Samuel Pordage (1633 â c. 1691) was a 17th-century English poet. He is best known by his Azaria and Hushai (1682), a reply to John Dryden's Absalom and Achitophel.
Samuel was the eldest son of John Pordage, a clergyman from Bradfield in Berkshire, who married the widow, Mary Pordage (born Lane) on 17 January 1633. Samuel baptised at St Dionis Backchurch, London, on 29 December 1633. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School from 1644, and studied law at Lincoln's Inn. At the trial of his father ten years later he appears to have been one of the witnesses. In his title-pages he described himself as âÂÂof Lincoln's Innâ and âÂÂa student of physick.â He was at one time chief steward to Philip Herbert, 5th Earl of Pembroke.
Roger L'Estrange attacked Pordage in the âÂÂObservatorâ for 5 April 1682 on account of âÂÂA brief History of all the Papists' bloudy Persecutions,â calling him âÂÂlimping Pordage, a son of the famous Familist about Reading and the author of several libels,â one against L'Estrange. Dryden, in the second part of âÂÂAbsalom and Achitophel,â published in November, described Pordage as
<blockquote>Lame Mephibosheth, the wizard's son.</blockquote>
He made various translations, wrote poems, and laid claim to two tragedies, Herod and Mariamne (1673), and The Siege of Babylon (1678), and a romance, Eliana.
While living with his father at the parsonage of Bradfield in 1660 he published a translation from Seneca the Younger, with notes, called âÂÂTroades Englished.â About the same time he published âÂÂPoems upon Several Occasions, by S. P., gent.,â a little volume which included panegyrics on Charles II and General George Monck, but which consisted for the most part of poems in the style of Robert Herrick.
In 1661 a volume appeared called âÂÂMundorum Explicatio, or the explanation of an Hieroglyphical Figure. ⦠Being a Sacred Poem, written by S. P., Armig.â This book, which was reissued in 1663, is attributed to Samuel Pordage, though it has been suggested that the real author was Pordage's father, a professed follower of Jacob Boehme. White Kennett, writing in 1728, attributed the work to Samuel.
In 1661 Samuel Pordage published a pamphlet, âÂÂHeroick Stanzas on his Maiesties Coronation.â In 1673 his Herod and Mariamne a tragedy, was acted at the Duke's Theatre, and was published anonymously. Elkanah Settle signed the dedication to the Duchess of Albemarle. The plot was borrowed from Josephus and the romance of âÂÂCleopatra.â In 1678 appeared âÂÂThe Siege of Babylon, by Samuel Pordage of Lincoln's Inn, Esq., author of the tragedy of âÂÂHerod and Mariamne.âÂÂâ This play had been licensed by Roger L'Estrange on 2 November 1677, and acted at the Duke's Theatre not long after the production at the Theatre Royal of Nathaniel Lee's âÂÂRival Queens;â and Statira and Roxana, the âÂÂrival queens,â were principal characters in Pordage's rhymed tragedy. The story is based upon âÂÂCassandraâ and other romances of the day.
Pordage brought out in 1679 the sixth edition of John Reynolds's âÂÂTriumphs of God's Revenge against the sin of Murther;â he prefixed to it a dedication to the Earl of Shaftesbury. In 1681, at the time when the Popish Plot scare was ebbing out, he wrote a single folio sheet, âÂÂA new Apparition of Sir Edmundbury Godfrey's Ghost to the E. of DâÂÂâ in the Tower;â the printer was obliged to make a public apology for the reflections on the Earl of Danby which it contained. Between 1681 and 1684 he issued âÂÂThe Remaining Medical Works of ⦠Dr. Thomas Willis ⦠Englished by S. P., Esq.â There is a general dedication to Sir Theophilus Biddulph, signed by Pordage; and verses âÂÂOn the author's Medico-philosophical Discoursesâ precede the first part.
Dryden's âÂÂAbsalom and Achitophelâ appeared in November 1681, and among the answers to it was Pordage's âÂÂAzaria and Hushai, a Poem,â 1682. In this piece Azaria was the Duke of Monmouth, Amazia the king, Hushai Shaftesbury, and Shimei Dryden. Some lines were devoted to L'Estrange, who was called Bibbai. On 15 March 1682 Dryden brought out âÂÂThe Medal, a Satire against Sedition,â an attack on Shaftesbury, and on 31 March Pordage published âÂÂThe Medal revers'd, a Satyre against Persecution,â with an epistle, addressed, in imitation of Dryden, to his enemies, the Tories. Pordage said he did not believe that the authors of âÂÂAbsalom and Achitophelâ and âÂÂThe Medalâ were the same, yet, as they desired to be thought so, each must bear the reproaches of the other.
In May John Oldham, in his âÂÂImitation of the Third Satire of Juvenal,â had ridiculed Pordage, and in another âÂÂSatireâ mentioned Pordage among the authors who had âÂÂgrown contemptible, and slighted since.â Besides the pieces already mentioned, Pordage is stated to have written a romance called âÂÂEliana.âÂÂ