The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07.
Drayton, Michael
15631631, English poet. The son of a prosperous tradesman, he received his educational training in the house of Sir Henry Goodere, where he served as page. There he made a lasting friendship with Anne Goodere, the youngest daughter of Sir Henry, who became the Idea in his series of sonnets (15931619). His work reflects the many poetic fashions of the day. He wrote poems on English history and topography (Englands Heroical Epistles, 159799; the 15,000-line panoramic Poly-Olbion, 161222; Mortimeriados, 1596, recast in The Barons Wars, 1597); satires (The Owl, 1604, and The Moon Calf, 1627); a Spenserian, though mock-heroic, fairyland poem (Nymphidia, 1627); and the idyllic Muses Elysium (1630). He also wrote scriptural paraphrases, pastorals, popular ballads, myths, and collaborated on plays.
See his complete works (ed. by J. W. Hebel et al., 5 vol., 193141); studies by R. Hardin (1973), L. Westling (1974), S. Naqi Husain Jafri (1981), and J. R. Brink (1990).