Among the many poets who found popularity in Renaissance England none now seems an odder choice for as acclaim and translation than the French Huguenot Guillaume Salluste, Sieur du Bartas. In England Du Bartas was probably the most admired of contemporary European writers, if one excludes Erasmus and the chief figures of the Reformation, and his lengthy descriptions of the creation and history of the world received an adulation seldom given far better poetry. To most readers since the Restoration his poetry has seemed, as Dryden put it, abominable fustian. Yet to many Englishmen from the 1580s until the shift of taste in the 1660s Du Bartas was the very type of the ‘divine poet', whose lines were ‘sweet’ and delightful, and whose wealth of anecdote, description, and information provided a vivid reflection of the Maker's own fecundity.