Lives of the Poets of Great 
Britain and Ireland, The 
 
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Title: The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) 
Volume II 
Author: Theophilus Cibber 
Release Date: August 7, 2005 [EBook #16469] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIVES 
OF THE POETS OF *** 
 
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Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
Preparer's Note: This e-text is taken from a facsimile of the original 
18th-century volume. The spelling, punctuation, and other quirks have 
largely been retained. Only the most obvious printer's errors have been
corrected, and are marked [like this]. 
Anglistica & Americana 
A Series of Reprints Selected by Bernhard Fabian, Edgar Mertner, Karl 
Schneider and Marvin Spevack 
17 
GEORG OLMS VERLAGSBUCHHANDLUNG HILDESHEIM 
THEOPHILUS CIBBER 
The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland 
(1753) 
Vol. II 
1968 
GEORG OLMS VERLAGSBUCHHANDLUNG HILDESHEIM 
Note 
The present facsimile is reproduced from a copy in the possession of 
the Library of the University of Göttingen. Shelfmark: H. lit. biogr. I 
8464. 
Although the title-page of Volume I announces four volumes, the work 
is continued in a fifth volume of the same date. Like Volumes II, III, 
and IV, it is by "Mr. CIBBER, and other Hands" and is "Printed for R. 
GRIFFITHS". 
M.S. 
Reprografischer Nachdruck der Ausgabe London 1753 Printed in 
Germany Herstellung: fotokap wilhelm weihert, Darmstadt Best.-Nr. 
5102040
THE 
LIVES 
OF THE 
POETS 
OF 
GREAT BRITAIN and IRELAND. 
Compiled from ample Materials scattered in a Variety of Books, and 
especially from the MS. Notes of the late ingenious Mr. COXETER 
and others, collected for this Design, 
By Mr. CIBBER, and other Hands. 
VOL. II. 
LONDON: Printed for R. GRIFFITHS, at the Dunciad in St. Paul's 
Church-Yard. MDCCLIII 
VOLUME II. 
Contains the 
LIVES 
OF 
Brewer Newcastle, Duchess May Newcastle, Duke Taylour Birkenhead 
Habington Boyle, E. Orrery Goldsmith Head Cleveland Hobbs Holiday 
[sic] Cokaine Nabbes Wharton Shirley Killegrew, Anne Howel Lee 
Fanshaw Butler Cowley Waller Davenant Ogilby King Rochester 
[Massinger] Buckingham Stapleton Smith Main Otway Milton 
[Oldham] Philips [Roscommon] 
* * * * *
_Just Published,_ 
In one small Octavo Volume, Price bound in Calf 3s. 
A TRANSLATION of the Ingenious Abbé DE MABLY'S 
Observations on the ROMANS. A learned and curious Performance; 
wherein the Policy of that People is set in so clear a Light, and the 
Characters of their great Men drawn with such a masterly Pen, as 
cannot but recommend it to all Lovers of Classical Learning. 
In this Work many new Lights are cast upon the Characters and 
Conduct of the following celebrated Personages: 
Romulus, | Pompey, | Otho, Tarquin the Elder, | Cato, | Vitellius, 
Servius Tullus, | Cæsar, | Vespasian, Brutus, | Cicero, | Titus, The 
Gracchi, | Antony, | Domitian, Marius, | Augustus, | Nerva, Sylla, | 
Tiberius, | Trajan, Crassus, | Caligula, | Antoninus, Scipio, | Claudius, | 
Marcus Aurelius, Hannibal, | Nero, | Diocletian, Pyrrhus, | Galba, | 
Constantine the Great &c. &c. &c. 
Printed for R. GRIFFITHS, in _Paul's Church-Yard_. 
* * * * * 
 
THE 
LIVES 
OF THE 
POETS 
 
ANTHONY BREWER, 
A poet who flourished in the reign of Charles I. but of whose birth and 
life we can recover no particulars. He was highly esteemed by some
wits in that reign, as appears from a Poem called Steps to Parnassus, 
which pays him the following well turned compliment. 
Let Brewer take his artful pen in hand, Attending muses will obey 
command, Invoke the aid of Shakespear's sleeping clay, And strike 
from utter darkness new born day. 
Mr. Winstanley, and after him Chetwood, has attributed a play to our 
author called Lingua, or the Contention of the Tongue and the Five 
Senses for Superiority, a Comedy, acted at Cambridge, 1606; but Mr. 
Langbaine is of opinion, that neither that, Love's Loadstone, 
Landagartha, or Love's Dominion, as Winstanley and Philips affirm, 
are his; Landagartha being written by Henry Burnel, esquire, and 
Love's Dominion by Flecknoe. In the Comedy called Lingua, there is a 
circumstance which Chetwood mentions, too curious, to be omitted 
here. When this play was acted at Cambridge, Oliver Cromwel 
performed the part of Tactus, which he felt so warmly, that it first fired 
his ambition, and, from the possession of an imaginary crown, he 
stretched his views to a real one; to accomplish which, he was content 
to wade through a sea of blood, and, as Mr. Gray beautifully expresses    
    
		
	
	
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