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Isaac Hawkins Browne (poet)

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Nationality
  
English

Notable work
  
A Pipe of Tobacco

Role
  
Politician

Occupation
  
barrister, poet

Name
  
Isaac Browne

Children
  
Isaac Hawkins Browne

Isaac Hawkins Browne (poet)
Born
  
21 January 1705
Burton-upon-Trent, Staffordshire

Died
  
February 14, 1760, Bloomsbury

Education
  
Trinity College, Cambridge

Isaac Hawkins Browne FRS (21 January 1705 – 14 February 1760) was an English politician and poet. His remembered as the author of some clever imitations of contemporary poets Jonathan Swift and Alexander Pope on the theme of A Pipe of Tobacco (1736), somewhat analogous to the Rejected Addresses of a later day. He also wrote a Latin poem on the immortality of the soul, De Animi Immortalitate (1754).

Contents

Life

He was born in Burton-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, the son of William Browne, Vicar of the parish, and Ann (nee Hawkins) Browne. He was educated in Lichfield and at Westminster School. He entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1721 and was said to have graduated as MA, although no record of the award has been found. A country gentleman and barrister, who had been called to the bar in 1728 from Lincoln's Inn, he had great conversational powers. He was a friend of Samuel Johnson.

He was MP for Much Wenlock, Shropshire from 1744 to 1754, although he did not apparently contribute much in debates, Dr Johnson commenting that, ironically: Browne, one of the first great wits of this country, got into Parliament and never opened his mouth.

He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in February, 1750.

Browne, recalled by Dr Johnson (in 1773) to have drunk hard for thirty years, died at his London home in Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury Square, on 14 February 1760.

He is memorialised at Trinity College, Cambridge chapel.

Family

He married Jane Trimnell, daughter of David Trimnell, in 1744. They had one child, Isaac Hawkins Browne

References

Isaac Hawkins Browne (poet) Wikipedia