Online Encyclopedia

EDWARD HAKE (fl. 1579)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 827 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
EDWARD HAKE (fl. 1579)  ,
See also:
English satirist, was educated under John Hopkins, the
See also:
part-author of the metrical version of the Psalms . He resided in Gray's
See also:
Inn and Barnard's Inn,
See also:
London . In the address " To the Gentle Reader " prefixed to his Newes out of Powles Churchyard . . . Otherwise entitled Syr Nummus (2nd ed., 1579) he mentions the " first three yeeres which I spent in the Innes of Channcery, being now about a dosen of yeeres passed." In 1585 and 1586 he was mayor of New Windsor, and in 1588 he represented the borough in parliament . His last
See also:
work was published in 1604 . He was protected by the
See also:
earl of Leicester, whose policy it was to support the Puritan party, and who no doubt found a valuable ally in so vigorous a satirist of error in clerical places as was Hake . Newes out of Paules Churchyarde, A Trappe for Syr Monye, first appeared in 1567, but no copy of this impression is known, and it was re-issued in 1579 with the title quoted above . The
See also:
book takes the form of a
See also:
dialogue between Bertulph and Paul, who meet in the aisles of the
See also:
cathedral, and is divided into eight " satyrs," dealing with the corruption of the higher clergy and of judges, the greed of attorneys, the tricks of physicians and apothecaries, the sumptuary
See also:
laws, extravagant living,
See also:
Sunday sports, the abuse of St Paul's cathedral as a meeting-place for business and conversation,
See also:
usury, &c . It is written in rhymed fourteen-syllable metre, which is often more comic than the author intended . It contains, amid much prefatory
See also:
matter, a note to the " carping and scornefull Sicophant," in which he attacks his enemies with small courtesy and much alliteration . One is described as a " carping careless cankerd churle." He also wrote a
See also:
translation from Thomas a .

Kempis, The

Imitation, or Following of Christ (1567, 1568) ; A Touchstone for this Time
See also:
Present (1574), a scurrilous attack on the
See also:
Roman Catholic Church, followed by a
See also:
treatise on
See also:
education; A
See also:
Commemoration of the . Raigne of . Elizabeth (1575), enlarged in 1578 to A Joyfull
See also:
Con- tinuance of the Commemoration, ; and of Gold's
See also:
Kingdom, and this Unhel ping Age (1604), a collection of pieces in
See also:
prose and verse, in which the author inveighs against the power of gold . A bibliography of these and of Hake's other
See also:
works was compiled by Mr Charles Edmonds for his edition in 1872 of the Newes (Isham Reprints, No . 2, 1872) .

End of Article: EDWARD HAKE (fl. 1579)
[back]
HAKE (Merluccius vulgaris)
[next]
THOMAS GORDON HAKE (1809-1895)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.