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George Chapman

George Chapman (Hitchin, Hertfordshire, c. 1559 – London, 12 May 1634) was an English dramatist, translator and poet. He was a classical scholar whose work shows the influence of Stoicism. William Minto speculated that Chapman is the unnamed Rival Poet of Shakespeare's sonnets. Chapman is seen as an anticipator of the metaphysical poets of the 17th century. He is best remembered for his translations of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, and the Homeric Batrachomyomachia.

George Chapman
George Chapman. Frontispiece engraving for The Whole Works of Homer (1616) attributed to William Hole
Bornc. 1559
Hitchin, Hertfordshire, England
Died(1634-05-12)12 May 1634
London
OccupationWriter
PeriodElizabethan
GenreTragedy, translation
Notable worksBussy D'Ambois, translations of Homer

Life and work edit

Chapman was born at Hitchin in Hertfordshire. There is conjecture that he studied at Oxford but did not take a degree, though no reliable evidence affirms this. Very little is known about Chapman's early life, but Mark Eccles uncovered records that reveal much about Chapman's difficulties and expectations.[1] In 1585 Chapman was approached in a friendly fashion by John Wolfall Sr., who offered to supply a bond of surety for a loan to furnish Chapman money "for his proper use in Attendance upon the then Right Honorable Sir Rafe Sadler Knight." Chapman's courtly ambitions led him into a trap. He apparently never received any money, but he would be plagued for many years by the papers he had signed. Wolfall had the poet arrested for debt in 1600, and when in 1608 Wolfall's son, having inherited his father's papers, sued yet again, Chapman's only resort was to petition the Court of Chancery for equity.[2] As Sadler died in 1587, this gives Chapman little time to have trained under him. It seems more likely that he was in Sadler's household from 1577 to 1583, as he dedicates all his Homerical translations to him.

Chapman spent the early 1590s abroad, and saw military action in the Low Countries fighting under renowned English general Sir Francis Vere. His earliest published works were the obscure philosophical poems The Shadow of Night (1594) and Ovid's Banquet of Sense (1595). The latter has been taken as a response to the erotic poems of the age, such as Philip Sidney's Astrophil and Stella and Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis. Chapman's life was troubled by debt and his inability to find a patron whose fortunes did not decline: Robert Devereux, Second Earl of Essex, and the Prince of Wales, Prince Henry both met their ends prematurely. The former was executed for treason by Elizabeth I in 1601, and the latter died of typhoid fever at the age of eighteen in 1612. Chapman's resultant poverty did not diminish his ability or his standing among his fellow Elizabethan poets and dramatists.

Chapman died in London, having lived his latter years in poverty and debt. He was buried at St Giles in the Fields. A monument to him designed by Inigo Jones marked his tomb, and stands today inside the church.[3]

Plays edit

Comedies edit

By the end of the 1590s, Chapman had become a successful playwright, working for Philip Henslowe and later for the Children of the Chapel. Among his comedies are The Blind Beggar of Alexandria (1596; printed 1598), An Humorous Day's Mirth (1597; printed 1599), All Fools (printed 1605), Monsieur D'Olive (1605; printed 1606), The Gentleman Usher (printed 1606), May Day (printed 1611), and The Widow's Tears (printed 1612). His plays show a willingness to experiment with dramatic form: An Humorous Day's Mirth was one of the first plays to be written in the style of "humours comedy" which Ben Jonson later used in Every Man in His Humour and Every Man Out of His Humour. With The Widow's Tears, he was also one of the first writers to meld comedy with more serious themes, creating the tragicomedy later made famous by Beaumont and Fletcher.

 
Grave marker of George Chapman now inside the church of St Giles in the Fields, London. The memorial, in the form of a Roman altar, was designed and paid for by Inigo Jones, and was previously in St Giles' churchyard.

He also wrote one noteworthy play in collaboration. Eastward Ho (1605), written with Jonson and John Marston, contained satirical references to the Scottish courtiers who formed the retinue of the new king James I; this landed Chapman and Jonson in jail at the suit of Sir James Murray of Cockpool, the king's "rascal[ly]" Groom of the Stool.[4] Various of their letters to the king and noblemen survive in a manuscript in the Folger Library known as the Dobell MS, and published by AR Braunmuller as A Seventeenth Century Letterbook. In the letters, both men renounced the offending line, implying that Marston was responsible for the injurious remark. Jonson's "Conversations With Drummond" refers to the imprisonment, and suggests there was a possibility that both authors would have their "ears and noses slit" as a punishment, but this may have been Jonson elaborating on the story in retrospect.

Chapman's friendship with Jonson broke down, perhaps as a result of Jonson's public feud with Inigo Jones. Some satiric, scathing lines, written sometime after the burning of Jonson's desk and papers, provide evidence of the rift. The poem lampooning Jonson's aggressive behaviour and self-believed superiority remained unpublished during Chapman's lifetime; it was found in documents collected after his death.

Tragedies edit

Chapman's greatest tragedies took their subject matter from recent French history, the French ambassador taking offence on at least one occasion. These include Bussy D'Ambois (1607), The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles, Duke of Byron (1608), The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois (1610[5]) and The Tragedy of Chabot, Admiral of France (published 1639). The two Byron plays were banned from the stage—although, when the Court left London, the plays were performed in their original and unexpurgated forms by the Children of the Chapel.[6] The French ambassador probably took offence to a scene which portrays Henry IV's wife and mistress arguing and physically fighting. On publication, the offending material was excised, and Chapman refers to the play in his dedication to Sir Thomas Walsingham as "poore dismembered Poems". His only work of classical tragedy, Caesar and Pompey (written 1604, published 1631), although "politically astute", can be regarded as his most modest achievement in the genre.[7][8]

Other plays edit

Chapman wrote The Old Joiner of Aldgate, performed by the Children of Paul's between January and February 1603 – a play which caused some controversy due to the similarities between the content of the play and ongoing legal proceedings between one John Flaskett (a local book binder) and Agnes How (to whom Flaskett was betrothed). The play was purchased from Chapman by Thomas Woodford & Edward Pearce for 20 marks (a considerable amount for such a work at the time) and resulted in a legal case that went before the Star Chamber.

Chapman wrote one of the most successful masques of the Jacobean era, The Memorable Masque of the Middle Temple and Lincoln's Inn, performed on 15 February 1613. According to Kenneth Muir, The Masque of the Twelve Months, performed on Twelfth Night 1619 and first printed by John Payne Collier in 1848 with no author's name attached, is also ascribed to Chapman.[9]

Chapman's authorship has been argued in connection with a number of other anonymous plays of his era.[10] F. G. Fleay proposed that his first play was The Disguises. He has been put forward as the author, in whole or in part, of Sir Giles Goosecap, Two Wise Men And All The Rest Fools, The Fountain of New Fashions, and The Second Maiden's Tragedy. Of these, only 'Sir Gyles Goosecap' is generally accepted by scholars to have been written by Chapman (The Plays of George Chapman: The Tragedies, with Sir Giles Goosecap, edited by Allan Holaday, University of Illinois Press, 1987).

In 1654, bookseller Richard Marriot published the play Revenge for Honour as the work of Chapman. Scholars have rejected the attribution; the play may have been written by Henry Glapthorne. Alphonsus Emperor of Germany (also printed 1654) is generally considered another false Chapman attribution.[11]

The lost plays The Fatal Love and A Yorkshire Gentlewoman And Her Son were assigned to Chapman in Stationers' Register entries in 1660. Both of these plays were among the ones destroyed in the famous kitchen burnings by John Warburton's cook. The lost play Christianetta (registered 1640) may have been a collaboration between Chapman and Richard Brome, or a revision by Brome of a Chapman work.

Poet and translator edit

Other poems by Chapman include: De Guiana, Carmen Epicum (1596), on the exploits of Sir Walter Raleigh; a continuation of Christopher Marlowe's unfinished Hero and Leander (1598); and Euthymiae Raptus; or the Tears of Peace (1609).

Some have considered Chapman to be the "rival poet" of Shakespeare's sonnets (in sonnets 78–86), although conjecture places him as one in a large field of possibilities.[12][13]

From 1598 he published his translation of the Iliad in instalments. In 1616 the complete Iliad and Odyssey appeared in The Whole Works of Homer, the first complete English translation, which until Pope's was the most popular in the English language and was the way most English speakers encountered these poems. The endeavour was to have been profitable: his patron, Prince Henry, had promised him £300 on its completion plus a pension. However, Henry died in 1612 and his household neglected the commitment, leaving Chapman without either a patron or an income. In an extant letter, Chapman petitions for the money owed him; his petition was ineffective. Chapman's translation of the Odyssey is written in iambic pentameter, whereas his Iliad is written in iambic heptameter. (The Greek original is in dactylic hexameter.) Chapman often extends and elaborates on Homer's original contents to add descriptive detail or moral and philosophical interpretation and emphasis.

Chapman also translated the Homeric Hymns, the Georgics of Virgil, The Works of Hesiod (1618, dedicated to Francis Bacon), the Hero and Leander of Musaeus (1618) and the Fifth Satire of Juvenal (1624).

Chapman's translation of Homer was admired by Alexander Pope for "a daring fiery spirit that animates his translation, which is something like what one might imagine Homer himself would have writ", though he also disapproved of Chapman's roughness and inaccuracy.[14] John Keats expressed a fervent admiration of Chapman's Homeric authenticity in his famous poem "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer". Chapman also drew attention from Samuel Taylor Coleridge and T. S. Eliot. [15]

Homage edit

In Percy Bysshe Shelley's poem The Revolt of Islam, Shelley quotes a verse of Chapman's as homage within his dedication "to Mary__ __", presumably his wife Mary Shelley:

There is no danger to a man, that knows
What life and death is: there's not any law
Exceeds his knowledge; neither is it lawful
That he should stoop to any other law.[16]

The Irish playwright Oscar Wilde quoted the same verse in his part fiction, part literary criticism, "The Portrait of Mr. W.H.".[17]

The English poet John Keats wrote "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer" for his friend Charles Cowden Clarke in October 1816. The poem begins "Much have I travell'd in the realms of gold" and is much quoted. For example, P. G. Wodehouse in his review of the first novel of The Flashman Papers series that came to his attention: "Now I understand what that 'when a new planet swims into his ken' excitement is all about."[18] Arthur Ransome uses two references from it in his children's books, the Swallows and Amazons series.[19]

Quotes edit

From All Fooles, II.1.170-178, by George Chapman:

I could have written as good prose and verse
As the most beggarly poet of 'em all,
Either Accrostique, Exordion,
Epithalamions, Satyres, Epigrams,
Sonnets in Doozens, or your Quatorzanies,
In any rhyme, Masculine, Feminine,
Or Sdrucciola, or cooplets, Blancke Verse:
Y'are but bench-whistlers now a dayes to them
That were in our times....

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Mark Eccles, "Chapman's Early Years", Studies in Philology 43.:2 (April 1946):176-93.
  2. ^ For the text of Chapman's petition for relief, see A. R. Braunmuller, A Seventeenth Century Letter-Book: A Facsimile Edition of Folger MS. V. A. 321 (Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1983), 395.
  3. ^ Thornbury, Walter. "St Giles-in-the-Fields." Old and New London: Volume 3. London: Cassell, Petter & Galpin, 1878. 197-218. British History Online Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  4. ^ Donaldson, Ian (2011). Ben Jonson : a life. Oxford University Press. p. 209. ISBN 9780198129769.
  5. ^ 324, Daiches
  6. ^ Grace Ioppolo, Dramatists and Their Manuscripts in the Age of Shakespeare, Jonson, Middleton and Heywood, London, Routledge, 2006; p. 129.
  7. ^ Birch, Dinah, ed. (2009). "Caesar and Pompey". The Oxford companion to English literature (7 ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192806871.
  8. ^ Spivack, Charlotte (1967). George Chapman. New York: Twayne. p. 144. OCLC 251374727.
  9. ^ Martin Butler: George Chapman's Masque of the Twelve Months (1619). In: English Literary Renaissance 37 (Nov. 2007); pp. 360–400.
  10. ^ Terence P. Logan and Denzell S. Smith, eds., The New Intellectuals: A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama, Lincoln, NE, University of Nebraska Press, 1977; pp. 155–60.
  11. ^ Logan, Terence P., and Denzell S. Smith, eds. The Popular School: A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama. Lincoln, NE, University of Nebraska Press, 1975; pp. 151–7.
  12. ^ Reid, Lindsay Ann (17 December 2014). "The Spectre of the School of Night: Former Scholarly Fictions and the Stuff of Academic Fiction". Early Modern Literary Studies. Sheffield Hallam University. (23): 1–31. ISSN 1201-2459. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  13. ^ Ellis, David (2013). The truth about William Shakespeare : fact, fiction and modern biographies. Edinburgh University Press. p. 72. ISBN 9780748653881.
  14. ^ Alexander Pope, "Preface" to 'The Iliad of Homer'
  15. ^ Matthews, Steven. "T. S. Eliot's Chapman: 'Metaphysical' Poetry and Beyond." Journal of Modern Literature Vol. 29 No. 4 (Summer 2006), pp. 22–43.
  16. ^ Hutchinson, Thomas (undated). The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley: Including Materials Never Before Printed in any Edition of the Poems & Edited with Textural Notes. E. W. Cole: Commonwealth of Australia; Book Arcade, Melbourne. p. 38. (NB: Hardcover, clothbound, embossed.) Published prior to issuing of ISBN.
  17. ^ Wilde, Oscar (2003). "The Portrait of Mr. W.H.". Hesperus Press Limited 4 Rickett Street, London SW6 1RU. p. 46. First published 1921.
  18. ^ Quoted on current UK imprint of Flashman novels as cover blurb.
  19. ^ Findlay, Kirsty Nichol, ed. (2011). Arthur Ransome's long-lost study of Robert Louis Stevenson. Woodbridge, England: Boydell. p. 112. ISBN 9781843836728.

Bibliography edit

  • Chapman, George. The Tragedies, with Sir Gyles Goosecappe. Ed. Allan Holaday. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1987. vol. 2 of The Plays of George Chapman. 2 vols. 1970–87.
  • ---. The Comedies. Ed. Allan Holaday. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1970. vol. 1 of The Plays of George Chapman. 2 vols. 1970–87.
  • ---. The Plays of George Chapman. Ed. Thomas Marc Parrott. 1910. New-York: Russell & Russell, 1961.
  • ---. George Chapman, Plays and Poems. Ed. Jonathan Hudston. London: Penguin Books, 1998.
  • ---. Bussy D'Ambois. Ed. Nicholas Brooke. The Revels Plays. London: Methuen, 1964.
  • ---. Bussy D'Ambois. Ed. Robert J. Lordi. Regents Renaissance Drama. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1964.
  • ---. Bussy D'Ambois. Ed. Maurice Evans. New Mermaids. London: Ernst Benn Limited, 1965.
  • ---. Bussy D'Amboise. Ed. and trans. Jean Jacquot. Collection bilingue des classiques étrangers. Paris: Aubier-Montaigne, 1960.
  • ---. The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles, Duke of Byron. Ed. George Ray. Renaissance Drama. New-York: Garland Publishing, 1979.
  • ---. The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron. Ed. John Margeson. The Revels Plays. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1988.
  • ---. The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois. Introd. David P. Willbern. Menston: The Scolar Press Limited, 1968.
  • ---. The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois. Ed. Robert J. Lordi. Salzburg Studies in English Literature. Jacobean Drama Studies 75. Salzbourg: Institut für Englische Sprache und Literatur, 1977.
  • ---. The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois in Four Revenge Tragedies. Ed. Katharine Eisaman Maus. Oxford English Drama. Oxford: OUP, 1995.
  • ---. The Tragedie of Chabot Admirall of France. Ed. Ezra Lehman. Philology and Literature 10. Philadelphia: Publications of the University of Philadelphia, 1906.
  • ---. The Gentleman Usher. Ed. John Hazel Smith. Regents Renaissance Drama Series. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1970.
  • ---. The Poems of George Chapman. Ed. Phyllis Brooks Bartlett. New-York: Modern Language Association of America, 1941.
  • ---. Selected Poems. Ed. Eirian Wain. Manchester: Carcanet – Fyfield Books, 1978.
  • ---. Ouids Banquet of Sence. A Coronet for his Mistresse Philosophie, and his Amorous Zodiacke. With a Translation of a Latine Coppie, Written by a Fryer, Anno Dom. 1400. London: I. R. for Richard Smith, 1595. Menston: The Scolar Press Limited, 1970.
  • Chapman, George, trans. Homer's Odyssey. Ed. Gordon Kendal. London: MHRA, 2016.
  • ---. The Works of George Chapman: Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. Ed. Richard Herne Shepherd. London: Chatto & Windus, 1875.
  • ---. Chapman's Homer: The Iliad. Ed. Allardyce Nicoll. Bollingen Series 41. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1998.
  • ---. Chapman's Homer: The Odyssey. Ed. Allardyce Nicoll. Bollingen Series 41. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2000.
  • ---. George Chapman's Minor Translations: A Critical Edition of His Renderings of Musæus, Hesiod and Juvenal. Ed. Richard Corballis. Salzburg Studies in English Literature: Jacobean Drama Studies, 98. Salzbourg: Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, 1984.
  • ---. Homer's Batrachomyomachia, Hymns and Epigrams, Hesiod's Works and Days, Musæus' Hero and Leander, Juvenal's Fifth Satire. Ed. Richard Hooper. London: John Russel Smith, 1858.
  • Chapman, George, Benjamin Jonson et John Marston. Eastward Hoe. Ed. Julia Hamlet Harris. Yale Studies in English 73. New Haven: Yale UP, 1926.
  • ---. Eastward Ho. Ed. R. W. Van Fossen. The Revels Plays. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1979.

External links edit


george, chapman, other, people, named, disambiguation, hitchin, hertfordshire, 1559, london, 1634, english, dramatist, translator, poet, classical, scholar, whose, work, shows, influence, stoicism, william, minto, speculated, that, chapman, unnamed, rival, poe. For other people named George Chapman see George Chapman disambiguation George Chapman Hitchin Hertfordshire c 1559 London 12 May 1634 was an English dramatist translator and poet He was a classical scholar whose work shows the influence of Stoicism William Minto speculated that Chapman is the unnamed Rival Poet of Shakespeare s sonnets Chapman is seen as an anticipator of the metaphysical poets of the 17th century He is best remembered for his translations of Homer s Iliad and Odyssey and the Homeric Batrachomyomachia George ChapmanGeorge Chapman Frontispiece engraving for The Whole Works of Homer 1616 attributed to William HoleBornc 1559 Hitchin Hertfordshire EnglandDied 1634 05 12 12 May 1634LondonOccupationWriterPeriodElizabethanGenreTragedy translationNotable worksBussy D Ambois translations of Homer Contents 1 Life and work 2 Plays 2 1 Comedies 2 2 Tragedies 2 3 Other plays 3 Poet and translator 4 Homage 5 Quotes 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 9 External linksLife and work editChapman was born at Hitchin in Hertfordshire There is conjecture that he studied at Oxford but did not take a degree though no reliable evidence affirms this Very little is known about Chapman s early life but Mark Eccles uncovered records that reveal much about Chapman s difficulties and expectations 1 In 1585 Chapman was approached in a friendly fashion by John Wolfall Sr who offered to supply a bond of surety for a loan to furnish Chapman money for his proper use in Attendance upon the then Right Honorable Sir Rafe Sadler Knight Chapman s courtly ambitions led him into a trap He apparently never received any money but he would be plagued for many years by the papers he had signed Wolfall had the poet arrested for debt in 1600 and when in 1608 Wolfall s son having inherited his father s papers sued yet again Chapman s only resort was to petition the Court of Chancery for equity 2 As Sadler died in 1587 this gives Chapman little time to have trained under him It seems more likely that he was in Sadler s household from 1577 to 1583 as he dedicates all his Homerical translations to him Chapman spent the early 1590s abroad and saw military action in the Low Countries fighting under renowned English general Sir Francis Vere His earliest published works were the obscure philosophical poems The Shadow of Night 1594 and Ovid s Banquet of Sense 1595 The latter has been taken as a response to the erotic poems of the age such as Philip Sidney s Astrophil and Stella and Shakespeare s Venus and Adonis Chapman s life was troubled by debt and his inability to find a patron whose fortunes did not decline Robert Devereux Second Earl of Essex and the Prince of Wales Prince Henry both met their ends prematurely The former was executed for treason by Elizabeth I in 1601 and the latter died of typhoid fever at the age of eighteen in 1612 Chapman s resultant poverty did not diminish his ability or his standing among his fellow Elizabethan poets and dramatists Chapman died in London having lived his latter years in poverty and debt He was buried at St Giles in the Fields A monument to him designed by Inigo Jones marked his tomb and stands today inside the church 3 Plays editThe Blind Beggar of Alexandria 1596 An Humorous Day s Mirth 1597 Charleymayne or the Distracted Emperor 1600 Sir Giles Goosecap 1601 Bussy D Ambois 1603 Caesar and Pompey 1604 All Fools 1604 Eastward Hoe 1605 Monsieur D Olive 1605 The Widow s Tears 1605 The Gentleman Usher 1606 The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron 1608 May Day 1609 The Revenge of Bussy D Ambois 1610 The Tragedy of Chabot Admiral of France 1612 Rollo Duke of Normandy 1612 The Memorable Masque of the Middle Temple and Lincoln s Inn 1613 Comedies edit By the end of the 1590s Chapman had become a successful playwright working for Philip Henslowe and later for the Children of the Chapel Among his comedies are The Blind Beggar of Alexandria 1596 printed 1598 An Humorous Day s Mirth 1597 printed 1599 All Fools printed 1605 Monsieur D Olive 1605 printed 1606 The Gentleman Usher printed 1606 May Day printed 1611 and The Widow s Tears printed 1612 His plays show a willingness to experiment with dramatic form An Humorous Day s Mirth was one of the first plays to be written in the style of humours comedy which Ben Jonson later used in Every Man in His Humour and Every Man Out of His Humour With The Widow s Tears he was also one of the first writers to meld comedy with more serious themes creating the tragicomedy later made famous by Beaumont and Fletcher nbsp Grave marker of George Chapman now inside the church of St Giles in the Fields London The memorial in the form of a Roman altar was designed and paid for by Inigo Jones and was previously in St Giles churchyard He also wrote one noteworthy play in collaboration Eastward Ho 1605 written with Jonson and John Marston contained satirical references to the Scottish courtiers who formed the retinue of the new king James I this landed Chapman and Jonson in jail at the suit of Sir James Murray of Cockpool the king s rascal ly Groom of the Stool 4 Various of their letters to the king and noblemen survive in a manuscript in the Folger Library known as the Dobell MS and published by AR Braunmuller as A Seventeenth Century Letterbook In the letters both men renounced the offending line implying that Marston was responsible for the injurious remark Jonson s Conversations With Drummond refers to the imprisonment and suggests there was a possibility that both authors would have their ears and noses slit as a punishment but this may have been Jonson elaborating on the story in retrospect Chapman s friendship with Jonson broke down perhaps as a result of Jonson s public feud with Inigo Jones Some satiric scathing lines written sometime after the burning of Jonson s desk and papers provide evidence of the rift The poem lampooning Jonson s aggressive behaviour and self believed superiority remained unpublished during Chapman s lifetime it was found in documents collected after his death Tragedies edit Chapman s greatest tragedies took their subject matter from recent French history the French ambassador taking offence on at least one occasion These include Bussy D Ambois 1607 The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron 1608 The Revenge of Bussy D Ambois 1610 5 and The Tragedy of Chabot Admiral of France published 1639 The two Byron plays were banned from the stage although when the Court left London the plays were performed in their original and unexpurgated forms by the Children of the Chapel 6 The French ambassador probably took offence to a scene which portrays Henry IV s wife and mistress arguing and physically fighting On publication the offending material was excised and Chapman refers to the play in his dedication to Sir Thomas Walsingham as poore dismembered Poems His only work of classical tragedy Caesar and Pompey written 1604 published 1631 although politically astute can be regarded as his most modest achievement in the genre 7 8 Other plays edit Chapman wrote The Old Joiner of Aldgate performed by the Children of Paul s between January and February 1603 a play which caused some controversy due to the similarities between the content of the play and ongoing legal proceedings between one John Flaskett a local book binder and Agnes How to whom Flaskett was betrothed The play was purchased from Chapman by Thomas Woodford amp Edward Pearce for 20 marks a considerable amount for such a work at the time and resulted in a legal case that went before the Star Chamber Chapman wrote one of the most successful masques of the Jacobean era The Memorable Masque of the Middle Temple and Lincoln s Inn performed on 15 February 1613 According to Kenneth Muir The Masque of the Twelve Months performed on Twelfth Night 1619 and first printed by John Payne Collier in 1848 with no author s name attached is also ascribed to Chapman 9 Chapman s authorship has been argued in connection with a number of other anonymous plays of his era 10 F G Fleay proposed that his first play was The Disguises He has been put forward as the author in whole or in part of Sir Giles Goosecap Two Wise Men And All The Rest Fools The Fountain of New Fashions and The Second Maiden s Tragedy Of these only Sir Gyles Goosecap is generally accepted by scholars to have been written by Chapman The Plays of George Chapman The Tragedies with Sir Giles Goosecap edited by Allan Holaday University of Illinois Press 1987 In 1654 bookseller Richard Marriot published the play Revenge for Honour as the work of Chapman Scholars have rejected the attribution the play may have been written by Henry Glapthorne Alphonsus Emperor of Germany also printed 1654 is generally considered another false Chapman attribution 11 The lost plays The Fatal Love and A Yorkshire Gentlewoman And Her Son were assigned to Chapman in Stationers Register entries in 1660 Both of these plays were among the ones destroyed in the famous kitchen burnings by John Warburton s cook The lost play Christianetta registered 1640 may have been a collaboration between Chapman and Richard Brome or a revision by Brome of a Chapman work Poet and translator editOther poems by Chapman include De Guiana Carmen Epicum 1596 on the exploits of Sir Walter Raleigh a continuation of Christopher Marlowe s unfinished Hero and Leander 1598 and Euthymiae Raptus or the Tears of Peace 1609 Some have considered Chapman to be the rival poet of Shakespeare s sonnets in sonnets 78 86 although conjecture places him as one in a large field of possibilities 12 13 From 1598 he published his translation of the Iliad in instalments In 1616 the complete Iliad and Odyssey appeared in The Whole Works of Homer the first complete English translation which until Pope s was the most popular in the English language and was the way most English speakers encountered these poems The endeavour was to have been profitable his patron Prince Henry had promised him 300 on its completion plus a pension However Henry died in 1612 and his household neglected the commitment leaving Chapman without either a patron or an income In an extant letter Chapman petitions for the money owed him his petition was ineffective Chapman s translation of the Odyssey is written in iambic pentameter whereas his Iliad is written in iambic heptameter The Greek original is in dactylic hexameter Chapman often extends and elaborates on Homer s original contents to add descriptive detail or moral and philosophical interpretation and emphasis Chapman also translated the Homeric Hymns the Georgics of Virgil The Works of Hesiod 1618 dedicated to Francis Bacon the Hero and Leander of Musaeus 1618 and the Fifth Satire of Juvenal 1624 Chapman s translation of Homer was admired by Alexander Pope for a daring fiery spirit that animates his translation which is something like what one might imagine Homer himself would have writ though he also disapproved of Chapman s roughness and inaccuracy 14 John Keats expressed a fervent admiration of Chapman s Homeric authenticity in his famous poem On First Looking into Chapman s Homer Chapman also drew attention from Samuel Taylor Coleridge and T S Eliot 15 Homage editIn Percy Bysshe Shelley s poem The Revolt of Islam Shelley quotes a verse of Chapman s as homage within his dedication to Mary presumably his wife Mary Shelley There is no danger to a man that knows What life and death is there s not any law Exceeds his knowledge neither is it lawful That he should stoop to any other law 16 The Irish playwright Oscar Wilde quoted the same verse in his part fiction part literary criticism The Portrait of Mr W H 17 The English poet John Keats wrote On First Looking into Chapman s Homer for his friend Charles Cowden Clarke in October 1816 The poem begins Much have I travell d in the realms of gold and is much quoted For example P G Wodehouse in his review of the first novel of The Flashman Papers series that came to his attention Now I understand what that when a new planet swims into his ken excitement is all about 18 Arthur Ransome uses two references from it in his children s books the Swallows and Amazons series 19 Quotes editThis section is a candidate for copying over to Wikiquote using the Transwiki process See also English translations of Homer Chapman From All Fooles II 1 170 178 by George Chapman I could have written as good prose and verse As the most beggarly poet of em all Either Accrostique Exordion Epithalamions Satyres Epigrams Sonnets in Doozens or your Quatorzanies In any rhyme Masculine Feminine Or Sdrucciola or cooplets Blancke Verse Y are but bench whistlers now a dayes to them That were in our times See also edit nbsp Poetry portalRival Poet The School of Night Thomas Marc Parrott Louis de Bussy d Amboise Charles de Gontaut duc de BironNotes edit Mark Eccles Chapman s Early Years Studies in Philology 43 2 April 1946 176 93 For the text of Chapman s petition for relief see A R Braunmuller A Seventeenth Century Letter Book A Facsimile Edition of Folger MS V A 321 Newark University of Delaware Press 1983 395 Thornbury Walter St Giles in the Fields Old and New London Volume 3 London Cassell Petter amp Galpin 1878 197 218 British History Online Retrieved 28 April 2023 Donaldson Ian 2011 Ben Jonson a life Oxford University Press p 209 ISBN 9780198129769 324 Daiches Grace Ioppolo Dramatists and Their Manuscripts in the Age of Shakespeare Jonson Middleton and Heywood London Routledge 2006 p 129 Birch Dinah ed 2009 Caesar and Pompey The Oxford companion to English literature 7 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192806871 Spivack Charlotte 1967 George Chapman New York Twayne p 144 OCLC 251374727 Martin Butler George Chapman s Masque of the Twelve Months 1619 In English Literary Renaissance 37 Nov 2007 pp 360 400 Terence P Logan and Denzell S Smith eds The New Intellectuals A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press 1977 pp 155 60 Logan Terence P and Denzell S Smith eds The Popular School A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press 1975 pp 151 7 Reid Lindsay Ann 17 December 2014 The Spectre of the School of Night Former Scholarly Fictions and the Stuff of Academic Fiction Early Modern Literary Studies Sheffield Hallam University 23 1 31 ISSN 1201 2459 Retrieved 19 October 2018 Ellis David 2013 The truth about William Shakespeare fact fiction and modern biographies Edinburgh University Press p 72 ISBN 9780748653881 Alexander Pope Preface to The Iliad of Homer Matthews Steven T S Eliot s Chapman Metaphysical Poetry and Beyond Journal of Modern Literature Vol 29 No 4 Summer 2006 pp 22 43 Hutchinson Thomas undated The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley Including Materials Never Before Printed in any Edition of the Poems amp Edited with Textural Notes E W Cole Commonwealth of Australia Book Arcade Melbourne p 38 NB Hardcover clothbound embossed Published prior to issuing of ISBN Wilde Oscar 2003 The Portrait of Mr W H Hesperus Press Limited 4 Rickett Street London SW6 1RU p 46 First published 1921 Quoted on current UK imprint of Flashman novels as cover blurb Findlay Kirsty Nichol ed 2011 Arthur Ransome s long lost study of Robert Louis Stevenson Woodbridge England Boydell p 112 ISBN 9781843836728 Bibliography editChapman George The Tragedies with Sir Gyles Goosecappe Ed Allan Holaday Cambridge D S Brewer 1987 vol 2 of The Plays of George Chapman 2 vols 1970 87 The Comedies Ed Allan Holaday Urbana University of Illinois Press 1970 vol 1 of The Plays of George Chapman 2 vols 1970 87 The Plays of George Chapman Ed Thomas Marc Parrott 1910 New York Russell amp Russell 1961 George Chapman Plays and Poems Ed Jonathan Hudston London Penguin Books 1998 Bussy D Ambois Ed Nicholas Brooke The Revels Plays London Methuen 1964 Bussy D Ambois Ed Robert J Lordi Regents Renaissance Drama Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1964 Bussy D Ambois Ed Maurice Evans New Mermaids London Ernst Benn Limited 1965 Bussy D Amboise Ed and trans Jean Jacquot Collection bilingue des classiques etrangers Paris Aubier Montaigne 1960 The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron Ed George Ray Renaissance Drama New York Garland Publishing 1979 The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles Duke of Byron Ed John Margeson The Revels Plays Manchester Manchester UP 1988 The Revenge of Bussy D Ambois Introd David P Willbern Menston The Scolar Press Limited 1968 The Revenge of Bussy D Ambois Ed Robert J Lordi Salzburg Studies in English Literature Jacobean Drama Studies 75 Salzbourg Institut fur Englische Sprache und Literatur 1977 The Revenge of Bussy D Ambois in Four Revenge Tragedies Ed Katharine Eisaman Maus Oxford English Drama Oxford OUP 1995 The Tragedie of Chabot Admirall of France Ed Ezra Lehman Philology and Literature 10 Philadelphia Publications of the University of Philadelphia 1906 The Gentleman Usher Ed John Hazel Smith Regents Renaissance Drama Series Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1970 The Poems of George Chapman Ed Phyllis Brooks Bartlett New York Modern Language Association of America 1941 Selected Poems Ed Eirian Wain Manchester Carcanet Fyfield Books 1978 Ouids Banquet of Sence A Coronet for his Mistresse Philosophie and his Amorous Zodiacke With a Translation of a Latine Coppie Written by a Fryer Anno Dom 1400 London I R for Richard Smith 1595 Menston The Scolar Press Limited 1970 Chapman George trans Homer s Odyssey Ed Gordon Kendal London MHRA 2016 The Works of George Chapman Homer s Iliad and Odyssey Ed Richard Herne Shepherd London Chatto amp Windus 1875 Chapman s Homer The Iliad Ed Allardyce Nicoll Bollingen Series 41 Princeton Princeton UP 1998 Chapman s Homer The Odyssey Ed Allardyce Nicoll Bollingen Series 41 Princeton Princeton UP 2000 George Chapman s Minor Translations A Critical Edition of His Renderings of Musaeus Hesiod and Juvenal Ed Richard Corballis Salzburg Studies in English Literature Jacobean Drama Studies 98 Salzbourg Institut fur Anglistik und Amerikanistik 1984 Homer s Batrachomyomachia Hymns and Epigrams Hesiod s Works and Days Musaeus Hero and Leander Juvenal s Fifth Satire Ed Richard Hooper London John Russel Smith 1858 Chapman George Benjamin Jonson et John Marston Eastward Hoe Ed Julia Hamlet Harris Yale Studies in English 73 New Haven Yale UP 1926 Eastward Ho Ed R W Van Fossen The Revels Plays Manchester Manchester UP 1979 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to George Chapman nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Chapman nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about George Chapman Monsieur D Olive Online text Hero and Leander Online text Five Chapman Plays Online Works by George Chapman at Project Gutenberg Works by or about George Chapman at Internet Archive Works by George Chapman at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp An Epicede or Funeral Song Online text Chapman s Homer The Iliad and The Odyssey Swinburne Algernon Charles Bryant Margaret 1911 Chapman George Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed pp 852 854 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Chapman amp oldid 1183296023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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