John Bancks (Q387372): Difference between revisions

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(‎Added qualifier: Online information (P146): https://dh.dickinson.edu/18cpc/node/41, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1638027232350)
(‎Removed claim: Biographical notes (P173): Career: Bookstall in Spitalfields; assistant at the bookshop of Mr Montague, allowed him time to write poetry; Biographer, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1638101435300)
Property / Biographical notes
Career: Bookstall in Spitalfields; assistant at the bookshop of Mr Montague, allowed him time to write poetry; Biographer
 
Property / Biographical notes: Career: Bookstall in Spitalfields; assistant at the bookshop of Mr Montague, allowed him time to write poetry; Biographer / rank
Normal rank
 
Property / Biographical notes: Career: Bookstall in Spitalfields; assistant at the bookshop of Mr Montague, allowed him time to write poetry; Biographer / reference
 

Revision as of 14:11, 28 November 2021

* 1709, 19 April 1751, English writer
  • John Banks
Language Label Description Also known as
English
John Bancks
* 1709, 19 April 1751, English writer
  • John Banks

Statements

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1709Julian
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19 April 1751Julian
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Education: local private school run by Mr Belpene; apprentice to a weaver in Reading, never completed due to broken arm
Coteries: Pope agreed to subscribe to Banks' Miscellanies after receiving a poem from him
Periodicals etc.: Old England Journal; the Westminster Journal
Overall: In his youth, Bancks was "saved from destitution by a timely legacy of ?10 from a distant relation" (DNB). While working in his own bookstall, Bancks was inspired to write The Weaver's Miscellany by the success of Stephen Duck's poem The Thresher' Labour and the patronage Duck received from Queen Caroline. His job as an assistant at a bookshop allowed him enough time to write poetry. His Miscellaneous Works in Verse and Prose enabled him to make a living writing as a profession. He published a number of biographies and some poems.