Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 10.djvu/113

Rh GASCOIGNE, (c.–), one of the great pioneers of Elizabethan poetry, was born about —as is believed, in Westmoreland. He was the son and heir of Sir John Gascoigne. He studied at Cambridge, and was admitted to Gray’s Inn in. His youth was unsteady, and his father disinherited him. In he had written his tragicomedy of The Glass of Government, not printed until. In his ﬁrst published verses were preﬁxed to a book called The French Littleton, and he brought out on the stage of Gray’s Inn two very remarkable dramas, Supposes, the earliest existing English play in prose, and Jocasta, the first attempt to naturalize the Greek tragedy. Of the latter only the second, third, and fourth acts were from his hand. Soon after this he married. In there was published A Hundred sundry Flowers bound up in one small Posy, a pirated collection of Gascoigne’s lyrics, he having started in March of to serve as a volunteer under the Prince of Orange. He was wrecked on the coast of Holland and nearly lost his life, but obtained a captain’s commission, and acquired considerable military reputation. An intrigue, however, with alady in the Hague, nearly cost him his life. He regained his position, and fought well at the siege of Middleburg, but was captured under the walls of Leyden, and sent back to England after an imprisonment of four months. In he issued an authoritative edition of his poems under the name of Posies. In the summer of he devised a poetical entertainment for Queen Elizabeth, then visiting Kenilworth; this series of masques was printed in as The Princely Pleasures. Later on in he greeted the queen at Woodstock with his Tale of Hemetes, and presented her on next New Year’s day with the MS. of the same poem, which is now in the British Museum. He completed in his two most important works, The Complaint of Philomene, and The Steel Glass, the ﬁrst of which had occupied him since ; they were printed in a single volume. Later on in he published A delicate Diet for dainty-mouthed Drunkards. He fell into a decline and died at Stamford on the 7th of October. We are indebted for many particulars of his life to a rare poem published in by George Whetstone, and entitled A Remembrance of the Well-employed Life and Godly End of George Gascoigne, Esquire. In his poem of The Steel Glass, in blank verse, Gascoigne introduced the Italian style of satire into our literature. He was a great innovator in point of metrical art, and he preﬁxed to the work in question a prose essay on poetry, which contains some very valuable suggestions. His great claim to remembrance was well summed up in the next generation by Thomas Nash, who remarked in his preface to Greene’s Menaphon, that “Master Gascoigne is not to be abridged of his deserved esteem, who ﬁrst beat the path to that perfection which our best poets aspired to since his departure, whereto he did ascend by comparing the Italian with the English.” The works of Gascoigne were collected in, and partly republished in 1810 and 1821. The best modern edition of the principal poems is that edited, with full bibliographical notes, by E. Arber in 1868.  GASCOIGNE,, was chief-justice of England in the reign of Henry IV. Both history and tradition testify to the fact that he was one of the great lawyers who in times of doubt and danger have asserted the principle that the head of the state is subject to law, and that the traditional practice of public ofﬁcers, or the expressed voice of the nation in parliament, and not the will of the monarch or any part of the legislature, must guide the tribunals of the country. The judge was a descendant of an ancient Yorkshire family. The date of his birth is uncertain, but it appears from the Year Books that he practised as an advocate in the reigns of Edward III. and Richard II. On the banishment of Henry of Lancaster, Gascoigne was appointed one of his attorneys, and soon after Henry’s accession to the throne was made chief-justice of the Court of King’s Bench. After the suppression of the rising in the north in, Henry eagerly pressed the judge to pronounce sentence upon Scrope, the archbishop of York, and the earl marshal Thomas Mowbray, who had been implicated in the revolt. The judge absolutely refused to do so, asserting the right of the prisoners to be tried by their peers. Although both were afterwards executed, the chief-justice had no part in the transaction. The often told tale of his committing the Prince of Wales to prison has of course been doubted by modern critics, but it is both picturesque and characteristic. The judge had directed the punishment of one of the prince’s riotous companions, and the prince who was present and enraged at the sentence struck or grossly insulted the judge. Gascoigue immediately committed him to prison, using ﬁrm and forcible language, which brought him to a more reasonable mood, and secured his voluntary obedience to the sentence. The king is said to have approved of the act, but there appears to be good ground for the supposition that Gascoigne was removed from his post or resigned soon after the accession of Henry V. He died in, and was buried in the parish church of Harewood in Yorkshire. Some biographies of the judge have stated that he died in, but this is clearly disproved by Foss in his Lives of the Judges; and although it is clear that Gascoigne did not hold ofﬁce long under Henry V., it is not absolutely impossible that the scene in the ﬁfth act of the second part of Shakespeare’s Henry IV. has some historical basis, and that the judge’s resignation was voluntary.  GASCONY, an old province in the SNV. of France, nearly identical with the Novempopulania or Aquitam'a Tertia of the Romans. Its original boundaries cannot be stated with perfect accuracy, but it included what are now the departments of Landes, Gers, and Hautes—I’yrénées, and parts of those of Haute-Garonne aud° Ariége. Its capital was Auch. About there was an incursion into this region of Vascons or l'asques from Spain, but whether of a hostile kind or not is uncertain ,- but as the original inhabitants, in common with those of the rest of Aquitaine were also Vasques, it is probable that the province owes its name Gascony less to this new incursion than to the fact that its inhabitants continued so long to maintain [their independence. In they suffered defeat from the Franks and were compelled to pay tribute, but they continued to be governed by their own hereditary dukes, and gradually extended the limits of their dominions to the Garonne. The province was overrun by Charlemagne but never completely subdued, and in it formally renounced the authority of the French kings; but through the extinction of the male line of hereditary dukes of Gascony in it came into the possession of the dukes of Guienne (or Aquitaine), with which province its history was from that time identified (see and ).  GASKELL, (1810–1865), one of the most distinguished of England’s women-novelists, was born at Cheyne Row, Chelsea, September 29, 1810. She was the second child of \Villiam Stevenson, of whom an account is given in the Annual Biography and Obituary for 1830. Mr Stevenson, who began life as classical tutor in the Manchester Academy, and preached also at Doblane, near that town, afterwards relinquished his ministry and became. a farmer in East Lothian ; and later, on the failure of his farming enterprises, he kept a boarding—house for students in Drummond Street, Edinburgh, where he also became editor of the Scots Jlayazine, and contributed largely to the Edinburgh Review. At the time of his daughter’s birth Mr Stevenson had been appomted Keeper