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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CHR-CLI |
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CHURCHYARD, THOMAS (c. 152o-16o4) , English author, was born at Shrewsbury about 1520, the son of a farmer. He received a good education, and, having speedily dissipated at court the money with which his father provided him, he entered the household of Henry Howard, earl
In 1S5o he went to Ireland to serve the lord deputy, Sir Anthony St Leger, who had been sent to pacify the country. Here Churchyard enriched himself at the expense, it is to be feared, of the unhappy Irish; but in 1552 he was in England 'again, trying vainly to secure a fortune by marriage
chief
ransom , but he was finally set free on giving his bond for the amount, an engagement which he repudiated as soon as he was safely in England. He is not to be identified with the T. C. who wrote for the Mirror for Magistrates (ed. 1559), " How the Lord Mowbray ... was banished . . . and after died miserablie in exile ," which is the work of Thomas Chaloner, but " Shore's Wife," his most popular poem, appeared in the 1563 edition of the same work, and to that of 1587 he contributed the ` Tragedie of Thomas Wolsey." These are plain manly compositions in the seven-lined Chaucerian stanza. Repeated petitions to the queen for assistance produced at first fair
he had to fly for his life in the disguise of a priest. In the next year he was sent by the earl
Guernsey
marriage
Churchyard was employed to devise a pageant for the queen's reception at Bristol in 1574, and again at Norwich in 1578. He had published in 1575 The fvrste parte of Churchyarde's Chippes, the modest title which he gives to his works. No second part appeared, but there was a much enlarged edition in 1578. A passage in Churchyarde's Choise (1579) gave offence to Elizabeth, and the author fled to Scotland, where he remained for three years. He was only restored to favour about 1584, and in 1593 he received a small pension from the queen. The affectionate esteem with which he was regarded by the younger Elizabethan writers is expressed by Thomas Nashe, who says (Foure Letters Confuted) that Churchyard's aged muse might well be " grand-mother to our grandiloquentest poets at this present." Francis Meres (Palladis Tamia, 1598) mentions him in conjunction with many great names among " the most passionate, among us, to bewail and bemoan the perplexities of love." Spenser, in " Colin Clout's come home again," calls him with a spice of raillery " old Palaemon " who " sung so long until quite hoarse he grew." His writings, with the exception of his contributions to the Mirror for Magistrates, are chiefly autobiographical in character or deal with the wars in which he had a share. They are very rare, and have never been completely reprinted. Churchyard lived right through Elizabeth's reign, and was buried in St Margaret's church, Westminster, on the 4th of April 1604. The extant works of Churchyard, exclusive of commendatory and occasional verses, include :A lamentable and pitifull Description of the wofull warres in Flanders (1578); A general rehearsal ) of warres, called Churchyard's Choise (1579), really a completion of the Chippes, and containing, like it, a number of detached pieces; A light Bondel of livelie Discourses, called Churchyardes Charge (1580); The Worthines of Wales (1587), a valuable antiquarian work in prose
The chief
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