|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: RON-SAC |
|
|
RYMER, THOMAS (16411713) , English historiographer royal, was the younger son of Ralph Rymer, lord of the manor of Brafferton in Yorkshire, described by Clarendon as " possessed of a good estate," and executed for his share in the " Presbyterian rising " of 1663. Thomas was probably born at Yafforth Hall
He was admitted as pensionarius minor at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge , on April 29, 1658, but left the university without taking a degree. On May 2, 1666, he became a member of Gray's Inn, and was called to the bar on June 16, 1673.. His first appearance in print was as translator of Cicero's Prince (1668), from the Latin treatise (16o8) drawn
Beaconsfield churchyard. The preface to the posthumous Histaria Ecclesiastica (1688) of Thomas Hobbes is said to have been by Rymer, but the Life of Hobbes (1681) sometimes ascribed to him was written by Richard Blackburne. He produced a congratulatory poem upon the arrival of Queen Mary in 1689. His next piece of authorship was to translate the sixth
' See Hickes, Memoirs of John Kettlewell (1718), pp. 10-14. 2 " The corruption of a poet is the generation of a critic " (Ded. of the Third Miscellany, in Works (1821), xii. p. 49), which is much more pointed than Beaconsfield 's reterence to critics as " men who have failed in literature and art" (Lothair, chap. xxxv.) or Balzac's sly hit at Merimee in similar terms. The poet's remarks on theworst critic that ever lived." John Dunton (Life and Letters, p. 354), however, considered him " orthodox and modest," and Pope " one of the best critics we ever had " (Spence's Anecdotes). Rymer contended that although Shakespeare possessed humour he had no genius for tragedy, Othello being merely " a bloody farce without salt or savour."Within eight months of his official appointment Rymer was directed (August 26, 1693) to carry out that great national undertaking with which his name will always be honourably connected, and of which there is reason to believe that Lords Somers and Halifax
At last, on November 20, 1704, was issued the first folio volume of the Foedera, Conventiones, Litterae et cujuscunque generis Acta Publica inter reges Angliae et alios quosvis imperatores, reges, &c., ab. A.D.1101 ad nostra usque tempora habita aut tractata. The publication proceeded with great rapidity, and fifteen volumes were brought out by Rymer in nine years. Two hundred and fifty copies were printed; but, as nearly all of them were presented to persons of distinction, the work soon became so scarce that it was priced by booksellers at one hundred guineas. A hundred and twenty sheets of the fifteenth volume and the copy for the remainder were burnt at a fire at William Bowyer's, the printer, on January 30, 171213. Rymer died shortly after the appearance of this volume, but he had prepared materials for carrying the work down to the end of the reign of James I. These were placed in the hands of Robert Sanderson, his assistant. For the greater part of his life Rymer derived his chief
earl
pp. 383-396, and in Johnson's Life of Dryden. See also Dryden's Works, i. 377, Vi. 251, xi. 6o, xiii. 2o. " I never came across a worse critic than Thomas Rymer," says Prof. George Saintsbury, who discusses his theories at length in History of Criticism (1902), pp. 391-397. See also A. Hofherr, T. Rymers dramatische Kritik (19(38). Rymer." Some of his poetical pieces were also inserted in J. Nichols
Two more volumes of the Foedera were issued by Sanderson in 1715 and 1717, and the last three volumes (xviii., xix. and xx.) by the same editor, but upon a slightly different plan, in 1726-35. The latter volumes were published by Tonson, all the former by Churchill. Under Rymer it was carried down to 1586, and continued by Sanderson to 1654. The rarity and importance of the work induced Tonson to obtain a licence for a second edition, and George Holmes, deputy keeper of the Tower records, was appointed editor. The new edition appeared between 1727 and 1735. The last three volumes are the same in both issues. There are some corrections, enumerated in a volume, The Emendations in the New Edition of Mr Rymer's Foedera, printed by Tonson in 1730, and on the whole the second is an improvement upon the first edition. A third edition, embodying Holmes's collation, was commenced at the Hague in 1737 and finished in 1745. It is in smaller type than the others, and is compressed within ten folio volumes. The arrangement is rather more convenient; there is some additional matter; the index is better; the type is not so good, but it is to be preferred to either of the previous editions. When the volumes of the Foedera first appeared they were analysed by Leclerc and Rapin in the Bibliotheque choisie and Bibliotheque ancienne et moderne. Rapin's articles were collected together and appended, under the title of Abrege historique des actes publiques de l'Angleterre, to the Hague edition. A translation, called Acta Regia, was published by Stephen Whatley, (1726-27), 4 vols. 8vo, reprinted both in 8vo and folio, the latter edition containing an analysis of the cancelled sheets, relating to the journals of the first parliament of Charles I., of the 18th volume of the Foedera. In 1810 the Record Commissioners authorized Dr Adam Clarke to prepare a new and improved edition of the Foedera. Six parts, large folio, edited by Clarke, Caley and Holbrooke, were published between 1816 and 183o. Considerable additions were made, but the editing was performed in so unsatisfactory a manner that the publication was suspended in the middle of printing a seventh part. The latter portion, bringing the work down to 1383, was ultimately issued in 1869. A general introduction to the Foedera was issued by the Record Commission in 1817, 4to. The wide learning and untiring labours of Rymer have received the warmest praise from historians. His industry was praised by Hearne (Collections, ii. 296). Sir T. D. Hardy
The best account of Rymer is to be found in the prefaces to Sir T. D. Hardy
Sir T. D. Hardy's Syllabus gives in English a condensed notice of each instrument in the several editions of the Foedera, arranged in chronological order. The third volume contains a complete index of names and places, with a catalogue of the volumes of transcripts collected for the Record edition of the Foedera. In 1869 the Record Office printed, for private destribution, Appendices A to E " to a report on the Foedera intended to have been submitted by C. Purton Cooper to the late Commissioners of Public Records," 3 vols. 8vo (including accounts of MSS. in foreign archives relating to Great Britain, with facsimiles). In the British Museum is preserved (Add. MS. 24699) a folio volume of reports and papers relating to the Record edition. Rymer left extensive materials for a new edition of the Foedera, bound in 59 vols. folio, and embracing the period from 1115 to 1698. This was the collection offered to the earl
End of Article: RYMER, THOMAS (16411713) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/RON_SAC/RYMER_THOMAS_16411713_.html"> RYMER, THOMAS (16411713) </a> |
|
|
(Previous) RYLSK |
(Next) RYOT, or RAVAT (from the Arabic ra'a, " to past... |
|
Sponsored Advertisements