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See also: born in See also: London
.
His name was first added to the See also: history of See also: English literature in 1897 by Mr See also: Henry Bradley's
See also: discovery that The Testament of Love, an important See also: prose See also: work hitherto attributed to See also: Chaucer, See also: bore in the initial letters of its chapters a statement of authorship—" Margarete of virtw, have merci on thin See also: Usk." By the See also: light of this perception, various autobiographical statements became luminous, and there remained no possible doubt that the author was See also: Thomas Usk, who was clerk of the closet to
See also: John of Northampton when he was mayor of London from 1381 to 1383
.
In
See also: July 1384 Usk was seized and put in prison, but was released on promise of bringing charges against the mayor
.
Usk had no wish to be what he called " a stinking See also: martyr," and he freely produced evidence which sent John of Northampton to See also: gaol
.
For this he was not forgiven by the duke of See also: Gloucester's party, although he continued to hold confidential posts in London until the close of 1386, when he was appointed sub-See also: sheriff of Middlesex
.
But he See also: fell with the See also: king, in the
See also: triumph of the duke of Gloucester, and on the 3rd of See also: February 1388 Usk, among others, was tried for treason and condemned
.
He was sentenced " to be See also: drawn, hung and beheaded, and that his See also: head should be set up over Newgate." John of See also: Malvern, in his continuation of See also: Ralph Higden's Polychronicon,l gives a horrid description of his execution, which occurred on the 4th of See also: March 1388, in circumstances of
See also: rude barbarity; it took See also: thirty blows of a sword to sever Usk's head from his shoulders
.
Professor See also: Skeat has shown that the date of his See also: book must be about 1387, for in it he reviews the incidents of his career, including the odd facts that, after his first imprisonment in 1384, he challenged any one who " contraried " his " saws " —that is to say, denied his allegations—to fight, but that no one took up his wager of See also: battle
.
From 1381 to 1383, while Chaucer was See also: comptroller of customs, Usk was See also: collector, and they were doubtless acquainted
.
In The Testament of Love, the See also: god is made to praise " mine own true servant, the See also: noble philosophical poet in English," who had composed " a See also: treatise of my servant See also: Troilus." Usk had at one See also: time been a Lollard, but in prison he submitted to the See also: Church and thought he was forgiven
.
His solitary work is remarkable, and the most elaborate production in
See also: original English prose which the end of the 14th century has bequeathed to us
.
It is, however, excessively tedious, and of its obscurity and dullness a very amusing proof is given by the fact that successive editors—and even Dr Henry Bradley and Professor Skeat—did not discover till too See also: late that the leaves of the original MS. had been shuffled and the See also: body of the treatise misarranged
.
No MS. of The Testament of Love has been preserved; it was first printed by W . Thynne in his edition of Chaucer, 1532 . In 1897 Professor Skeat, with cancelled sheets to cover the unluckySee also: mistake above referred to, issued a revised and annotated text in his Chaucerian and other Pieces
.
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