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ARTHUR JOHNSTON (1587-1641)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 473 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARTHUR JOHNSTON (1587-1641)  , Scottish physician and writer of Latin verse, was the son of an
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Aberdeenshire laird Johnston of Johnston and Caskieben, and on his
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mother's side a grandson of the seventh Lord Forbes . It is probable that he began his university studies at one, or both, of the colleges at Aberdeen, but in 16o8 he proceeded to Italy and graduated M.D. at Padua in 161o . Thereafter he resided at
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Sedan, in the
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company of the exiled Andrew Melville (q.v.), and in 1619 was in practice in Paris . He appears to have returned to England about the time of James I.'s
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death and to have been in Aberdeen about 1628 . He met Laud in
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Edinburgh at the time of Charles I.'s Scottish coronation (1633) and was encouraged by him in his
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literary efforts, partly, it is said, for the undoing of Buchanan's reputation as a Latin poet . He was appointed rector of King's College, Aberdeen, in
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June 1637 . Four years later he died at Oxford, on his way to
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London, whither Laud had invited him . Johnston
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left more than ten
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works, all in Latin . On two of these, published in the same
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year, his reputation entirely rests: (a) his version of the Psalms (Psalmorum Davidis paraphrasis poetica et canticorum evangelicorum, Aberdeen, 1637), and (b) his
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anthology of contemporary Latin verse by Scottish poets (Deliciae poetarum scotorum hujus aevi illustrium, Amsterdam, 1637) . He had published in 1633 a
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volume entitled Cantici Salomonis paraphrasis poetica, which, dedicated to Charles I., had brought him to the
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notice of Laud . The full version of the Psalms was the result of Laud's encouragement . The
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book was for some time a strong
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rival of Buchanan's
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work, though its good Latinity was not
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superior to that of the latter .

The Deliciae, in two small thick volumes of 699 and 575 pages, was a patriotic effort in

imitation of the various volumes (under a similar title) which had been popular on the Continent during the second decade of the century . The volumes are dedicated by Johnston to John Scot of Scotstarvet, at whose expense the collected works were published after Johnston's death, at
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Middelburg (1642) . Selections from his own poems occupy pages 439-647 of the first volume, divided into three sections, Parerga, Epigrammata and Musae . Aulicae . He published a volume of epigrams at Aberdeen in 1632 . In these pieces he shows himself at his best . His sacred poems, which had appeared in the Opera (1642), were reprinted by Lauder in his Poetarum Scotorum musae sacrae (1739) . The earliest lives are by Lauder (u.s.) and Benson (in Psalmi Davidici, 1741) . Ruddiman's Vindication of Mr George Buchanan's Paraphrase (1745) began a pamphlet controversy regarding the merits of the rival poets .

End of Article: ARTHUR JOHNSTON (1587-1641)
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