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See also: English schoolmaster, translator and playwright, author of the earliest extant English See also: comedy, Roister Doister, came of the See also: family of Uvedale, who in the 14th century became lords of Wykeham, Hants, by See also: marriage with the heiress of the Scures
.
The name was probably pronounced Oovedale, as it appears as Yevedale, Owdall, Woodall, with other variants
.
He latinized it as Udallus, and thence anglicized it as Udall
.
He is described as Owdall of the parish of St See also: Cross, Southampton, 12 years old at See also: Christmas 1516, when admitted a See also: scholar of Winchester See also: College in 1517 (Win
.
Seed
.
Reg.)
.
He was therefore not 14 (as Anthony See also: Wood says) but 161 years of age when admitted a scholar of Corpus Christi College, See also: Oxford, in See also: June 1520; he is called Wodall as a lecturer at that college in 1526 to 1528 (T
.
See also: Fowler, Ii 1st
.
C
.
C
.
C.)
.
With See also: John
See also: Leland he produced " dites " (ditties) " and interludes" (B.M
.
MS . ,8A lxiv.) at See also: Anne Boleyn's See also: coronation on the 31st of May 1533
.
Leland's contributions are all in Latin; those of " Udallus," which See also: form the chief See also: part, are mostly in English, the speeches being each spoken by a " See also: child," at Cornhill beside Leadenhall," "at the Conducte in Cornhill " and " at the little Conducte in Cheepe." His Floures for Latine Spekynge, selected and gathered out of See also: Terence and the same translated into Englysshe, published by Bartlet (in aedibus Bertheleti), were dedicated " to my most sweet See also: flock of pupils, from the monastery of the monks of the See also: order of Augustine," on the 28th of See also: February 1533—1534
.
There were no monks of that order, and whether See also: Austin Friars or Augustinian canons were meant is open to doubt
.
The See also: book was prefaced with laudatory Latin verses by Leland and by Edmund See also: Jonson
.
The latter was a Winchester and Oxford contemporary of Udal's, in 1528 See also: lower master (hostiarius) at See also: Eton, a See also: post which he See also: left to become master of the school of St Anthony's Hospital, then the most flourishing school in See also: London
.
From the dedication we may infer that Udal was See also: usher under Jonson and " the sweet flock "was at St Anthony's school next door to Austin Friars
.
At Midsummer 1534 he became See also: head master of Eton (informator puerorum or Judi grammaticalis; Eton See also: Audit Book
.
25—26 See also: Hen
.
VIII.)
.
It has been suggested (Die
.
Nat
.
Biog.) that the Floures was dedicated to Eton boys in advance; but this is unlikely, as in those days See also: schools never got their masters till the place was vacant, or on the See also: verge of vacancy
.
At Eton Udal's See also: salary was £Io and £1 for See also: livery, with "See also: petty receipts " of 8s
.
4d. for obits, 2s
.
8d. for laundress, 2S. for candles for his chamber, and 23s
.
4d
.
" for ink, candles and other things given to the grammar school by Dr Lupton, provost." One of his school books, Commentaries on the Tusculan questions of See also: Cicero (ed, Berouldus, 1509), with the inscription " sum Nicolai Udalli 1536," is in the See also: King's Library at the
See also: British Museum
.
There was a yearly See also: play, 3S. being paid for the repair of the dresses of the players at Christmas, and Is
.
4d. to a servant of the dean of Windsor for bringing his master's clothes for the players
.
A payment for repair of the players' dresses recurs every See also: year
.
Udal has been credited (E
.
K
.
See also: Chambers, Mediaeval Stage, ii
.
144, 192) with producing a play at See also: Braintree while See also: vicar there, recorded in the churchwardens' accounts for 1534 as " Placidas See also: alias See also: Sir Eustace." The play is actually called in the accounts (only extant in 17th-century extracts) " Placy Dacy alias St Ewastacy," and is the old play of Placidas, mentioned in the 9th century
.
Udal did not become vicar of Braintree till the 27th of See also: September 1537 (Newconrt's Repert. ii
.
89)
.
At Michaelmas he resigned the mastership of Eton to reside at Braintree, being called "See also: late schole-master wose roome nowe enjoyeth and occupieth Mr Tindall " in a letter from the provost to See also: Thomas
See also: Cromwell, then privy See also: seal, on the 7th See also: October 1537 (Lett. and Pa
.
Hen."VIII., 1537)
.
He returned to Eton, however, or rather to Hedgeley, the school being removed there on account of the plague, at Midsummer 1537, being paid for the third and See also: fourth terms of the school year
(Eton Audit Book, 29–30 Hen
.
VIIL)
.
In October 1538 " See also: Nicholas Uvedale, professor of the liberal arts, informator and schoolmaster of Eton, " was licensed to hold the vicarage of Braintree, " with other benefices," without See also: personal residence
.
The accounts of Cromwell for 1538 include " Woodall, the scholemaster of Eton, to playing before my See also: lord, £5." Presumably he brought a troupe of Eton boys with him
.
In that year he published a second edition of his Floures of Terence for the benefit of Eton boys
.
The often-questioned account of Thomas See also: Tusser (Five See also: Hundred Pointes of See also: Good Husbandrie) is typical of Eton at the See also: time, as Udal's predecessor See also: Cox is said in See also: Ascham's Scholemaster to have been " the best scholemaster and greatest beater of our time ":--
" From Powles I went to Aeton sent,
To learn straightwaies the Latin phraise;
Where fifty-three stripes given to me at once I had; For fault but small or none at all
It came to pass thus beat I was;'
See, Udall, see, the See also: mercie of thee to mee, poor lad."
Udal's See also: rule of the See also: rod at Eton was brought to an abrupt conclusion by his being brought up before the privy council on the 14th of See also: March 1540/1541 for being " counsail " with two of the boys, Thomas Cheney, a relation of the lord treasurer of the
See also: household, and Thomas Hoorde, for stealing some See also: silver images and See also: chapel ornaments
.
He denied the See also: theft, but confessed to a much more scandalous offence with Cheney, and was sent to the See also: Marshalsea prison
.
He tried, but failed, to get restored to Eton . Attempts have been made to whitewash him . But his own confession, and an abject letter of repentance with promises of amendment, addressed (probably) to Wriothesley, a HampshireSee also: man and a family friend, cannot be got over
.
It shows that he was a See also: bad schoolmaster as well as an immoral one, since he pleads " myn honest chaunge from See also: vice to See also: vertue, from prodigalitee to frugall lyving, from negligence of teachyng to assiduitee, from play to studie, from lightness to gravitee." In 1542-1543, after the See also: bursar of Eton had ridden up to London to the provost, Udal was paid " J3s
.
4d. in full satisfaction of his salary in arrears and other things due to him while he was teaching the See also: children "; but on the other See also: side of the account appears an item of " 6os. received from Dr Coxe for Udal's debts." So no See also: money passed to Udal
.
He seems to have maintained himself by translating into English, in 1542, See also: Erasmus's Apophthegms and other See also: works
.
In 1544 he published a new edition of the Floures of Terence
.
He seems to have taken a schoolmastership in See also: Northumberland or Durham, as Leland in one of his Encomia speaks of him, probably at this time, as translated to the Brigantes
.
He seems to have been made to resign his living at Braintree, a successor being appointed on the 14th of See also: December 1544
.
He purged himself, however, by composing the Answer to (he Articles of the Commoners of Devonshire and See also: Cornwall (See also: Pocock; Troubles of the Prayer Book of 1549, Camd
.
See also: Soc., new series, 37, 141, 193), when they See also: rose in See also: rebellion in the summer of 1549 against the First Prayer Book of See also: Edward VI
.
In 1551 he received a patent for printing his See also: translation of See also: Peter See also: Martyr's two works on the Eucharist 'and the See also: Great See also: Bible in English (Pat
.
4 Edw . VI. pt . 5, M . 5, See also: Shakespeare Soc. iii. See also: xxx.)
.
He was rewarded by being made a See also: canon of Windsor on the 14th of December 1551
.
On the 5th of See also: January " after the See also: common reckoning 1552 " (i.e
.
1551/2) he edited a translation of Erasmus's Paraphrases of the Gospels, him-self translating the first three, while that on St John was being translated by the princess Mary, till she See also: fell sick and handed her See also: work over to Dr See also: Malet
.
The work was done at the See also: suggestion and expense of the dowager See also: queen Katharine, in whose See also: charge Mary was
.
A translation by Udal of Geminus's Anatomie or Compendiosa See also: talus anatomiae delineatio, a huge See also: volume with gruesome plates, was published in 1553." Udal's preface is dated the loth of See also: July 1552 " at Windesore
.
In June and September 1553 (Trevelyan Pap
.
Camd
.
Soc
.
84, ii . 31, 33) " Mr Nicholas Uvedale " was paid at the See also: rate of £13, 6s
.
8d. a year as " scholemaster to Mr Edward Courtney,
1 Tusser was a chorister of St See also: Paul's
.
" Sweete mistresse, where as I love you nothing at all, Regarding your substance and richnesse chiefe of all," and so on; whereas it was meant to read
" Sweete mistresse, whereas I love you (nothing at all Regarding your substance and richnesse) chiefe of all, For your personage, beautie, demeanour and wit."
The play was entered at Stationers' See also: Hall, when printed in 1566
.
Only one copy is known, which was given to Eton by an old Etonian, the Rev
.
Th
.
Briggs, in 1818, who privately printed
See also: thirty copies of it
.
As the title-page is gone the only evidence of its authorship is See also: Wilson's
See also: quotation
.
Wilson being an Etonian, it has been argued that his quotation was a reminiscence of his Eton days, and that the play was written for and first per-formed by Eton boys
.
But the occurrence of the quotation first in the edition of 1554, and its See also: absence in the previous See also: editions of 1551 and 1552, coupled with the absence of anything in the play to suggest any connexion with a school, while the scene is laid in London and among London citizens and is essentially a London play, furnish a strong See also: argument that Roister Doister first appeared in 1553, and therefore could not have been written at Eton or for Eton boys
.
Nor could it have been written at See also: Westminster School or for Westminster boys, as argued by Professor Hales in Eng
.
Studien (1893) xviii
.
408 . For though Udal did become head master of Westminster, he only became so nearly two years after Wilson's quotation from Roister Doister appeared . He was at Winchester in the See also: interval, for See also: Stephen See also: Gardiner, See also: bishop of Winchester and chancellor, by will of the 8th of See also: November 1555 (P.C.C
.
3 Noodes), gave 40 marks (£26, 135
.
4d.) to " Nicholas Udale, my scholemaister
.
" In what sense he was Gardiner's schoolmaster it is hard to guess
.
He was not head master or usher of Winchester College; but he may have been master of the old City Grammar or High School, to which the bishop appointed (A
.
F
.
Leach, His,
.
Winch
.
See also: Coll
.
32, 48)
.
The schoolhouse had been leased out for 41 years in 1544 but it is possible Gardiner had revived the school or kept a school at his palace of Wolvesey . At Westminster " Mr Udale was admitted to be scholemaster 16 Dec.See also: anno 1555 " (Chapter See also: Act-Book)
.
The last act of the secular canons, substituted by See also: Henry VIII. for the monks, was the
See also: grant of a lease on the 24th of September 1556
.
When the monks re-entered, on Mary's restoration, of the abbey (Nov
.
21, 1556), the school did not, as commonly alleged, cease, nor had Udal ceased to be master (Shakespeare Soc. iii. xxxiv.) when he died a
See also: month later
.
The parish See also: register of St See also: Margaret's, Westminster, under " Burials in December A.D
.
1556 " records " 11 die Katerine Woddall," " 23 die Nicholas
beinge within the Tower of London, by virtue of the King's Majesty's Warrant "—the See also: young See also: earl of See also: Devon, who had been in prison ever since he was twelve years old
.
Queen Mary on the 3rd of December 1554 issued a warrant on Udal's behalf reciting that he had " at soundrie seasons convenient heretofore shewed and myndeth hereafter to shewe his See also: diligence in setting forth Dialogues and Enterludes before us for our royal disporte and recreacion, " and directing " the maister and yeomen of the office of the Revells " to deliver whatever Udal should think necessary for setting forth such devices, while the See also: exchequer was ordered to provide the money to buy them (Loseley See also: MSS
.
See also: Kempe 63, and Hist
.
MSS
.
Corn
.
See also: Rep. vii
.
612) . One of these interludes was probably Roister Doister; for it was in January 1553, i.e . 1554, that Thomas Wilson, master of St Katharine's Hospital by the Tower, produced the third edition of The Rule of Reason, the first text-book on logic written in English,which contains, while the two earlier editions, published in 1551 and 1552 respectively, do not contain, a long quotation from Roister Doister . It gives under the heading of " ambiguitie, " as " an example of such doubtful writing whiche, by reason of poincting, maie haveSee also: double sense and contrarie meaning
.
. taken out of an intrelude made by Nicholas Udal," the letter which See also: Ralph Roister procured a scrivener to compose for him, asking Christian See also: Constance, the heroine, to marry him
.
Roister's emissary read it
556
Yevedale," i.e
.
Udal
.
Katharine was perhaps a See also: sister or other relation, as See also: Elizabeth Udall was buried there on the 8th of July 1559
.
The abbey cellarer's accounts ending Michaelmas 1557 contain a payment " to Thomas Notte, usher of the boys, £6,
See also: ros., and to the scholars (scolasticis vocatis le grammer childern), £63, 6s
.
8d.," showing that the usher carried on the school after Udal's See also: death
.
Next year (1557-1558) the abbey See also: receiver accounted for £20 paid to John Passey, (the new) schoolmaster, to See also: Richard Spenser, usher, £15, and f133, 6s
.
8d. for 40 grammar boys
.
So it is clear that the school never stopped . Udal therefore was master of Westminster for just over two years . He died at the age of 52 . Roister Doister well deserves its fame as the first English comedy . It is infinitely See also: superior to any of its predecessors in form and substance
.
It has sometimes been described as a See also: mere adaptation of Plautus's See also: Miles Gloriosus
.
Though the central idea of the play—that of a braggart soldier (with an impecunious parasite to flatter him) who thinks every woman he See also: sees falls in love with him and is finally shown to be an arrant coward—is undoubtedly taken from Plautus, yet the See also: plot and incidents, and above all the See also: dialogue, are absolutely See also: original, and infinitely superior to those of Plautus
.
Even the final incident, in which the See also: hero is routed, is made more humorous by the male slaves being represented by maid-servants with mops and pails
.
The play was printed by F
.
See also: Marshall in 1821; in Thomas See also: White's Old English Dramas (3 vols., 1830) ; by the Shakespeare Society, vol. iii., the introduction to which contains the fullest and most accurate account of his
See also: life; in Edward See also: Arber's reprints in 1869; and See also: Dodsley's Old Plays (1894), vol. iii
.
(A
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F
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