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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FLA-FRA |
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FLETCHER, GILES (c. 1584-1623) , English poet, younger son of the preceding, was born about 1584. Fuller in his Worthies of England says that he was a native of London, and was educated at Westminster school. From there he went to Trinity College, Cambridge , where he took his B.A. degree in 1606, and became a minor fellow of his college in 1608. He was reader in Greek grammar (1615) and in Greek language (1618). In 1603 he contributed a poem on the death of Queen Elizabeth to Sorrow's Joy. His great
cousin
Cambridge about 1618, and soon after received, it is supposed from Francis Bacon, the rectory of Alderton, on the Suffolk coast, where " his clownish and low-parted parishioners . . . valued not their pastor according to his worth; which disposed him to melancholy and hastened his dissolution." (Fuller, Worthies of England, ed. 1811, vol. ii. p. 82). His last work
appeared in the year of his death (1623). The principal work
Christ's Victorie and Triumph
design . The first canto
Triumph
great
canto
separate
Giles Fletcher's poem was edited (1868) for the Fuller Worthies Library, and (1876) for the Early English Poets by Dr A. B. Grosart. It is also reprinted for The Ancient and Modern Library of Theo-logical Literature (1888), and in R. Cattermole
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