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THOMAS NORTON (1532–1584)

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 798 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS NORTON (1532–1584)  ,
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English lawyer, politician and writer of verse, was born in
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London in 1532 . He was educated at Cambridge, and early became a secretary to the
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Protector Somerset . In 1555 he was admitted a student at the Inner Temple, and married Margery Cranmer, the daughter of the archbishop . From his eighteenth
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year Norton had begun to compose verse . We find him connected with
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jasper Heywood; as a writer of " sonnets " he contributed to Tottel's
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Miscellany, and in 156o he composed, in
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company with Sackville, the earliest English tragedy,
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Gorboduc, which was performed before Queen Elizabeth in the Inner Temple on the 18th of
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January 1561 . In 1562 Norton, who had served in an earlier parliament as the representative of Gatton, became M.P. for Berwick, and entered with
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great activity into politics . In religion he was inspired by the sentiments of his
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father-in-law, and was in possession of Cranmer's MS. code of ecclesiastical law; this he permitted John Foxe to publish in 1571 . He went to Rome on legal business in 1579, and from 158o to 1583 frequently visited the Channel Islands as a
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commissioner to inquire into the status of these possessions . Norton's Calvinism grew with years, and towards the end of his career he became a rabid fanatic . His punishment of the Catholics, as their official censor from 1581 onwards, led to his being nicknamed " Rackmaster-General." At last his turbulent puritanism made him an
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object of fear even to the English bishops; he was deprived of his office and thrown into the Tower . Walsingham presently released him, but Norton's
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health was undermined, and on the loth of March 1584 he died in his house at Sharpenhoe, Bedfordshire . The Tragedie of Gorboduc was first nnhlicharl ~~an~ ~~**+~~+~•~in 1565, and, in better form, as The Tragedie of Feerex and Porrex, in 1570 .

Norton's early lyrics have in the

main disappeared . The most interesting of his numerous anti-Catholic
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pamphlets are those on the
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rebellion of Northumberland and on the projected
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marriage of Mary Queen of Scots to the duke of Norfolk . Norton also translated Calvin's Institutes (1561) and Alexander Nowell's Catechism (1570) . Gorboduc appears in various dramatic collections, and was separately edited by W . D . Cooper (Shakespeare
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Soc . 1847), and by
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Miss Toulmin Smith in Volkmoller's Englische Sprach- and Literaturdenkmale (1883) . The best account of Norton, and his place in
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literary
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history, is that of Sidney Lee in his
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Dictionary of
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National Biography . (E .

End of Article: THOMAS NORTON (1532–1584)
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