John Lockman (1698âÂÂ1771) was an English writer.
Born in humble circumstances, he was a self-taught scholar who learnt to speak French by frequenting Slaughter's Coffee House. He had enough acquaintance with Alexander Pope that he could dedicate to him in 1734 his translation of Charles Porée's Oration. His inoffensive character procured for him the name of the âÂÂLamb.â but when âÂÂHesiodâ Cooke abused his poetry, Lockman retorted, âÂÂIt may be so; but, thank God! my name is not at full length in the âÂÂDunciad.âÂÂâÂÂ
His poems were chiefly occasional verse intended to be set to music for Vauxhall. In 1762 he tried, fruitlessly, to get them printed by subscription. He frequently went to court to present his verses to the royal family, and after he became secretary to the British Herring Fishery, he tendered gifts of pickled herrings. Both poems and herrings, he declared, were âÂÂmost graciously accepted.âÂÂ
He died in Brownlow Street, Long Acre, on 2 February 1771, leaving a widow, Mary.
Lockman worked on the General Dictionary, Historical and Critical including a life of Samuel Butler. He translated many French works, including Voltaire's âÂÂAge of Louis XIV,â and âÂÂHenriade;â Marivaux's âÂÂPharamond;â and Le Sage's âÂÂBachelor of Salamanca.âÂÂ
Lockman is also the translator of Voltaire's "Letters concerning the English Nation" (London, 1733). The work was first thought to have been partially written by Voltaire himself, in English, in the years following his stay in that country from 1726-28. The hypothesis, posed by Harcourt Brown, was debunked by J. Patrick Lee in his essay, "The Unexamined Premise" (2001). He established that the entire "Letters" had in fact been written in French and then translated into English (Studies on Voltaire and the eighteenth century, 2001:10).
He also published:
Lockman wrote also a âÂÂHistory of Christianity,â and histories of England, Greece, and of Rome, by question and answer, which passed through numerous editions. He was a frequent contributor to the Gentleman's Magazine.
Attribution