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NASHE (or NASH), THOMAS (1567-1601) , English poet, playwright and pamphleteer, was born at Lowestoft in 1567. His father belonged to an old Herefordshire family, and is vaguely described as a " minister," Nashe spent nearly seven years, 1582 to 1589, at St John's College, Cambridge , taking his B.A. degree in 1585-1586. On Ieaving the university he tried, like Greene
Cambridge , although he refers to it as a forthcoming publication in his preface to Greene
original
governor . In 1593 he wrote Christs Teares over Jerusalem, in the first edition of which he made friendly overtures to Gabriel Harvey. These were, however, in a second edition, published in the following year, replaced by a new attack, and two years later appeared the most violent of his tracts against Harvey, Have with you to Saffron-walden, or, Gabriell Harveys Hunt is up (1596). In 1599 the controversy was suppressed by the archbishop of Canterbury. After Marlowe's death Nashe prepared his friend's unfinished tragedy of Dido (1596) for the stage. In the next year he was in trouble for a play, now lost, called The Isle of Dogs, for only part of which, however, he seems to have been responsible. The " seditious and slanderous matter " contained in this play induced the authorities to close for a time the theatre at which it had been performed, and the dramatist was put in the Fleet prison. Besides his pamphlets and his play-writing, Nashe turned his energies to novel-writing. He may be regarded as the pioneer
earl
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and is nominally " in praise of the red herring," but really a description of Yarmouth, to which place he had retired after his imprisonment, written in the best style of a " special
Dekker
sharp
printed in Fitzgeffrey's Afaniae (1601). The works of Thomas Nashe were edited by Dr A. B. Grosart in 1883-1885, and more recently by Ronald B. McKerrow (1904). An account of his work as a novelist may be found in the English Novel in the Time of Shakespeare, by J. J. Jusserand (Eng. trans., 189o). The Unfortunate Traveller was edited with an introduction by Edmund Gosse in 1892. See also " Nash
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