to refer to him as "one of the Grooms of the Queen's
Majesty's Privy Chamber", an elevated status that he shared with his friend
John Florio. Certain Small Works included a substantially revised edition of
The Tragedy of Cleopatra, one that has been thought to be more performable on
stage than the original closet drama version. Recent scholarship has identified
a painting of a noblewoman dressed as Cleopatra as being a portrait of Anne
Clifford dressed as the Egyptian queen, perhaps associated with a staged
performance of the 1607 version of Daniel's play.
1609–1619:
Final version of Civil Wars, country life, prose History, and death
In
1609, Daniel published his final version of The Civil Wars, a work that now
extended to eight books. Daniel dedicated the work to Mary Sidney, the patron
who had helped first bring him to prominence. In the dedication to the epic
poem, he stated that he had intended to continue the work "unto the
glorious union of Henry VII", meaning the marriage of Henry Tudor (Queen
Elizabeth's grandfather) to Elizabeth of York in 1486. The final version of the
poem, however, only extended through Edward IV's marriage to Elizabeth
Woodville in 1464. In the dedication, Daniel also stated that he intended to
write a prose "History of England, from the Conquest", introducing
the principal project that was to occupy the rest of his literary career and life.
Daniel
spent most of the final decade of his life in semi-retirement, living at a
country house in the small hamlet of Ridge (now Rudge) in the village of
Beckington in Somerset. In 1610, he wrote the masque Tethys' Festival, which
was performed at Whitehall to celebrate the investiture of King James's son,
Henry, as Prince of Wales. During the next few years, Daniel conducted research
on English history, relying in part on the expertise and collections of his
friends, the antiquarians William Camden and Robert Cotton. In 1612, he
published the first instalment of his prose history, The First Part of the
History of England, an edition covering the early years of England's history,
from the Norman Conquest (1066) through the end of the reign of King Stephen
(1154). In 1614, he wrote the pastoral play, Hymen's Triumph, which was
performed to celebrate the wedding of Jean Drummond to Robert Ker, 1st Earl of
Roxburghe at Queen Anne's new palace, Somerset House.
Daniel
was said to have lost his place as a groom of the privy chamber to Anne of
Denmark in 1618 for visiting a disgraced courtier, Robert Lloyd alias Flood.
The
final version of Daniel's prose history, The Collection of the History of
England was published in 1618. It included material from The First Part of the
History and continued from the point where that work had left off through the
end of the reign of Edward III (1377).
The
final work that Daniel wrote was a poem addressed to James Montague, Bishop of
Winchester, in 1618. It was intended to console the Bishop who was suffering
from jaundice. The work suggests that Daniel may have been suffering from the
same illness; he says of "this close vanquishing / And secret wasting
sickness" that he had "struggled with it too".
It
is unclear if Daniel was ever married. The burial of a "Mrs. Daniell"
is recorded in the Beckington register in March 1619, seven months before
Daniel's death; however, it is unknown if this was the author's wife. Daniel
executed his will on 4 September 1619 and died the following month; he was
buried on 14 October 1619 at St George's Church in Beckington. In the 1650s,
Daniel's old student, Anne Clifford, had a memorial monument erected to honour
him at the church.
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