Pedantry Pedantically Denounced
On a Latin play about Richard III by the master of Caius College, Cambridge (1579):
. . . Legge’s was a poverty-stricken mind; his Latin versification might crimson the cheek of a preparatory schoolboy, and but for the sad fact that by the time they have read sufficiently to write on English literature, scholars have only too often lost the gift, unhappily for their readers, of knowing what is boring and what is not, this fatuous production of a shallow pedant would have been treated with as little respect as it deserves.
(F. L. Lucas, Seneca and Elizabethan Tragedy, 1922, page 97)
He adds a footnote on the last word:
It may be added that John Palmer of St John’s who took the part of Richard “had his head so possest with a prince-like humour” that he behaved like a potentate ever after, and died in prison as a result of his regal prodigalities.
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