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See also: English poet, only son of See also: Sir See also: John Denham (1559–1639),
See also: lord chief baron of the See also: exchequer in See also: Ireland, was See also: born in See also: Dublin in 1615
.
In 1617 his See also: father became baron of the exchequer in See also: England, and removed to See also: London with his See also: family
.
In Michaelmas See also: term 1631 the future poet was entered as a gentleman commoner at Trinity See also: College, See also: Oxford
.
He removed in 1634 to Lincoln's See also: Inn, where he was, says John See also: Aubrey, a See also: good student, but not suspected of being a wit
.
The reputation he had gained at Oxford of being the " dream-ingest See also: young See also: fellow " gave way to a scandalous reputation for gambling
.
In 1634 he married See also: Ann See also: Cotton, and seems to have lived with his. father at See also: Egham, Surrey
.
In 1636 he wrote his paraphrase of the second See also: book of the Aeneid (published in 1656 as The Destruction of Troy, with an excellent verse essay on the See also: art of See also: translation)
.
About the same See also: time he wrote a See also: prose See also: tract against gambling, The Anatomy of See also: Play (printed 1651), designed to assure his father of his repentance, but as soon as he came into his See also: fortune he squandered it at play
.
It was a surprise to every-one when in' 1642 he suddenly, as Edmund Waller said, " broke out like the Irish See also: rebellion, three score thousand strong, when no one was aware, nor in the least expected it," by See also: publishing The Sophy, a tragedy in five acts, the subject of which was See also: drawn from Sir See also: Thomas
See also: Herbert's travels
.
At the beginning of the See also: Civil War Denham was high See also: sheriff for Surrey, and was appointed governor of See also: Farnham See also: Castle
.
He showed no military ability, and speedily surrendered the castle to the parliament
.
He was sent
as a prisoner to London, but was soon permitted to join the See also: king at Oxford
.
In 1642 appeared See also: Cooper's
See also: Hill, a poem describing the
See also: Thames scenery round his home at Egham
.
The first edition was See also: anonymous: subsequent See also: editions show numerous alterations, and the poem did not assume its final See also: form until 1655
.
This famous piece, which was See also: Pope's See also: model for his Windsor See also: Forest, was not new in theme or manner, but the praise which it received was well merited by its ease and See also: grace
.
Moreover Denham expressed his commonplaces with See also: great dignity and skill
.
He followed the taste of the time in his frequent use of antithesis and See also: metaphor, but these devices seem to arise out of the See also: matter, and are not of the nature of See also: mere See also: external See also: ornament
.
At Oxford he wrote many squibs against the roundheads
.
One of the few serious
pieces belonging to this See also: period is the See also: short poem " On the See also: Earl of Strafford's Trial and See also: Death."
From this time Denham was much in See also: Charles I.'s confidence
.
He was entrusted with the
See also: charge of forwarding letters to and from the king when-he was in the custody of the parliament, a
duty which he discharged successfully with Abraham See also: Cowley, but in 1648 he was suspected by the See also: Parliamentary authorities, and thought it wiser to See also: cross the Channel
.
He helped in the removal of the young duke of See also: York to See also: Holland, and for some time he served
See also: Queen Henrietta Maria in See also: Paris, being entrusted by her with despatches for Holland
.
In 165o he was sent to Poland in See also: company with Lord Crofts to obtain See also: money for Charles II
.
They succeeded in raising £1o,000
.
After two years spent at the exiled See also: court in Holland, Denham returned to London and being quite without resources, he was for some time the See also: guest of the earl of Pembroke at See also: Wilton
.
In 1655 an See also: order was given that Denham should restrict himself to some place of residence to be selected by himself at a distance of not less than 20 M. from London; subsequently he obtained from the See also: Protector a licence to live at See also: Bury St See also: Edmunds, and in 1658 a See also: passport to travel abroad with the earl of Pembroke
.
At the Restoration Denham's services were rewarded by the office of surveyor-general of See also: works
.
His qualifications as an architect were probably slight, but it is safe to regard as grossly exaggerated the accusations of incompetence and peculation made by See also: Samuel See also: Butler in his brutal "
See also: Panegyric upon Sir John Denham's Recovery from his Madness." He eventually secured the services of Christopher Wren as deputy-surveyor
.
In 166o he was also made a knight of the See also: Bath
.
In 1665 he married for the second time
.
His wife, See also: Margaret, daughter of Sir See also: William
See also: Brooke, was, according to the comte de Gramont, a beautiful girl of eighteen
.
She soon became known as the See also: mistress of the duke of York, and the See also: scandal, according to See also: common report, shattered the poet's reason
.
While Denham was recovering, his wife died, poisoned, it was said, by a cup of See also: chocolate
.
Some suspected the duchess of York of the See also: crime, but the Comte de Gramont says that the general opinion was that Denham himself was guilty
.
No sign of See also: poison, however, was found in the examination after Lady Denham's death
.
Denham survived her for two years, dying at his See also: house near See also: Whitehall in See also: March 1669
.
He was buried on the 23rd in
See also: Westminster Abbey
.
In the last years of his See also: life he wrote the bitter See also: political satires on the shamefulconduct of the Dutch War entitled " Directions to a Painter," and " Fresh Directions," continuing Edmund Waller's " Instructions to a Painter." The printer of these poems, with which were printed one by Andrew Marvell, was sentenced to stand in the pillory
.
In 1667 Denham wrote his beautiful See also: elegy on Abraham Cowley
.
Denham's poems include, beside those already given, a verse paraphrase of See also: Cicero's See also: Cato major, and a metrical version of the Psalms
.
As a writer of didactic verse, he was perhaps too highly praised by his immediate successors
.
See also: Dryden called Cooper's Hill " the exact See also: standard of good writing," and Pope in his Windsor Forest called him " majestic Denham." His collected poems with a dedicatory See also: epistle to Charles II. appeared in 1668
.
Other editions followed, and they are reprinted in See also: Chalmers' (181o) and other collections of the English poets
.
His political satires were printed with some of Rochester's and Marvell's in Bibliotheca curiosa, vol. i
.
(See also: Edinburgh, 1885)
.
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