Luke Milbourn
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Luke Milbourne or Milbourn (1649–1720) was an English clergyman, known as a High Church supporter of Henry Sacheverell, and also as a critic and poet.


Life

He was the son of Luke Milbourne (1622–1668), an ejected minister who was the incumbent of Wroxhall, Warwickshire, where he was born. His mother's name was Phœbe. The antiquarian John Nelson states that the family lived at Newington Green, well known for its dissenting academies, where they kept a boarding school; Phoebe taught, because her husband was barred from doing so. The younger Luke was educated at Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1667, and graduated B.A. in 1670. After graduating he appears to have held chaplaincies to the English merchants at Hamburg and at St Mary's Church, Rotterdam. He was afterwards at
Harwich Harwich is a town in Essex, England, and one of the Haven ports on the North Sea coast. It is in the Tendring district. Nearby places include Felixstowe to the north-east, Ipswich to the north-west, Colchester to the south-west and Clacton-on- ...
, and was beneficed in the beginning of William III's reign at
Great Yarmouth Great Yarmouth (), often called Yarmouth, is a seaside town and unparished area in, and the main administrative centre of, the Borough of Great Yarmouth in Norfolk, England; it straddles the River Yare and is located east of Norwich. A pop ...
. There he associated much with Rowland Davies, later dean of Cork, and wrote a lampoon on the town, entitled ''Ostia''. In 1688 he had become lecturer of
St Leonard's, Shoreditch St Leonard's, Shoreditch, is the ancient parish church of Shoreditch, often known simply as Shoreditch Church. It is located at the intersection of Shoreditch High Street with Hackney Road, within the London Borough of Hackney in East London. The ...
, and in 1704 he succeeded Samuel Harris as rector of
St Ethelburga's Bishopsgate St Ethelburga-the-Virgin within Bishopsgate is a Church of England church in the City of London, located on Bishopsgate near Liverpool Street station. The church was severely damaged by an IRA bomb in 1993. Following rebuilding and restoration i ...
. He is 'the priest of the church of England and rector of a church in the city of London' who, in a published ''Letter'' (1713) to Roger Laurence, author of ''Lay Baptism Invalid'', rejected the validity of lay baptism by the authority of Calvin and of French Protestant writers. Many of his numerous printed sermons touched on the martyrdom of Charles I, and enforcing the duty of passive obedience. After listening to one of Milbourne's high-flying sermons in January 1713, Bishop White Kennett asked indignantly 'why he did not stay in Holland?’ and 'why he is suffered to stay in England?’ He died in London 15 April 1720.


Critic

Milbourne is mainly remembered on account of his strictures on John Dryden's translation of Virgil, and of the retaliation made upon him both by Dryden, and by Alexander Pope on Dryden's behalf. He was coupled with
Sir Richard Blackmore Sir Richard Blackmore (22 January 1654 – 9 October 1729), English poet and physician, is remembered primarily as the object of satire and as an epic poet, but he was also a respected medical doctor and theologian. Earlier years He was born ...
in Pope's '' An Essay on Criticism'' as the type of all that is contemptible in a critic. Milbourne attempted an English rendering of Virgil before Dryden. According to an advertisement Milbourne had then issued ''The First Book of Virgil's Æneis made English.'' No copy may be now known. Dryden's translation appeared in 1697, and its success inspired Milbourne's attack on it.In his ''Notes on Dryden's Virgil, in a Letter to a Friend, with an Essay on the same Poet'', London, 1698. In order to demonstrate his own superiority, Milbourne supplemented criticisms by specimens of his own translation of the first and fourth '' Eclogues'' and the first '' Georgic''. Dryden complained in the preface to the ''Fables'' (1700) that his critic's scurrility was unprovoked. One of Milbourne's avowed reasons for not sparing Dryden was that Dryden had never spared a clergyman. Dryden replied that if he had fallen foul of the priesthood he had only to ask pardon of good priests, and was afraid Milbourne's 'part of the reparation would come to little.' 'I am satisfied,’ he concludes, 'that while he and I live together I shall not be thought the worst poet of the age.' The morals of Milbourne, who, according to Dryden, had lost his living for libelling his parishioners, were severely handled in a poem entitled ''The Pacificator'', 1699.


Works

He contributed Latin verses to ''Lacrymæ Cantabrigienses'', 1670, on the death of
Henrietta, Duchess of Orleans Henrietta Anne of England (16 June 1644 O.S. New_Style.html" ;"title="6 June 1644 New Style">N.S.– 30 June 1670) was the youngest daughter of King Charles I of England and Queen Henrietta Maria. Fleeing England with her mother and governe ...
. Milbourne's other works, apart from 31 single sermons and some tracts, are: * 'A Short Defence of the Order of the Church of England, by a Presbyter of the Diocese of Norwich' (anon.), 1688. * 'Mysteries in Religion vindicated, or the Filiation, Deity, and Satisfaction of our Saviour asserted against Socinians and others, with occasional reflections on several late pamphlets,’ London, 1692. * A metrical version of 'The Imitation of Christ,’ entitled 'The Christian Pattern Paraphrased,’ 1697. * 'The Psalms of David in English Metre,’ 1698. * 'Tom of Bedlam's answer to his Brother, Ben Hoadly,’ 1709. * 'The Moderate Cabal, a Satyr in Verse,’ 1710 (anon.). * 'The Two Wolves in Lamb's Skins, or Old Eli's sorrowful Lamentations over his two Sons,’ 1716. * 'A Legacy to the Church of England, vindicating her Orders from the Objections of Papists and Dissenters,’ 2 vols. London, 1722, (posthumous).


Family

A son, Thomas Milbourne, was fellow of St John's College, Cambridge, and died in October 1743.


Notes


References

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Milbourne, Luke 1649 births 1720 deaths 17th-century English Anglican priests 18th-century English Anglican priests English literary critics Alumni of Pembroke College, Cambridge English male poets English male non-fiction writers