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Fulke Greville had a remarkable personality and
intelligence. He is one of the most complex and
interesting characters of his period.
Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke, Joan Rees
(1971), book-jacket.

Fulke Greville’s ability to combine the roles of
writer, courtier, government official, builder of an
estate and patron made him almost a type of the
Renaissance man

after he left the University he traveled, and at his
return, being well accomplished, was introduced into
the Court by his uncle Robert Grevil a servant to Q.
Elizabeth, where he was esteemed a most ingenious
person, and had in favour by all such that were
lovers of Arts and Sciences
Athenae Oxonienses
Anthony A Wood (1691)

Sir Fulke Greville had much and private access to
Queen Elizabeth which he used honourably and did
many men good
Apophthegmes New and Old,
Sir Francis Bacon (1625).

Sir Fulke Greville, the friend of Sir Philip Sidney
and the very prototype of the gentle courtier.
Francis Bacon,
Nieves Mathews, p. 291.

Sir William Pickering was like to have gained the
Queen’s bed by studying, Sir Philip Sidney had her
heart for writing, and Sir Fulke Greville had her
favour for both ... others ministered to Queen
Elizabeth’s government, this gentleman to her
recreation and pleasure … his mornings were devoted
to his books, his afternoons to his knowing friends,
his nights for his debonair acquaintance … his
affableness endeared him to the popularity …
sweet was his disposition, winning his
converse, fluent his discourse
Statesmen and Favourites of England
David Lloyd (1665).

…
every word he spake
Was wine and music
Iter Boreale,
Richard Corbett (1647) |
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Who was Fulke Greville?
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Greville is generally regarded by historians of the
period as ‘the very prototype of the gentle courtier
(Nieves Mathews); a man who treated ‘all classes of
men’ with respect and courtesy. He is described as a
brave, affable,
charming, humorous and generous man of intellectual
and artistic genius who possessed such elegant
speech that Bishop Corbett, who knew him well,
claimed that his ‘every word was wine and music.’
In his long life, the Recorder of
Stratford-upon-Avon played many parts. After being
educated at Shrewsbury (where he met his lifelong
friend Philip Sidney), and Jesus College, Cambridge,
he was successfully (and in many cases
simultaneously): an ‘intelligencer’ who traveled all
over Europe and recruited spies for Walsingham and
Essex (Marlowe, Gwinne and Coke); a soldier (he was
captain of a hundred lancers and fought for Henry of
Navarre at the Battle of Coutras in 1586); a sailor
(master and commander of the Foresight, 1580
and, in 1599, Rear-Admiral commanding The
Triumph, the largest ship in the British Navy).
He was a renowned horseman and a ‘famous Champion of
the tiltyard’.
He was a lawyer (Middle Temple and Gray’s Inn) and
represented the Somervilles in the ‘Somerville
Suicide Case’; a judge (Recorder of Stratford and
Warwick); a statesman (Secretary to the Council of
Wales, 1581, Treasurer of the Navy, 1598-1604, and
Chancellor of the Exchequer,
1614-1621). During
his long career the Recorder of Stratford-upon-Avon
managed to repair his family estates and ‘died
reputed to be the richest man in England’.
Greville never married and spent much of his great
fortune on many diverse interests. He was an art
collector (the Warwick Collection, particularly the
tapestries). A builder (rebuilding the ruined
Warwick Castle), and an early patron of Inigo Jones
(Brooke House, Holborn and The Banqueting House,
Whitehall). He designed three of the most famous
gardens in England, (Warwick Castle, Brooke House,
Holborn, and Kings Place, Hackney). He was a great
promoter of America (The Virginia Company), and,
with Philip Sidney and Francis Drake, he planned
‘The Invasion of America’ in 1585. Greville’s
lasting fame is as a patron to men of literature
(including three Poets Laureate, Samuel Daniel,
Edmund Spencer and Ben Jonson); history (William
Camden, Dorislaus); trade (the East India Company);
science (Giordano Bruno and John Speed); politics
(Francis Bacon and Sir John Coke); and the Church
(Bishops Andrews and Overall).
Greville’s literary reputation rests upon:
Caelica (1633), a sequence of songs and sonnets
containing love poems as well as religious and
philosophical verses. Mustapha (piratically
published in 1609), and Alaham (1633), two
Senecan closet dramas in verse, with choruses on the
Greek model, intended to be read rather than acted.
Four verse treatises: A Treatise upon Fame and
Honour (1633); A Treatise of Warres
(1633); A Treatise of Monarchy (1670); A
Treatise of Religion, (1670). A Letter to an
Honourable Lady, (1633) and A Letter of
Travell (1633). Greville is most famous for his
biography, The Life of Sir Philip Sidney
(1652).
Geoffrey
Bullough summed it up ...
What is conceivable is that Fulke Greville the
man, freed from the restrictions of Fulke
Greville the courtier and administrator, might
well have found the true medium for his
metaphysical debating mind not in closet-dramas
but in the popular theatre of his day. What
Chapman achieved by sheer power of intellectual
will and Tourneur vainly strove to equal,
Greville was equipped to equal or surpass.
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