Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 15.djvu/387

 Gray's Inn on 19 May 1664, was called to the bar on 21 June 1672 (ib.), and, according to Wood, ‘lived at Banbury in Oxfordshire, and practised his faculty’ (Athenæ Oxon. ed. Bliss, iv. 597). Becoming tired of the law, he took orders about 1684, and four years later obtained the rectory of Drayton, near Banbury, ‘where,’ writes Wood, ‘he is resorted to by fanatical people’ (loc. cit.) Dover died at Drayton on 3 Nov. 1725, aged 81, and was buried on the 6th of that month in the chancel of the church (mon. inscr. in, Reg. of Magd. Coll. Oxford, v. 240). He is author of ‘The Roman Generalls, or the Distressed Ladies,’ 4to, London, 1667 (another edition, 1677), an unacted tragedy in heroic verse, and written, he declares in dedicating it to Robert, lord Brook, to mitigate the severity of his legal studies, ‘for after I had read a sect or two in Littleton, I then to divert my self took Cæsar's Commentaries, or read the Lives of my Roman Generalls out of Plutarch.’ Wood, who states that Dover had ‘written one or two more plays, which are not yet printed,’ mentions another piece from his pen, ‘The White Rose, or a Word for the House of York, vindicating the Right of Succession; in a Letter from Scotland, 9 March 1679,’ fol., London, 1680.

[Bloxam's Reg. of Magd. Coll. Oxford, v. 239–240; Rawlinson MS. B. 400 F., f. 62; Baker's Biographia Dramatica (Reed and Jones), i. 195, ii. 219.] 

DOVER, ROBERT (1575?–1641), founder of the Olympic games on Cotswold Hills, son of John Dover, gent., of Norfolk, was probably born about 1575, and was an attorney at Barton-on-the-Heath, Warwickshire. At the end of a copy of ‘Annalia Dubrensia,’ 1636, in the British Museum, are manuscript verses by D'Avenant containing the couplet (printed in modern reprints):— Dover that his Knowledge not Imploy's T'increase his Neighbors Quarrels, but their Joyes. With a footnote, ‘He was bred an attorney who never try'd but two causes, always made up the difference.’ Having a sufficient fortune he gave up his profession very early, and settled at Wickham [i.e. Winchcombe], building himself a house at Stanway, in the heart of Cotswold. Early in James I's reign (circa 1604) he founded the ‘Cotswold games,’ and directed them for nearly forty years. They were a protest against the rising puritanical prejudices. Having the king's license to select a fitting place, Dover chose the open country-side between Evesham and Stow-on-the-Wold, where a little acclivity, still called ‘Dover's Hill,’ marks the site. Endymion Porter [q. v.], groom of the bedchamber, furnished the captain with some of the royal clothes, hat, feathers, and ruff. Wood describes him mounted on a white horse as chief director of the games, and says that some of the gentry and nobility came sixty miles to see them. A castle of boards turning on a pivot was erected on the central height, and guns were fired from it to announce the opening of the sports. They consisted of cudgel-playing, wrestling, the quintain, leaping, pitching the bar and hammer, handling the pike, playing at balloon or hand ball, leaping over each other, walking on the hands, a country dance of virgins, men hunting the hare (which, by Dover's orders, was not to be killed), and horse racing on a course some miles long. These games, with the customary feasting in tents, were held on Thursday and Friday in Whitsun-week. Prizes of value were given, and so many that it is said that five hundred gentlemen wore ‘Dover's yellow favours’ a year after. The phrase ‘a lyon of Cotswolde’ occurs in John Heywood's ‘Proverbs,’ pt. i. c. i. (1545–6), in ‘Thersytes’ (1537), and in Harrington's ‘Epigrams,’ and probably refers to the famous ‘wild sheep of Cotswold.’ The familiar reference to coursing on ‘Cotsall’ in the ‘Merry Wives of Windsor’ is not in the 4to, 1602, nor the reprint, 1619; it first appears in the folio of 1623. A small 4to vol. of thirty-five leaves, with a curious frontispiece of the sports and Dover on horseback, appeared in 1636, entitled ‘Annalia Dubrensia. Upon the yeerely celebration of Mr. Robert Dover's Olimpick Games upon the Cotswold Hills. Written by [thirty-three contributors], London, 1636’ (reprinted 1700 by Dr. Thomas Dover, by Dr. Grosart 1877, and by Mr. Vyvyan 1878). This book is full of quaint poetry, with anagrams, acrostics, and epigrams. Among the contributors are Drayton, Trussel, Feltham, Marmion, Ben Jonson, Thomas Heywood, and Randolph. The Grenville copy of this rare book has Dover's autograph and presentation entry. At the end Dover has ‘A Congratulatory Poem to his Poetical and Learned Friends, &c.,’ in which he defends his ‘innocent pastime’ against the puritan charge of being ‘a wicked, horrid sin.’ Somerville's ‘Hobbinol, or Rural Games’ has its action at Dover's Hill. Barksdale's ‘Nympha Libethris, or the Cotswold Muse,’ 1651, has slight allusion to the games. With the death of the founder and the cessation of prizes the games died out under the Commonwealth, to be revived in the reign of Charles II, and to continue till 1852.

Dover died in his house at Stanway, and was buried in the parish church 6 June 1641. By his wife, daughter of Dr. Cole, dean of Lincoln, he had one son, Captain John Dover,