Notes and Queries, Number 47, September 21, 1850 by Various
page 34 of 67 (50%)
page 34 of 67 (50%)
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with that of our immortal bard; but few know anything of him beyond his
commendatory verses prefixed to the first folio of Shakspeare. He was born at Denbigh in 1558, and educated at Westminster School while Camden taught there. In 1582 he matriculated at Baliol College, Oxford; and about 1590 he succeeded to a Fellowship at Trinity College, Cambridge. Thence he travelled into Italy, and at Rome was guilty of several indiscretions by the freedom of his conversations. He next went to Jerusalem to pay his devotions at the Holy Sepulchre, and on his return touched at Constantinople, where he received a reprimand from the English ambassador for the former freedom of his tongue. At his return to England, he retired to Oxford, and, according to Wood, spent some years there for the sake of the public library. He died in July, 1633, and was buried in Westminster Abbey, "in the south crosse aisle, neere the dore of St. Benet's Chapell," but no inscription now remains to record the event. Whalley, in Gifford's _Jonson_ (1. cccxiv.), says, speaking of Hugh Holland-- "He wrote several things, amongst which is the life of Camden; but none of them, I believe, have been ever published." Holland published two works, the titles of which are as follows, and perhaps others which I am not aware of:-- 1. "Monumenta Sepulchralia Sancti Pauli. Lond. 1613. 4to." 2. "A Cypres Garland for the Sacred Forehead of our late Soveraigne King James. Lond. 1625. 4to." |
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