Online Encyclopedia

BARNABE GOOGE (1540-1594)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 241 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARNABE

GOOGE (1540-1594)  ,
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English poet, son of Robert Googe, recorder of Lincoln, was born on the 1th of
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June 1540 at Alvingham,
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Lincolnshire . He studied at Christ's College, Cambridge, and at New College, Oxford, but does not seem to have taken a degree at either university . He afterwards removed to
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Staple's
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Inn, and was attached to the household of his kinsman,
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Sir William
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Cecil . In 1563 he became a gentleman pensioner to Queen Elizabeth . He was absent in Spain when his poems were sent to the printer by a friend, L . Blundeston . Googe then gave his consent, and they appeared in 1563 as Eglogs, Epytaphes, and Soneltes . There is extant a curious correspondence on the subject of his
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marriage with Mary Darrell, whose
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father refused Googe's suit on the ground that she was bound 'by a previous contract . The
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matter was decided by the intervention of Sir William Cecil with Archbishop Parker, and the marriage took place in 1564 or 1565 . Googe was provost-marshal of the court of Connaught, and some twenty letters of his in this capacity are preserved in the record office . He died in
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February 1594 . He was an ardent
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Protestant, and his
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poetry is coloured by his religious and
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political views .

In the third " Eglog," for instance, be laments the decay of the old

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nobility and the rise of a new aristocracy of
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wealth, and he gives an indignant account of the sufferings of his co-religionists under Mary . The other eclogues
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deal with the sorrows of earthly love, leading up to a
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dialogue between
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Corydon and Cornix, in which the heavenly love is extolled . The
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volume includes epitaphs on Nicholas Grimald, John Bale and on Thomas Phaer, whose
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translation of Virgil Googe is uncritical enough to prefer to the versions of Surrey and of Gavin Douglas . A much more charming pastoral than any of those contained in this volume, " Phyllida was a fayer maid " (Totters
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Miscellany) has been ascribed to Barnabe Googe . He was one of the earliest English pastoral poets, and the first who was inspired by
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Spanish
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romance, being consider-ably indebted to the
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Diana Enamorada of Montemayor . His other
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works include a translation from
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Marcellus Palingenius (said to be an anagram for Pietro Angelo Manzolli) of a satirical Latin poem, Zodiacus vitae (Venice, 1531?), in twelve books, under the title of The Zodyake.of
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Life (156o); The Popish Kingdome, or reign of Antichrist (1J7o), translated frorn Thomas Kirchmayer or Naogeorgus; The Spiritual Husbandrie from the same author, printed with the last; Foure Bookes of Husbandrie (1577), collected by Conradus Heresbachius; and The Proverbes of . . . Lopes de Mendoza (1579) .

End of Article: BARNABE GOOGE (1540-1594)
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