Theodore Bathurst


Theodore Bathurst, also known as Theophilus Bathurst was an English poet and translator who wrote in the Latin language. His most notable work is Calendarium Pastorale.

Life

Bathurst was descended from an ancient family of Hothorpe in Northamptonshire, and a relative of Dr Ralph Bathurst, the famous English physician, scholar, and divine. He entered Trinity College, Cambridge in 1602, but graduated BA in 1606 from Pembroke College, the college to which Edmund Spenser belonged.
Bathurst led a private life, and was a man of little ambition. So much the more, says one of his editors, he deserved honour as he desired it less.

Works

While at Pembroke, he executed his translation of Spenser's The Shepheardes Calender. He wrote the first two ecologues at Pembroke, which were dedicated to Thomas Neville, master of Trinity College, Cambridge. This translation had the honour of being highly commended by Sir Richard Fanshawe, who has himself left us specimens of Latin translations of English verse.
Bathurst's translation was edited first by Dr William Dillingham of Emmanuel College, and dedicated to Francis Lane. It was republished by John Ball, who, in his address to the reader, says he had much and long labour in procuring a copy of Bathurst's work. It was then already rare among the booksellers.
Ball's edition is accompanied by the original eclogues on the opposite pages. He speaks of Bathurst, in the address above mentioned, as
He added a Latin dissertation, De vita Spenseri et scriptis. The precise title of Bathurst's book is:
In 1653 when the first edition of a parallel text was released, John Hacket offered some insights into its origins, which he passed to the reviser of the text William Dillingham, master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Emmanuel was at the forefront of the Puritan movement in intellectual circles, presenting the orthodox position on the doctrine of the trinity. Dillingham's text was included in the 1679 text of Spenser's Works, which was reissued in 1732.