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Nicholas Grimald, The Judas of the Reformation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2020

Extract

Many a man of letters who has been accounted great in his own time and whose work has had no little influence on the world's literature has ceased to be a person of any interest in later years, and his works are no longer read. Few such men have left so little record of themselves, or have inspired in these latter days of research so little interest, so little desire to make inquiry into their lives and personalities as has Nicholas Grimald. Nevertheless, John Bale, the first writer of English literary history, tells how renowned he was in that day, and calls him the foremost alumnus of Cambridge and not the least glory of his time. Indeed, he might well be regarded as such. Next to Sir Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, he was the principal contributor to the first anthology of English poetry, then known as Songes and Sonnettes, now known as Tottel's Miscellany, a book which enjoyed astonishing popularity. A second edition of it appeared within a month of the first, and eight editions appeared within twenty years. His name is here joined to those of two men who are still remembered. Another reason for the interest of posterity is that two of Grimald's poems in this volume, “The Death of Zoroas,” and “Marcus Tullius Ciceroes Death,” were the first compositions in blank verse to be published in the English language. The credit, to be sure, is commonly given to Surrey for having written the first blank verse, for although the translation in that poetic form which he made of the second and the fourth book of the Aeneid was published June 21, 1557, a little over two weeks later than Songes and Sonnettes, it must have been written at least ten years before, as Surrey died in 1547. Nevertheless, it is not improbable that Grimald's compositions in blank verse were done even before Surrey's, for in 1547 he was appointed lecturer in rhetoric at Christ Church, Oxford. Warton suggests that Grimald's verses were “prolusions or illustrative practical specimens for our author's course of lectures in rhetoric.” But he had previously been engaged in literary work for some years. His poetic drama, Christus Redivivus, which was published in 1543, was written about 1539, when, as he says in its dedicatory epistle, he was about twenty. In 1548, he published his Archipropheta, which shows him to be a master of a variety of verse forms.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1922

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References

1 Scriptorum illustrium maioris Brytanniae, . . . Catalogus by John Bale, ed. Basle 1557, p. 701.

2 T. Warton, History of English Poetry, ed. 1840, III, 69.

3 Bodl. MS. Duke Humphrey b. 1., f. 186.

4 Lansdowne MS. 2., Art. 31.

5 Calendar of State Papers 1547-1580, p. 15.

6 The Works of Nicholas Ridley, Parker Society Publications, ed. 1843, Cambridge, p. 337.

7 The Writings of John Bradford, M. A., Parker Society Publications, ed. 1853, Cambridge, p. 158.

8 The Works of Bishop Ridley, D.D., The Letters of Bishop Ridley, Parker Society Publications, ed. 1843, Cambridge, p. 361.

9 Op. cit., p. 537.

10 Op. cit., p. 371.

11 Op. cit., p. 379.

12 Op. cit., p. 388.

13 “The Story of Laurence Saunders, Martyr” in Foxe's Acts and Monuments, ed. 1838, London, VI, 618.

14 The Writings of John Bradford, M. A., Parker Society Publications, p. 548.

15 Foxe's Acts and Monuments, ed. 1841, p. 627.

16 John Strype, Ecclesiastical Memorials, ed. 1822, Oxford, p. 229.