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WILLIAM WEBBE (fl. 1586)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 455 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM WEBBE (fl. 1586)  ,
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English
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literary critic, was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, where he took his degree in 1572–1573 . He was tutor to the two sons of
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Edward Sulyard of Flemyngs, Essex, and later to the children of Henry Grey of Pirgo in the same county . A letter from him is prefixed to the 1592 edition of Tancred and Gismunda,2 written by his friend, Robert Wilmot . In 1586 he published A Discourse of English Poetrie, dedicated to his
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patron, Edward Sulyard . Webbe argued that the dearth of good English
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poetry since Chaucer's day was not due to lack of poetic ability, or to the poverty of the language, but to the want of a proper
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system of prosody . He abuses " this tinkerly verse which we call ryme," as of barbarous origin, and comments on the
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works of his
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con-temporaries, displaying
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enthusiasm for Spenser's Shepheardes
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Calendar, and admiration for Phaer's
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translation of Virgil . He urged the adoption of hexameters and sapphics for English verse, and gives some lamentable examples of his own composition . The Discourse was reprinted in J . Haslewood's Ancient Critical Essays (1811-1815), by E . Arber in 1869, and in Gregory Smith's Elizabethan Critical Essays (1904) .

End of Article: WILLIAM WEBBE (fl. 1586)
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