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Daryna Borovets Group 2.3: University Wits Is A Term Invented by Literary Historians To Identify A Handful of

This document discusses the University Wits, a group of English writers active in the late 16th century. It describes the backgrounds and works of several prominent Wits, including Robert Greene, Thomas Nashe, Christopher Marlowe, John Lyly, Thomas Watson, George Peele, Thomas Lodge, and Thomas Kyd. It notes that while some like Marlowe can be reliably identified, the biographies of others like Greene and Nashe do not align with their literary output, suggesting they may have been fronts for other writers like Francis Bacon. The document aims to shed light on this influential but obscure group of Elizabethan authors.

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Daria Borovets
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
93 views5 pages

Daryna Borovets Group 2.3: University Wits Is A Term Invented by Literary Historians To Identify A Handful of

This document discusses the University Wits, a group of English writers active in the late 16th century. It describes the backgrounds and works of several prominent Wits, including Robert Greene, Thomas Nashe, Christopher Marlowe, John Lyly, Thomas Watson, George Peele, Thomas Lodge, and Thomas Kyd. It notes that while some like Marlowe can be reliably identified, the biographies of others like Greene and Nashe do not align with their literary output, suggesting they may have been fronts for other writers like Francis Bacon. The document aims to shed light on this influential but obscure group of Elizabethan authors.

Uploaded by

Daria Borovets
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Daryna Borovets Group 2.

3
University Wits is a term invented by literary historians to identify a handful of
writers, some well known, others less so, who first appeared in the early 1580s and
had almost completely vanished from the record by the mid-90s.  Some were students
together at the Merchant Taylor’s School during the period when the boys performed
plays for the Court.  Some were together at Trinity College Oxford and then at the
Inns of Court in the Holborne district of London.  Some wrote poetry, some
tales, some plays, some all three.  For some we have almost nothing but their
reputations.  All wrote in “pre-Shakespearean” styles that separated them from the
writers of the previous “drab era.”  As David Horne, author of the only biography of
George Peele, puts it: “All were learned and classical in their tastes and interested in
courtly literature” (70).  Several are the accepted authors of works that Shakespeare
“rewrote” in the ’90s, and most of them have been assigned an assortment of the
many anonymous works of that period.

Most interesting perhaps is how several of them are the favorites for authors of those
Shakespeare plays that the so-called “disintegrators” like to assign to someone other
than Shakespeare:  George Peele and Robert Greene lead the field in this, but almost
all of them have been assigned to all or part authorship of at least one of his plays by
some Shakespeare scholar.  In other words their styles in some places are so close to
early Shakespeare that scholars can’t tell the difference.

The leading name is that of Robert Greene (“died” 1592), poet, pamphleteer, proto-
novelist and playwright.  Though not the first to appear in print––his first
pamphlet, Mamillia, was registered with the Stationers in 1580, the year after John
Lyly’s Euphues––but he was the most prolific: 20 works published over the next 12
years (with a number of anonymous works attributed to him later).  He was also the
first to disappear (I use the term advisedly) in 1592.  Described by his fellow
pamphleteers and even by himself as a profane and profligate ne’er do weel––
something utterly belied by his works––Greene’s biography is too weak to take
seriously.  For these and other reasons, we (myself and one other authorship scholar)
believe that the real Robert Greene was a front for a Court writer.

The second most prominent member of the group in terms of published material and
talent is Thomas Nashe (1567-1601).  He and Greene should be credited with
launching the English periodical press as a viable industry.  Their volley of
pamphlets throughout the latter half of the 1580s and the early years of the ’90s
showed the world that there was a market in England for serial publications of
quality.  Like his senior, Nashe’s works proclaim him as one of the most highly
educated, erudite writers of his time, qualities his official biography doesn’t support.
I stand with the Baconian Edward George Harman in claiming that Nashe was a front
for Francis Bacon.
Most famous of all, Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593) is not on every list (he
attended Cambridge, not Oxford, and was never a student at the Inns), but he was
obviously involved with some of the others.  The popularity of his
play Tamburlaine in the late 1580s was what turned the London Stage into an industry
strong enough and popular enough to withstand its enemies’ continuous efforts to take
it down.  His assassination in 1593 by government agents was the opening bell for the
disappearance of the entire group, who were all dead or fled shortly after (that is, all
but Nashe, who continued to get published until 1599).  It also proves that he was who
he said he was, for no one would bother murdering a proxy, leaving the real writer to
strike again under another name.  In fact, for the most part his biography is a model
for what we should expect to find for any gifted and popular writer of the period.

John Lyly (1553-1606) is the earliest of the Wits, both in age and in public
awareness.  The first thing to bear his name, the proto-novel Euphues, the Anatomy of
Wit, made him famous, both in his own time and ever after, carrying to a peak its
ornate style, known ever since as euphuism.  Licensed in December 1578, published
the following spring, it foretold the kind of literature that would be coming from the
University Wits for the next decade.  His name is also attached to a series of Court
plays performed by the children’s companies throughout the ’80s.  Lyly had attended
Oxford (Magdalen), though earlier than the other Wits (BA 1573, MA 1575). 
However, like Greene and Nashe, his biography fails to support his claims to
authorship, chiefly because although Euphues was one of the most popular books of
the time, and although he continued to live in London and was apparently in desperate
need of work and money, it seems he produced nothing from the disbanding of Paul’s
Boys in 1590 until his death in 1607––17 years of inexplicable silence.

Thomas Watson (1555-1592?), one of the first to arrive was also one of the first to
vanish.  Primarily a Latinist, his best known work in English is the Passionate
Century of Love, over a hundred poems, some translations, many in the style of 15th-
century Italian poets, published in 1582 (and dedicated to the Earl of Oxford).  A
variety of things were published under Watson’s name including lyrics to madrigals
set to music by William Byrd.  However, despite the obvious popularity of the works
published in his name, what we have in the way of a biography simply can’t support
them.  That both he and Robert Greene, another biographically-challenged writer,
supposedly died within days of each other at the outset of the literary holocaust of the
’90s suggests that both were fronts for the same Court writer.  (The only evidence for
Watson’s death at that time is a single line in the parish register of St. Batholomew the
Less.  For Greene there’s nothing.)

George Peele (1556-1596) appears in the literary record at about the same time as
Watson, both shortly after Greene.  A graduate of Christ Church College Oxford (mat
1571, BA 1577, MA 1579), having returned to London, his home town, in 1581, he
wrote for the Stage until 1590, at which point he broke with his earlier career as a Wit,
providing official encomia and writing and directing pageants for the City and his
alma mater.  He’s credited with writing the only play to be identified with the first
Blackfriars Theater (The Arraignment of Paris) in 1581, while suggestions that he was
the author of the various other plays claimed for him are too uncertain to take on faith.

Thomas Lodge (1558-1625) connects with this group through all three factors: time,
location, and works.  Educated at the Merchant Taylor’s School during the period
when the students occasionally performed at Court, then at Oxford during the period
that John Lyly and George Peele were attending (he got his BA in 1577 and his MA in
1581).  Once out of college he became a member of Lincoln’s Inn, located in the
neighborhood of High Holborn where Peele and others were also located.  His first
appearance in print in 1579 was in response to the Church-promoted attack
by Stephen Gosson on the playwriting Wits.  Although his biographer has a poor
opinion of his talent (Sisson 184-9), he did produce one work that was later turned
into a masterpiece by Shakespeare: As You Like It.  But that he was more than a front
is clear from the many mediocre tales published under his name and several serious
translations and medical works he published later.  As a contributor to the literary
legacy of the University Wits he fades from the scene following the publication of his
last pastoral tale in 1596, having turned to the study and practice of medicine that will
dominate the rest of his life.

Thomas Kyd (1558-1594) was a Londoner like Peele, and a student at the Merchant
Taylor’s School during the same play-giving period as Thomas Lodge and Edmund
Spenser.  The son of a scrivener, what today we would call a professional secretary,
there is little solid evidence that Kyd was ever much more than that for clients like
Lord Strange.  His authorship of the groundbreaking play The Spanish Tragedy is
based on nothing more than three words by Meres and a passing mention by Thomas
Heywood 30 years later, which, if nothing else, has made him a favorite with scholars
as the purported author of dozens of anonymous works including the mythical Ur-
Hamlet.  Arrested by Cecil’s agents in May 1593, Kyd was imprisoned and racked
into turning state’s evidence against Marlowe.  Though released following Marlowe’s
assassination, he died the following year, shortly after the murder of their patron, Lord
Strange.

Lesser names

Sir George Buc (1560-1622) is known best as Master of the Revels for the first two
decades under James.  What he was doing earlier, during the period in question, is
unclear.  Wikipedia calls him a “minor poet,” and minor he must have been, or one
that used a pseudonym, as it’s hard to find any of his poetry.  Better known as the
author of a biography of Richard III (Buc’s ancestor was a member of Richard’s
retinue), he’s also famous as the antiquarian who discovered important documents
that vindicate Richard, not that it did either one of them any good with historians that
prefer to keep that much maligned Plantagenet as history’s arch-villain.

Thomas Acheley (or Achelow) is the most obscure of the Wits, although it seems he
was well known in his time since he was praised in 1589 by Nashe in Menaphon, in
1597 by Meres, and in 1607 by Dekker (as belonging to an earlier era).  England’s
Parnassus, an anthology published in 1600, contains 13 passages attributed to him. 
He was still alive and living in the Inns community in 1599 when Mathew Royden
swore out a “surety of the peace” against him (Horne 67), but if he published in the
’90s it was not under his own name, though possibly a tract in verse published in 1602
as by T.A. was from his pen.

Gregory Downhall (died 1614) was a “founding scholar” at the Merchant Taylor’s


School (founded in 1561), where he would have been acquainted with the real
Edmund Spenser.  He took his BA at Pembroke College Cambridge in 1574, followed
by advanced studies at Oxford at the same time as several of the other Wits, and at
one of the Inns of Chancery during the ’80s.  Since the single poem attributed to him
in Watson’s Passionate Century is the only work found under his name, he was
probably included there as a friend or patron of the group.  Secretary to the Ld
Chancellor (Hatton?), “one of his friends was the Countess of Pembroke,” i.e., Mary
Sidney (Horne 68).  Someone by his name served in Parliament (from Saltash in
Devon) in 1597-’98 (wiki).

Matthew Roydon (died 1622) got his MA from Oxford in 1580.  Although the only
works to survive are his dedicatory poem in Watson’s Passionate Century (1582),
another in Peckham’s True Report (1583), and one in his elegy to Sidney, published
first in 1593, and several times after that, he was clearly a poet of acclaim.  Like
Marlowe, he’s seen as one of the members of Raleigh’s circle (DNB) due largely to
the fact that his friend George Chapman dedicated his School of Night to him in 1594,
as well as his Ovid’s Banquet of Sense the following year (wiki).  According to
Chapman, Royden was friendly with Marlowe’s patrons, Ld Strange and Henry Percy,
Earl of Northumberland, and also with George Carey, patron of Shakespeare’s
company, the Lord Chamberlain’s Men (1597-1603) and the 5th Earl of Sussex. 
Other complimentary mentions came from Nashe (1589), Meres (1598), and John
Davies of Hereford (1611), while the actor Robert Armin referred to him as a
“poetical light” in 1609.  A court record places him in Westminster (the Inns
community) in 1599. It’s possible that Roydon was connected to Oxford though his
uncle Arthur Golding, who married Ursula Roydon of Kent

It should be noted that the rake-hell reputation that has adhered to the Wits like
barnacles to an old tanker vanishes on even the most cursory glance at what’s actually
known about them.  It’s true that Thomas Lodge was a spend-thrift in his youth and
that Thomas Watson was a rascal (if he’s the same Watson who attempted to con Sir
William Cornwallis into marrying his daughter to Watson’s brother-in-law), but even
the most cursory examination of the records shows that the bad reputation pinned on
the whole group was of the nature of the bad reputations pinned on Robert Greene
(mostly by himself) or on George Peele (by a posthumous pamphleteer) whose
biographer spends most of his text proving that Peele was nothing of the sort.  Most of
these young writers were educated men with respectable reputations in their own time,
who went on to respectable careers in later life as secretaries to statesmen and
members of Parliament.

It’s my opinion that the mystification that surrounds these writers and their proxies is
only an extension of the mystification that surrounds Shakespeare.  It seems clear that
some of them are real and some are proxies for Court writers.  It also seems clear that,
whether masked or not, these names represent writers who came together in the 1580s
at Fisher’s Folly, under the aegis of the Earl of Oxford, the ones referred to by
Burghley as Oxford’s “lewd friends.”  Brought together to provide plays, propaganda,
and other writings necessary to the functioning of Walsingham’s operation, they
vanished from the literary scene following his death in 1590.

Why all of this remains such a mystery after so many centuries is not nearly so
mysterious once we understand that the lack of evidence for the Wits, who they were,
what brought them together, and where they were located, is not the result of a
peculiar lack of interest on the part of the readers of the time, nor of any natural fire or
flood loss of records, but of a more or less calculated effort on the part of particular
members of the Court community to eliminate their own or their family’s connection
to these writers and their works.  For more on this, check The Cecils and
History and Missing from the Record.

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