Nathaniel Baxter Explained

Nathaniel Baxter (fl. 1606) was an English clergyman and poet. In earlier life tutor to Sir Philip Sidney, and interested in the manner of Sidney's circle in literature and Ramist logic, he became more sternly religious in his opinions.[1] He is now remembered for his 1606 poem Ourania, though not for its poetic merit.[2]

Life

He was tutor in Greek to Sir Philip Sidney, and was a student of Magdalen College, Oxford in 1569, graduating M.A. in 1577. He had been one of the travelling companions of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford in Europe in 1575-7. He makes allusions to de Vere in Ourania, while addressing his daughter Susan who married Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke.[3] He held clerical positions successively at Redbourn in Hertfordshire, Finedon and Titchmarsh in Northamptonshire, Leire in Leicestershire, at St. Margaret Lothbury and St. Giles-in-the-Fields in London (1590).[4] Baxter was one of the signatories to the famous letter addressed to Thomas Cartwright, dated London, 25 May 1577.

He became warden of Collegiate Church of St Mary Youghal, Ireland, in 1592, and was inducted into the office of warden 23 May 1592 by William Lyon. On 25 August 1597 Baxter found that the revenues of the college were threatened. He was obliged to give a bond that he would, within forty days after demand, resign his office. On 26 April 1598 complaint was made to the court of revenue exchequer, that Baxter had refused to allow the officer of the court to sequestrate the revenues of the college. An attachment was issued against him, and a new sequestration issued. On 30 June 1598 Baxter, having resisted the surrender of his office, through third parties disposed of the college revenues and the college house to Sir Thomas Norris, President of Munster. Baxter then resigned; but the commissioners, finding that the revenues had been disposed of, refused to accept the trust. Baxter left Ireland in 1599.

He is next found vicar of Mitchel Troy, Monmouthshire, and compounding for his first-fruits of the living 26 May 1602. In 1633 he was engaged in controversy with John Downes, a theologian of Bristol.

Works

Joseph Hunter, in his New Illustrations of Shakespeare (1845), took Baxter to be the author of Ourania, a work previously ascribed to Nicholas Breton.[5] Ourania describes its author's tutorial relation to Sir Philip Sidney, and there are various details of the poet's history and of his house in Troy. The name 'Tergaster' reveals the playful nickname given by Sidney to his tutor; Tergaster is dog-Latin for Back- or Bax-ter. There are flattering addresses in verse to contemporary 'fair ladies and brave men'.

Religious works included:

D. Nathaniaelis Baxteri Colcestrensis queastiones et responsa in Petri Ranii [i.e. Rami] dialecticam, London, 1586, was a work on logic.

Notes and References

  1. Katherine Duncan-Jones, Sir Philip Sidney: Courtier Poet (1991), pp. 40-1.
  2. Web site: Rev. Nathaniel Baxter: Sir Philip Sydneys Ourania. [The Song.] . 15 June 2009 . 27 June 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100627150623/http://wiz2.cath.vt.edu/Spenser/TextRecord.php?action=GET&textsid=36971 . dead .
  3. Alan H. Nelson, Monstrous Adversary: The Life of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (2003), p. 121 and p. 430.
  4. http://wiz2.cath.vt.edu/spenser/AuthorRecord.php?&method=GET&recordid=31 Author Record
  5. Sir Philip Sydney's "Ourania." That is, Endimiones Song and Tragedie, containing all Philosophie. Written by N. B. London: Printed by Ed. Allde for Edward White, and are to be solde at the little north doore of Saint Paules Church, at the signe of the Gun, 1606.