Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 3).pdf/341

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to Sidney, but 'was for his labour scorned'. He was answered the same year in a lost pamphlet called Strange News out of Afric and also by Lodge (q.v.), and rejoined with A Short Apology of the School of Abuse (App. C, No. xxiv). The players revived his plays to spite him and on 23 Feb. 1582 produced The Play of Plays and Pastimes to confute him. In the same year he produced his final contribution to the controversy in Plays Confuted in Five Actions (App. C, No. xxx). In 1591 Gosson became Rector of Great Wigborough, Essex, and in 1595 published the anonymous pamphlet Pleasant Quips for Upstart Newfangled Gentlewomen. In 1600 he became Rector of St. Botolph's, Bishopsgate. In 1616 and 1617 he wrote to Alleyn (q.v.) as his 'very loving and ancient friend'.[1] He died 13 Feb. 1624.

Gosson claims to have written both tragedies and comedies,[2] but no play of his is extant. He names three of them. Of Catiline's Conspiracies he says that it was 'usually brought into the Theater and that 'because it is known to be a pig of mine own sow, I will speak the less of it; only giving you to understand, that the whole mark which I shot at in that work was to show the reward of traitors in Catiline, and the necessary government of learned men in the person of Cicero, which foresees every danger that is likely to happen and forestalls it continually ere it take effect'.[3] Lodge disparages the originality of this play and compares it unfavourably with Wilson's Short and Sweet[4] (q.v.). Of two other plays Gosson says: 'Since my publishing the School of Abuse two plays of my making were brought to the stage; the one was a cast of Italian devices, called, The Comedy of Captain Mario; the other a Moral, Praise at Parting. These they very impudently affirm to be written by me since I had set out my invective against them. I can not deny they were both mine, but they were both penned two years at the least before I forsook them, as by their own friends I am able to prove.'[5] It is conceivable that Gosson may be the translator of Fedele and Fortunio (cf. ch. xxiv).


ROBERT GREENE (1558-92).

Robert Greene was baptized at Norwich on 11 July 1558. He entered St. John's College, Cambridge, as a sizar in 1575 and took his B.A. in 1578 and his M.A. by 1583, when he was residing in Clare Hall. The addition of an Oxford degree in July 1588 enabled him to describe himself as Academiae Utriusque Magister in Artibus. He has been identified with a Robert Greene who was Vicar of Tollesbury, Essex, in 1584-5, but there is no real evidence that he took orders. The earlier part of his career may be gathered from his autobiographic pamphlet, The Repentance of Robert Greene (1592), eked out by the portraits, also evidently in a measure autobiographic, of Francesco in Never Too Late (1590) and of Roberto in Green's Groats-worth of Wit bought with a Million of Repentance (1592). It seems that he travelled in youth and learnt much wickedness; then married and lived for a

  1. Collier, Memoirs of Alleyn, 133.
  2. Plays Confuted, 167
  3. School of Abuse, 40.
  4. Lodge, Defence of Plays, 28.
  5. Plays Confuted, 165.