John Davies (poet)
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- For other people of this name, see John Davies.
Early life
Davies was born in Wiltshire, to John and Mary Davies, and educated at Winchester College and at the Queen's College, Oxford. His poem, Orchestra, was published in the year prior to his call to the bar from the Middle Temple in July 1595. In February 1598 he was disbarred for entering the dining hall of the Inns in the company of two swordsmen and striking Richard Martin with a cudgel. The victim was a noted wit who had insulted him in public, and Davies had immediately taken boat at the Temple steps and retired to Oxford, where he chose to write poetry. Another of his works, Nosce Teipsum, was published in 1599 and found favour with Queen Elizabeth I and Lord Mountjoy, later lord deputy of Ireland.Davies became a favourite of the queen, to whom he addressed his work, Hymns of Astraea, in 1599. Later that year, however, his Epigrams was included in a list of published works that the state ordered to be confiscated and burned. In 1601 he was readmitted to the bar, having made a public apology to Martin, and in the same year served as the member of parliament for Corfe Castle. In 1603, he was part of the deputation sent to bring King James VI of Scotland to London as the new monarch. The Scots king was also an admirer of Davies' poetry, and rewarded him with a knighthood and appointments (at Mountjoy's recommendation) as solicitor-general and, later attorney-general, in Ireland.
Ireland
Davies arrived in Dublin in November 1603, where Mountjoy had accepted the submission of the rebel Hugh O'Neill some six months earlier, at the close of the Nine Years War. Finding pestilence and famine all over Ireland, Davies noted that the courts still commanded respect, but that the sloth of the protestant clergy and the ruin of the churches was detrimental to religion. He condemned the practice of issuing debased coinage and, in pursuit of the establishment of regular quarter-sessions of the courts, went on the Leinster circuit through seven counties in April 1604. In 1605 he travelled to England with the commendation of Sir Arthur Chichester, who succeeded Mountjoy in government, and returned to Ireland by July.Davies was very much committed to reform not just in the law but in religious affairs too. He was all for banishing catholic clergy from Ireland and for enforcing church attendances, and strict measures to this end were taken on his return. He delivered a powerful speech on the 23rd of November 1605 in the court of Castle Chamber, dealing with the summonsing of recusants to answer their contempt of the king's proclamations. In May 1606 he submitted his report of his circuit of the province of Munster to Sir Robert Cecil, the king's secretary, and was made serjeant at law after his appointment as attorney general. In the summer he travelled through counties Monaghan, Fermanagh and Cavan, and a year later through Meath, Westmeath, Longford, King's county and Queen's County, both of which circuits he reported to Cecil.
Ulster
Davies became heavily involved in government efforts to establish a plantation in the lately rebellious province of Ulster. In September 1607, he delivered to Cecil his report of the Flight of the Earls, a seminal event in Irish history and, before long, had travelled into the absent earls' territories to lay indictments against them there. In August 1608, he went with Chichester to view the escheated lands, reporting that the people, "wondered as much to see the king's deputy as the ghosts in Vurgil wondered to see AEneas alive in hell[sic]". In October he was in England, pushing for the plantation of the province.In May 1609, Davies was made serjeant, with a grant of lands valued at £40 p.a. He revisited England in 1610 on plantation business, which had so advanced that he thought his assistance to the commission charged with bringing the project to fruition would no longer be needed. In 1610 he defended proceedings brought by the Irish against the plans for the plantation of Cavan, but in the following year he begged for recall from Ireland. At about this time he wrote the Discoverie of the True Causes why Ireland was never entirely subdued (pub.1612), a well-written - albeit polemical - account of the constitutional standing of Ireland.
In England, Davies spent much time in preparing the way for the Irish parliament of 1613, to which he was returned for County Fermanagh. In the first sitting he was proposed as speaker with the Crown's approval, but an Irish candidate was proposed in opposition to him, and comical disorder ensued when the Irishman was placed in the chair and refused to vacate in favour of the government candidate. Davies was seized by his own supporters and lifted bodily into his opponent's lap; his opponent was then ejected from the chair and withdrew himself from the chamber with 98 supporters, whereupon the vote was taken in their absence. Davies was approved as speaker by Chichester, and delivered a memorable speech on the history and role of parliament in Ireland.
In 1615, Davies' reports of Irish cases were published; he had appeared as counsel in many of these, including the case of the Bann Fishery and the cases of Tanistry and Gavelkind, which set precedents in Irish constitutional law, with wider implications for British colonial policy.
Later career
In 1619, Davies relinquished office and, retiring from Ireland, began to practise as king's serjeant in England; eventually he also went on circuit there as a judge. He was a founder member of the Society of Antiquaries, and in 1621 again served as a member of the English parliament, where he occasionally spoke on Irish matters. On the 7th of December 1626, Davies (who had always been corpulent) died in his bed of apoplexy brought on after a supper party. He had just been appointed lord chief justice of one of the superior courts in England, but never took his place on the bench.Davies' wife, Eleanor Touchet (married in March 1609), who had a history of insanity in her family, had developed a devotion to prophecy based on scriptural anagrams. During the marriage, she published several fanatical books of prophecy, a manuscript for one of which her husband had burned. Although Davies was exasparated by his wife's excesses (he once said, "I pray you weep not while I am alive, and I will give you leave to laugh when I am dead"), she is said to have accurately foretold the date of his death and wore mourning clothes for the three years leading up to the predicted time; as the date approached - three days before - she, "gave him pass to take his long sleep".
Family
Davies had two children by his marriage, an idiot boy who was drowned in Ireland, and a daughter. In 1633, Touchet was brought before the high commission in England on charges relating to her religious anagram practices. During a fruitless examination of her under oath, one of the commissioners devised an anagram of his own: Dame Eleanor Davys - never so mad a ladye. She was sent to prison, and afterward remarried, but was deserted by her new husband and buried next to Davies on her death in 1652.Legacy
In political terms, Davies was significant in his work on constitutional law and in framing the terms of the Plantation of Ulster, a model that served the English crown as it extended its colonial reach in North America and elsewhere. In literary terms, he was a fine poet who lay quite neglected from the mid-17th century, until his cause was championed by Thomas Stearns Eliot.References
- Nicholas P. Canny Making Ireland British, 1580–1650 (Oxford University Press, 2001). ISBN 0198200919.
- Dictionary of National Biography 22 vols. (London, 1921–1922).
- James Shapiro 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare (London, 2005) ISBN 0571214800.
External Links
- [Luminarium: Sir John Davies] Biography, works, essays
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