SIR SAMUEL GARTH BIOGRAPHY

SIR SAMUEL GARTH BIOGRAPHY from the Biographical Dictionary of English Literature by John Cousin.

GARTH, SIR SAMUEL (1661-1719). —Physician and poet, born at Bolam in the county of Durham, and ed. at Camb., he settled as a physician in London, where he soon acquired a large practice. He was a zealous Whig, the friend of Addison and, though of different political views, of Pope, and he ended his career as physician to George I., by whom he was knighted in 1714. He is remembered as the author of The Dispensary , a satire, which had great popularity in its day, and of Claremont , a descriptive poem. He also ed. a translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses , to which Addison, Pope, and others contributed. Perhaps, however, the circumstance most honourable to him is his intervention to procure an honourable burial for Dryden, over whose remains he pronounced a eulogy.