Biography Giles Fletcher Junior
- Time Period1588 - 1623
- Place
Poet Biography
English poet, younger of the sons, both named after their father who was also an English poet of some reknown, 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 16o8. He was reader in Greek grammar (1615) and in Greek language (i618).
In 1603 he contributed a poem on the death of Queen Elizabeth to Sorrows Joy.
His great poem of Christs Victory appeared in 1610, and in 1612 he edited the Remains of his cousin Nathaniel Pownall.
It is not known in what year he was ordained, but his sermons at St Marys were famous. Fuller tells us that the prayer before the sermon was a continuous allegory.
He left 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. His last work, The Reward of the Faithful, appeared in. the year of his death (1623).
The principal work by which Giles Fletcher is known is Christs Victorie and Triumph, in Heaven, in Earth, over and after Death (iôio). An edition in 1640 contains seven full-page illustrative engravings by George Tate. It is in four cantos and is epic in design. The first canto, Christs Victory in Heaven, represents a dispute in heaven between Justice and Mercy, assuming the facts of Christs life on earth; the second, Christs Victory on Earth, deals with an allegorical account of the Temptation; the third, Christs Triumph over Death, is based on the Passion; and the fourth, Christs Triumph after Death, treating of the Resurrection and Ascension, concludes with an affectionate eulogy of his brother Phineas Fletcher (q.v.) as Thyrsilis. The metre is an eight-line stanza owing something to Spenser. The first five lines rhyme ababb, and the stanza concludes with a rhyming triplet, resuming the conceit which nearly every verse embodies. Giles Fletcher, like his brother Phineas, to whom he was deeply attached, was a close follower of Spenser.
In his very best passages Giles Fletcher attains to a rich melody which charmed the ear of Milton, who did not hesitate to borrow very considerably from the Christs Victory and Triumph ~in his Paradise Regained.
Fletcher lived in an age which regarded as models the poems of Marini and Gongora, and his conceits are sometimes grotesque in connexion with the sacredness of his subject. But when he is carried away by his theme and forgets to be ingenious, he attains great solemnity and harmony of style. His descriptions of the Lady of Vain Delight, in the second canto, and of Justice and of Mercy in the first, are worked~out with much beauty of detail into separate pictures, in the maimer of the Faerie Queene.