Henry Brooke (Q387405)

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Revision as of 21:20, 26 November 2021 by Olaf Simons (talk | contribs) (‎Created claim: Biographical notes (P173): Overall: Many of Brooke's works reflect the sentimentality characteristic of the mid-18th c. A patriot Whig with staunch anti-Catholic protestant tendencies, Brooke received government censure for his politically controversial works; his play Gustavus Vasa: the Deliverer of his Country, and his satirical opera Jack the Giant-Queller, were banned for their subversive content. He was very active in Ireland's political life, publishing a number of...)
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* 1703, + 1783-10-10, Irish writer
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Henry Brooke
* 1703, + 1783-10-10, Irish writer

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    1703
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    10 October 1783Gregorian
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    Career: sent to read law at the Temple 1724; chamber counsel in Dublin for 7 years; barrack-master in co. Kildare; writer and playwright
    Periodicals etc.: translated the ?Man of Law's Tale? in Ogle's reworking of the Canterbury Tales
    Overall: Many of Brooke's works reflect the sentimentality characteristic of the mid-18th c. A patriot Whig with staunch anti-Catholic protestant tendencies, Brooke received government censure for his politically controversial works; his play Gustavus Vasa: the Deliverer of his Country, and his satirical opera Jack the Giant-Queller, were banned for their subversive content. He was very active in Ireland's political life, publishing a number of zealous pamphlets. The novel The Fool of Quality is his best-known work. The DNB characterizes Brooke as "a representative of the tightly-knit Anglo-Irish class of the mid-eighteenth century and a man of letters trying his hand at various literary genres."
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