Early in his documentary-essay
Magnetic North(2008), Jonathan Meades extols the herring as the defining staple of Northern Europe, comparable to the Mediterranean olive, and “infinitely preferable to lobster or sole”. From Arras to Helsinki, a dish of herring with the local tipple punctuates his meander along the coast, leitmotiv as celebration. But Meades was not the first to praise the fish. A stray snippet by John Taylor the Water Poet, four centuries earlier, noted:
Tom Nash a witty pamphlet did endite In praise of Herrings, both the red and write. (Taylor, sig. Fff2v)
Tom Nash
a witty pamphlet did enditeIn praise of Herrings, both the red and write. (Taylor, sig. Fff2v)
Taylor was here referring, in the course of a long litany of previous mock encomia, to Nashe’s Lenten
1925 words
Citation: Ossa-Richardson, Anthony. "Nashe's Lenten Stuff". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 21 July 2014 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=3323, accessed 21 November 2024.]