Literary Criticism (1400-1800)

Harvey, Gabriel | Harold S. Wilson (essay date 1945)

Harold S. Wilson (essay date 1945)

SOURCE: Wilson, Harold S. Introduction to Gabriel Harvey's Ciceronianus, translated by Clarence A. Forbes, pp. 1-34. Lincoln: The University of Nebraska, 1945.

[In the following essay, Wilson examines Harvey's Ciceronianus, describing its composition, context, contents, purpose, and style.]

I

Though Gabriel Harvey was not, like the poet,

A creature quite too bright and good
To be so much misunderstood,(1)

posterity has, on the whole, dealt rather harshly with him. An unwilling participant in a spectacular and amusing but highly undignified flyting with the brilliant Elizabethan journalist, Thomas Nashe, Harvey has commonly been judged from the estimate of his opponent as a dull pedant. But Tom Nashe is a biased witness and quite unfit to judge of Harvey's accomplishments in the learned world of his day. While he was still in his middle twenties,2 Harvey...

[The entire page is 15873 words long]

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