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LAUREATE (Lat. laureatus, from laurea...

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 283 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LAUREATE (
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Lat. laureatus, from laurea, the
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laurel tree)
  . The
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laurel, in ancient
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Greece, was sacred to Apollo, and as such was used to form a
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crown or wreath of honour for poets and heroes; and this usage has been widespread . The word " laureate " or " laureated " thus came in
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English to signify eminent, or associated with glory,
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literary or military . " Laureate letters " in old times meant the despatches announcing a victory; and the epithet was given, even officially (e.g. to John Skelton) by
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universities, to distinguished poets . The name of " bacca-laureate " for the university degree of bachelor shows a confusion with a supposed etymology from
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Lat. bacca lauri (the laurel berry), which though incorrect (see BACHELOR) involves the same idea . From the more general use of the
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term " poet laureate " arose its restriction in England to the office of the poet attached to the royal household, first held by Ben
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Jonson, for whom the position was, in its essentials, created by Charles I. in 1617 . (Jonson's appointment does not seem to have been formally made as poet-laureate, but his position was
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equivalent to that) . The office was really a development of the practice of earlier times, when minstrels and versifiers were
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part of the retinue of the King; it is recorded that Richard Cceur de Lion had a versificator regis (Gulielmus Peregrinus), and Henry III. had a versificator (Master Henry); in the 15th century John Kay, also a " versifier," described himself as
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Edward IV.'s " humble poet laureate." Moreover, the crown had shown its patronage in various ways; Chaucer had been given a pension and a perquisite of wine by Edward III., and Spenser a pension by Queen Elizabeth . W . Hamilton classes Chaucer, Gower, Kay, Andrew Bernard, Skelton, Robert Whittington, Richard Edwards, Spenser and
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Samuel Daniel, as " volunteer Laureates."
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Sir William Davenant succeeded Jonson in 1638, and the title of poet laureate was conferred by letters patent on Dryden in 167o, two years after Davenant's
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death, coupled with a pension of £30o and a butt of Canary wine . The
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post then became a
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regular institution, though the emoluments varied, Dryden's successors being T . Shadwell (who originated
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annual birthday and New
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Year odes), Nahum Tate, Nicholas Rowe, Laurence Eusden, Colley Cibber, William Whitehead, Thomas Warton, H .

J .

Pye, Southey, Wordsworth, Tennyson and, four years after Tennyson's death,
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Alfred Austin . The office took on a new lustre from the
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personal distinction of Southey, Wordsworth and Tennyson; it had fallen into contempt before Southey, and on Tennyson's death there was a considerable feeling that no possible successor was acceptable (William Morris and Swinburne being hardly court poets) . Eventually, however, the undesirability of breaking with tradition for temporary reasons, and thus severing the one official
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link between literature and the state, prevailed over the protests against following Tennyson by any one of inferior genius . It may be noted that abolition was similarly advocated when Warton and Wordsworth died . The poet laureate, being a court official, was considered responsible for producing formal and appropriate verses on birthdays and state occasions; but his activity in this respect has varied, according to circumstances, and the custom ceased to be obligatory after Pye's death . Wordsworth stipulated, before accepting the honour, that no formal effusions from him should be considered a necessity; but Tennyson was generally happy in his numerous poems of this class . The emoluments of the post have varied; Ben Jonson first received a pension of zoo marks, and later an annual " terse of Canary wine." To Pye an allowance of £27 was made instead of the wine . Tennyson drew £72 a year from the lord chamberlain's department, and £27 from the lord steward's in lieu of the " butt of
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sack." See Walter Hamilton's Poets Laureate of England (1879), and his contributions to Notes and Queries (Feb . 4, 1893) .

End of Article: LAUREATE (Lat. laureatus, from laurea, the laurel tree)
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