Barthold Heinrich Brockes (born Sept. 22, 1680, Hamburg [Germany]—died Jan. 16, 1747, Ritzebüttel, Cuxhaven) was a poet whose works were among the most influential expressions of the early Enlightenment in Germany.
The scion of a wealthy patrician family, he traveled widely before becoming a merchant in his hometown. In 1720 he was appointed a member of the Hamburg senate, and in 1735 he became a magistrate in Ritzebüttel. Influenced by the 18th-century British poets James Thomson and Alexander Pope, whose works he translated, he wrote nature poetry, such as Irdisches Vergnügen in Gott (1721–48; “Earthly Pleasure in God”), in which natural phenomena are described minutely and seen as aspects of God’s perfectly ordered universe. One of the first German poets to treat nature as a principal subject, he was the forerunner of the new poetic attitude toward nature in German literature that culminated in the works of Ewald Christian von Kleist and Albrecht von Haller.