Zachary Boyd

Zachary Boyd (1585–1653) was a Scottish minister and university administrator who wrote many sermons, scriptural versifications and other devotional works.[1][2] He served as Dean of Faculties, Rector and Vice-Chancellor at the University of Glasgow during the 1630s and 1640s, and bequeathed a generous legacy to the University including his library and large manuscript collection of unpublished sermons and verse.[3]

Zachary Boyd
Born1585
Died1653 (aged 6768)
NationalityScottish
Occupationreligious writer

Life

Boyd was born into the family of Boyd of Pinkhill, Ayrshire. He first studied at the University of Glasgow and then went to Saumur in France. There he followed courses of his kinsman Robert Boyd and in 1611 became Regent Professor. He returned to Glasgow in 1621 and became Minister of Barony Parish in 1625.[4] During the 1630s and 1640s he served as Dean of Faculties, Rector and Vice-Chancellor of the Glasgow University.[1]

He was a moderate royalist who, like many faculty members at Glasgow, was initially reluctant to subscribe to the National Covenant in 1638, though in time he did so.[5] As a Scottish Presbyterian his primary concern during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms was to guarantee Presbyterian church government in Scotland. In a poem about the Battle of Newburn Boyd celebrated the Scottish victory but stopped short of saying that the King himself had been defeated. After many magistrates and ministers subsequently fled Glasgow, Boyd remained behind and met Oliver Cromwell in October 1648: Cromwell was advised to ‘pistol the scoundrel’ but instead invited Boyd for dinner.[5][6]

Works

Three collections of Boyd's verse were printed during his lifetime. The Garden of Zion (1644) is a two-volume work that versifies Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, the Song of Solomon, and other Old Testament songs.[7] Boyd sought to have his metrical paraphrase of the psalter (printed in 1644) and scriptural songs (1645) accepted as the standard text for use in England and Scotland. Though the Scottish General Assembly sent his psalms to the Westminster Assembly for consideration, Robert Baillie criticized Boyd for his 'fruitles designe' in seeking to have his psalter adopted.[8] These books were printed by George Anderson, an unofficial printer to the University whom Boyd supported during his time as Vice-Chancellor.

His printed prose consists of a variety of devotional works. The largest is the prose treatise Last Battell of the Soule in Death (Edinburgh, 1628), a text written in the Ars moriendi tradition to offer solace to those approaching death.[9] Cleare Forme of Catechising (Glasgow, 1639) is a children's catechism. A Sermon of Preparation to the Communion and A Sermon for the Day of the Sacrament (Edinburgh, 1629) and Two Orientall Pearles, Grace and Glory (Edinburgh, 1629) made a small number of Boyd's sermons available in print, but Boyd left over 250 more in manuscript.

Boyd also left a substantial quantity of scriptural versifications. Boyd's autograph manuscripts, which are held at Glasgow University Library, include Zions Flowers (or 'Christian Poems for Spiritual Edification'), the didactic set of exercises The English Academie and versified Gospels entitled The Four Evangels. Zions Flowers versifies nineteen biblical narratives from the Old Testament, such as 'Pharoah's Tyrannie and Death', 'David and Goliath' and 'Destruction of Sodom'.[10] Known collectively as 'Boyd's Bible' - though Boyd never did versify the entire Bible - these poems' critical estimation has never been high: representative is the nineteenth-century writer John Lang's opinion that Boyd 'was not a poet, yet he was something more than a mere doggerel rhymer [….] the commendable features are often marred not merely by rugged verse, but also by hard and unsympathetic thought.'[11] Boyd's versifications are remarkable for the extent to which they contain phrases and imagery appropriated from Josuah Sylvester's translation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas' Semaines and Sylvester's other works.[12] Boyd's Deed of Mortification indicated that a portion of the money he donated to Glasgow was to be used for printing his poems; it never was.[13] However, the bibliographer Gabriel Neil did print four poems from Zion's Flowers in 1855, and David Atkinson produced an edition of Boyd's Selected Sermons for the Scottish Text Society in 1989.[14]

gollark: What horrible parsing quirk makes that valid?
gollark: Suuuure.
gollark: `command(str) const char * str; {`... is this C?
gollark: https://github.com/kspalaiologos/Backdoor↑ I KNEW it was a good idea to distrust all palaiologos binaries.
gollark: Hmm. Is there anything stopping me pinning random software I didn't contribute to to my github profile?

References

  1. Zachary Boyd. University of Glasgow (multi-tab page)
  2. Zachary Boyd entry in Cousin, John William (1910). A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London, J. M. Dent & Sons; New York, E. P. Dutton.
  3. "The University of Glasgow Story".
  4. Long, John Marshall (1855). Glasgow and the Barony thereof. Glasgow. p. 47.
  5. Atkinson, David W. (1989). Selected Sermons of Zachary Boyd. Aberdeen. p. xiii-xiv.
  6. "The University of Glasgow Story: On This Day: 13th October".
  7. "English Short Title Catalogue". Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  8. Baillie, Robert (1842). The Letters and Journals of Robert Baillie, A. M., Principal of the University of Glasgow. p. III, 3.
  9. Atkinson, David W. (1977). "Zachary Boyd and the Ars Moriendi Tradition". Scottish Literary Journal. 4 (1): 5–16.
  10. "Glasgow University Library Special Collections".
  11. Lang, John Marshall (1895). Glasgow and the Barony thereof. pp. 48–49.
  12. Auger, Peter (2013). "Presbyterian Imitation Practices in Zachary Boyd's Nebuchadnezzars Fierie Furnace". The Seventeenth Century. 28 (2): 207–19. doi:10.1080/0268117X.2013.792157.
  13. "University of Glasgow Special Collections".
  14. "Ayrshire Collections".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.