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Encyclopedia :
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Thomas Nashe |
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Thomas NasheThomas Nashe (November 1567 - ?1600) was an English Elizabethan pamphleteer, poet and satirist. Son of the minister William Nashe and his wife Margaret (nee Witchingham).Baptized in Lowestoft, Suffolk. The family moved to West Harling, near Thetford in 1573. Around 1581 Thomas went up to St John's College, Cambridge gaining his bachelor's degree in 1586. Then he moved to London and started his literary career. It does not appear that Nashe ever proceeded Master of Arts at Cambridge, Having left Cambridge Nashe apparently went to London, where his pamphlet, 'The Anatomie of Absurditie' was registered for publication on 19th September 1588, although it only seems to have been published much later. During the interim Nashe apparently took part in the anti-Martinist campaign, in what capacity is not clear, though he was strongly associated with the writing of pamphlets by John Taylor some fifty years later. He may have gathered intelligence or helped by writing anti-Martinist plays and pamphlets, or contributed to the pamphlets his friend John Lyly brought out in 1589. If Nashe be the author of the late anti-Marprelate pamphlet An Almond for a Parrat (1590), attributed on the title-page to one 'Cutbert Curry-knave', he humorously claims to have met Harlequin while returning from a trip to Venice in the summer of 1589. However, there is no evidence Nashe had either time or means to go abroad, and he never subsequently refers to having visited Venice elsewhere in his work. He remained in London apart from periodic visits to the countryside to avoid the plague, and in 1597, following the suppression of The Isle of Dogs (co-written with Ben Jonson), Jonson was jailed, but Nashe was able to escape to the country. He remained for some time in Great Yarmouth before returning to London. He was alive in 1599, when his last known work Nashes Lenten Stuffe was published, and dead by 1601, when he was memorialized in a Latin verse in Affaniae by Charles Fitzjeoffrey. He was featured in Thomas Dekker's News from Hell and the anonymous The Three Parnassus Plays, which provides this epitaph: Let all his faults sleep with his mournful chest And there for ever with his ashes rest His style was witty, though it had some gall; Some things he might have mended, so may all. Yet this I say, that for a mother of wit, Few men have ever seen the like of it. Works by Thomas Nashe
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