John Hopkins (poet)

John Hopkins

John Hopkins, contemporary engraving by Frederick Hendrik van Hove. The inscription includes his pseudonym Sylvius.
Born 1675
Alma mater Jesus College, Cambridge
Genre Poetry

John Hopkins (born 1675) was an Anglo-Irish poet. He was the second son of Ezekiel Hopkins, bishop of Derry, and younger brother of Charles Hopkins.

Life

He was born on 1 January 1675. John Hopkins graduated B.A. in 1693, and proceeded M.A. in 1698 from Jesus College, Cambridge.[1]

Works

Hopkins published in 1698 two Pindaric poems:

In the following year he issued Milton's Paradise Lost imitated in Rhyme. In the Fourth, Sixth, and Ninth Books: Containing the Primitive Loves. The Battel of the Angels. The Fall of Man. His final work was a collection of love-verses and translations from Ovid, Amasia, or the Works of the Muses … In three volumes, 1700, with a general dedication to Isabella FitzRoy, Duchess of Grafton, and dedications of particular sections to various persons of distinction.[1]

There is a derisive notice on Hopkins in A Session of the Poets, 1704–5.[1]

References

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bullen, Arthur Henry (1891). "Hopkins, John (fl.1700)". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 

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