A friend of Thomas More, Erasmus, Thomas Linacre, Budaeus, Reginald Pole, and John Leland, he did editorial work and saw books through the press for them. He was the supervisor of Linacre's editions of Galen's treatises, and of the second edition of More's Utopia. His own works, mainly letters, translation and moral treatises, were collected for publication in 1545.[3]
A dialogue between Reginald Pole and Thomas Lupset is an imagined work of political theory by Thomas Starkey. It is set at Bisham Abbey, and may be based on an actual visit of Lupset to Pole there in 1529. It is in the tradition of Utopia, and of Thomas Elyot's almost contemporary The Boke named the Governour.[2][4]
123Peter G. Bietenholz, Thomas Brian Deutscher, Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation (2003), p. 357-9.