This section contains 1,747 words (approx. 6 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Duncan-Jones, Katherine. “Christs Teares, Nashe's ‘Forsaken Extremities.’” Review of English Studies n.s. 49, no. 194 (1998): 167-80.
In the following essay, Duncan-Jones examines Nashe's relationship to Sir George Carey and Lady Carey in order to demonstrate the extreme poverty and legal difficulties Nashe experienced in his career. A letter from Carey to his wife demonstrates Nashe's debt to the Careys and the danger that his enemy Gabriel Harvey genuinely posed to him.
The only surviving visual image of Thomas Nashe, a clumsy woodcut in a satirical pamphlet on him called The Trimming of Thomas Nashe (1597), shows him as a convicted felon, with his feet apparently sunk in mud or dung, and his legs shackled together.1 This image is of little or no value as a guide to Nashe's personal appearance, yet it may nevertheless indicate that he was correctly viewed by his contemporaries as one whose satirical writing was...
This section contains 1,747 words (approx. 6 pages at 300 words per page) |