SKETCHES OF THE LIFE OF
Sir Thomas Wyat
AD 1503–1542
(1)
Catherine Millsing (Oxford University), in Encyclopaedia Britanica
(1972), v. 23, pp. 826f.
Introduction
. Wyat, Sir Thomas (1503-1542), English poet and diplomatist, belonged
to a family long settled with some distinction in the West Riding of Yorkshire.
In the time of Henry VII the family moved to Kent and in 1493 the poet's
father, Henry, bought the castle and estate of Allington near Maidstone,
where ten years later his elder son Thomas was born to his wife, Anne,
daughter of John Skinner of Reigate, Surrey. Henry Wyat maintained his
family's standing; after being imprisoned and according to his son tortured
by Richard III, he became a privy councilor to Henry VII, a knight of the
Bath at the coronation of Henry VIII, knight banneret in 1513, and treasurer
of the King's Chamber in 1523. Till his death in 1536 he showed a practical,
affectionate, and trusting interest in his son's welfare, revealed in letters
of 1536 to Thomas Cromwell; his character is movingly commemorated by the
poet in letters to his son, Thomas the younger.
Career At Court of Henry VIII
. Thomas the elder was entered at St. John's College, Cambridge,
in 1515. In 1520 he married Elizabeth Brooke, daughter of Thomas Lord Cobham,
apparently with unhappy results. He was introduced at court, where he held
several social offices, and seems to have been popular and admired for
his attractive appearance and skill in music, languages, and arms. He was
one of the challengers in the royal tournament at Greenwich at Christmas
1525. In 1526 and 1527 he was sent on diplomatic missions to the French
and papal courts, from 1528 to 1530 he was high marshal at Calais, and
till 1536 he was regularly employed in diplomatic missions, to the satisfaction
of Henry VIII. In that year, however, he was sent to the Tower, and it
has been thought that this was part of the movement against the queen.
Wyat's acquaintance with Anne Boleyn probably began when their families
were neighbours in Kent; his admiration for her was known at court, but
there is no certain evidence of any more intimate relation between them
than loving friendship. The cause of his imprisonment was probably some
mere folly, as his father's letters to Cromwell suggest, for he returned
to full royal favour on his release after a month's imprisonment. He was
knighted in 1537 and was sent on embassy to the emperor Charles V, where
again his services were found satisfactory in spite of complaints by Edmund
Bonner (archdeacon of Leicester and later bishop of London) who had been
sent to join him.
Bonner's complaints were sent in a letter to Cromwell, who was too good
a friend of Wyat to take any notice of them. On Cromwell's fall and death,
however, Bonner's charges of disloyalty were renewed, and Wyat was also
accused of treasonable relations with Cardinal Reginald Pole. He answered
the charges in his remarkable Defence (first published in 1816)
and was formally pardoned in March 1541. The pardon was almost immediately
followed by grants of land from the king, and in 1542 he represented the
king when the emperor's ambassadors arrived at Falmouth. He died at Sherborne
on Oct. 6, 1542. Several elegies were written, of which Surrey's —“Wyatt
resteth here, that quick could never rest” — is the most famous. It commemorates
a personality that could draw out equally William Camden's phrase "splendide
doctus" and Cromwell's "gentle frank heart." Among Wyat's worst follies
seems to be that of leaving his own financial affairs in disorder when
he went to serve the king. He
speaks with simple shame of his own follies in his two noble and loving
letters of advice to his son.
Personality
. Any fuller impression of his personality must be drived from his
poems, which are, in fact, unusual for their time in carrying a strong,
though undetailed, sense of individuality. They consist of Certayne
Psalmes . . . drawen into Engliyshe meter, published in 1549; three
satires and a number of "Songes and Sonettes" published by Richard Tottel
in 1557 (in Songes and Sonettes, written by the ryght honorable Lorde
Henry Haward late Earle of Surrey, and other, usually known
as Tottel's Miscellany); and other songs identified in manuscripts
and printed in 19th- and 20th-century editions by
Nott and Muir (see Bibliography). Variant readings between Tottel's
printing and manuscript versions, sometimes in Wyat's autograph, have caused
disagreements about Wyat's intentions and achievements as a metrist. Minor
alterations in the most memorable poems serve to satisfy the ear both of
Tottel's readers and of 20th century lovers of syncopated rhythms.
Achievements As a Poet
. Historically, Wyat's greatest achievements may have been his translations,
the first in English, of Italian sonnets, and his handling in the satires
of terza rima with such free running over the rhymes as to point
to the later unrhymed use of the heroic line in blank verse. Artistically,
his finest achievement undoubtedly lies in his songs, where, though making
occasional use of French forms such as the rondeau, he relies mainly
on the English lyric tradition and his own skill as a lutenist. At his
best, his sense of what is singable is exquisite; his failure to write
immediately recognizable English sonnets may be due partly to his instinct
for the singable. The English sonnet has outlined a weighty, concentrated
structure with heavily marked rhymes; Wyat's sonnet translations tend to
the floating unstressed endings to which singers can give value. "My galley
charged with forgetfulness" is a poor sonnet; it is an attractive 14-line
song.
Nearly all the songs, like the sonnets, are about love. Both songs and
sonnets use the Petrarchan theme of love-service, and the sonnets use the
Petrarchan imagery of fire-ice, love-sieges, and so on; but the general
effect is markedly un-Petrarchan. Wyat's poetry is singularly lacking in
colour-words, and his world is one of gray shadows and black-and-white;
it may be this that seems to transport a Petrarchan storm at sea to the
English Channel. His images are rarely richly decorative; sometimes they
are of the kind usually ascribed to the Metaphysical poets: images of process
and becoming, where it is often impossible to lay a finger on the dividing
line between image and imaged. Many of the songs use no imagery; they make
direct statements of feeling in bare and commonplace language. Emotional
or argumentative point and power are communicated by grammatical means
which look forward to Shakespeare's "had, having, and in quest to have,"
as in the poem beginning "Forget not yet the tried intent":
forget not this, |
How long hath been, and is |
The mind that never meant amiss, |
Poetical force is given to this bare clarity by the pulse of a mastered
rhythm. In the best songs the statement coincides magically with the repeated
stanzaic form, and sometimes even refrains are integrated syntactically
and emotionally into the statement. In the worst work, the bareness is
baldness, and the form is flat.
The dramatic origin, in a real or imagined moment or act, of many of
the poems has been seen as a foreshadowing of Donne, as has Wyat's awareness
of the revulsions as well as the attractions of love. But Wyat's poetry
allows his lady, however shadowy, more of independent existence than Donne's;
he and she can have relationships other than the passionate. It is also
less insistent on personal temperament, its formal structures merely indicating,
rather than proclaiming, the personality. The songs in which the lute is
referred to or addressed (e.g., "Blame not my Lute," "My Lute awake")
clarify the relation of the poet to his hearers; the lute is genuinely
addressed, being endowed with that semblance of personality which men give
to an object loved through long association, and his talking to it may
be overheard without intrusion, so that the poems are neither all-private
nor all-public.
George Puttenham, in his Arte of English Poesie (1589), describes
Sir Thomas Wyat as "deep-witted," and though this might seem to refer to
his meditations in and on the Psalms, or to his musings on private and
public life in the satires, it also applies to the grave vitality of some
of the love poetry. By Surrey and others, Wyat was revered as an artistic
innovator. For the modern reader, he is an original poet whose worst work,
awkward or tedious or both, is outweighed by the fine balance between force
and delicacy in his best.
Bibliography. — Wyat's Works were ed.,
with those of Henry Howard, earl of Surrey, by G. Sewell (1717) and G.
F. Nott, 2 vol. (1815-16); with those of Surrey, Sackville, Grimald, and
Lord Vaux, by R. Bell (1854); and by G. Gilfillan (1858), A. K. Foxwell,
2 vol. (1913), and K. Muir (1949); also in Unpublished Poems Edited
from the Blage Manuscript, 1961). They are also included in G. Bullett,
Silver Poets of the 16th Century (1947). See also R.
Alscher, Sir T. Wyatt und seine Stellung in der Entwickelungsgeschichte
(1886); H. B. Lathrop, "The Sonnet Forms in Wyatt and Surrey," in Modern
Philology, vol. ii (1904); A. K. Foxwell, A Study of Sir Thomas
Wyatt's Poems (1911); E. K. Chambers, Sir Thomas Wyatt and . . .
Collected Studies (1933); C. M. Ing, Elizabethan Lyrics (1951);
H. A. Mason, "Wyatt and the Psalms," in the Times Literary Supplement
(Feb. 27 and March 6, 1953); K. Muir, Life and Letters of Sir Thomas
Wyatt (1963); R. Southall, The Courtly Maker: an Essay on the Poetry
of Wyatt and His Contemporaries (1964); P. Thomson, Sir Thomas Wyatt
and His Background (1965).
(2)
Sidney Lee, in Leslie Stephan & Sidney Lee, ed., Dictionary
of National Biography (Oxford, 1885-1901[reprint 1993]), v. 21, pp.
1098-1102
WYATT, SIR THOMAS
(1503?–1542), poet, only son of Sir Henry Wyatt and Anne, daughter of John
Skinner of Reigate, Surrey, was born about 1503, at his father's residence,
Allington Castle, Kent. The 'inquisitio post mortem' of his father, dated
1537, inaccurately describes him as then aged 'twenty-eight years and upwards.'
A Sketch of Thomas' Father's Life
SIR HENRY WYATT
(d. 1537), the father of the poet, resisted the pretensions of Richard
III to the throne, and was in consequence arrested and imprisoned in the
Tower for two years. According to his son's statement he was racked in
Richard's presence, and vinegar and mustard were forced down his throat.
Henry's Fondness For Cats
. There is an old tradition in the family that while in the Tower
a cat brought him a pigeon every day from a neighbouring dovecot and thus
saved him from starvation. There is no contemporary confirmation of the
legend. The Earl of Romney, who is directly descended in the female line
from the Wyatts, possesses a curious half-length portrait of Sir Henry
seated in a prison cell with a cat drawing towards him a pigeon through
the grating of a window. Lord Romney also possesses a second picture of
'The cat that fed Sir Henry Wyatt,' besides a small bust portrait of Sir
Henry. The pictures, illustrating the tradition of the cat (now at Lord
Romney's house, 4 Upper Belgrave Street, London), represent Sir Henry Wyatt
in advanced years, and were obviously painted on hearsay evidence very
long after the date of the alleged events they claim to depict. The Wyatt
patters, drawn up in 1727, relate that Sir Henry on his release from the
Tower 'would ever make much of cats, as other men will of their spaniels
or hounds.'
Henry' Career At Court
. On the accession of Henry VII Wyatt was not merely liberated but
was admitted to the privy council, and remained high in the royal favour.
He was one of Henry VII's executors, and one of Henry VIII's guardians.
Henry VIII treated him with no less consideration than his father had shown
him. He was admitted to the privy council of the new king in April 1509,
and became a knight of the Bath on 23 July following. In 1511 he was made
jointly with Sir Thomas Bolyn [q.v.] constable of Norwich castle (Letters
and Papers of Henry VIII, i. No. 3008), and on 29 July of the same
year was granted an estate called Maidencote, at Estgarstone in Berkshire.
At the battle of the Spurs he served in the vanguard (16 Aug. 1513). He
became treasurer to the king's chamber in 1524, but resigned that office
to Sir Brian Tuke on 23 April 1528. He had purchased in 1492 the castle
and estate of Allington near Maidstone in Kent, and made the place his
principal residence. Henry VIII visited him there in 1527 to meet Wolsey
on his return from the continent. Wyatt remained friendly with Sir Thomas
Boleyn (the father of Queen Anne Boleyn), who had been his colleague at
Norwich, and resided at Hever Castle in Kent.
Henry's Death
. Sir Henry died on 10 Nov. 1537 (Inq. post mort. 28 Hen.
VIII, m. 5), and, in accordance with the directions in his will, which
was proved on 21 Feb. 1537/8 (Cromwell, f. 7), was buried at Milton,
near Gravesend.
Thomas’ Education
. At twelve years of age the son Thomas was admitted of St. John's
College, Cambridge. He graduated there B.A. in 1518, and M.A. in in 1520.
There is a vague tradition that he also studied at Oxford. He married early
— in 1520, when not more than seventeen — but as a boy he had made the
acquaintance of Anne Boleyn, and long after the date of his marriage Wyatt
was regarded as her lover. He soon sought official employment, and became
esquire of the body to the king. In 1524 he was appointed clerk of the
king's jewels, but the statement that he succeeded his father as treasurer
to the king's chamber is an invention of J. P. Collier, who forged entries
in official papers in support of it (Trevelyan Papers, Camd. Soc.;
SIMONDS, Sir Thomas Wyatt and his Poems). At Christmas 1525 he distinguished
himself at a court tournament. Next year he accompanied Sir Thomas Cheney
on a diplomatic mission to France.
Thomas Travels in Europe
. In January 1526/7 he accompanied Sir John Russell, the ambassador,
to the papal court. The story is told that Russell in his journey down
the Thames encountered Wyatt, and , 'after salutations, was demanded of
him shither he went, and had answer, "To Italy, sent by the king." "And
I," said Wyatt, "will, if you please, ask leave, get money, and go with
you." "No man more welcome," answered the ambassador, So, this accordingly
done, they passed in post together' (Wyatt MSS.) While abroad at
this time, Wyatt visited Venice, Ferrara, Bologna, Florence, and Rome.
Russell broke his leg at Rome, and Wyatt undertook to negotiate on his
behalf with the Venetian republic. On his return journey towards Rome he
was taken captive by the imperial forces under the constable Bourbon, and
a ransom of three thousand ducats was damanded. Wyatt, however, escaped
to Bologna.
Relations at Court
. On settling again in England Wyatt refoined the court, but in 1529
and 1530 he chiefly spent his time at Calais, where he accepted the post
of high-marshal. His relations with Anne Boleyn continued close until her
favours were sought by Henry VIII. Then it is said that he frankly confessed
to Henry the character of his intimacy with her (cf. HARPSFIELD,
Pretended Divorce), and warned him against marrying a woman of blemished
character. In 1533 he was sworn of the privy council, and at Anne's coronation
on Whit Sunday of that year he acted as chief 'ewerer' in place of his
father, and poured scented water over the queen's hands. The story of the
Spanish chronicler that Henry afterwards banished Wyatt from court for
two years is uncorroborated. In the spring of 1535 he was engaged in a
heated controversy with Elizabeth Rede, abbess of West Malling, who declined
to obey the orders of the government to admit Wyatt to confiscated property
of the abbey. He was in attendance on the king early in 1536, but soon
afterwards the discovery of Anne's post-nuptial infidelities created at
court an atmosphere of suspicion, which threatened to overwhelm Wyatt.
On 5 May 1536 he was committed to the Tower, but it was only intended to
employ him as a witness against the queen. Cromwell wrote to Wyatt's father
on 11 May that his life was to be spared. No legal proceedings were taken
against him, and he was released on 14 June. His sister Mary attended Queen
Anne on the scaffold. A miniature manuscript book of prayers on vellum
bound in gold (enamelled black), which now belongs to Lord Romney, is said
to have been given to the queen to a lady of Wyatt's family. (A very similar
volume and binding is among the Ashburnham MSS. at the British Museum;
cf. Archaeologia, xliv. 259-70).
Ambassador to the Emperor in Spain
. Wyatt made allusion to the fatal month of May in one of his sonnets;
but he had not forfeited the king's favour, and the minister Cromwell thenceforth
treated him with marked confidence. In October 1536 he was given a command
against the rebels in Lincolnshire, and he was knighted on 18 March 1536/7.
In 1537 he became sheriff of Kent. In April of the same year he was appointed
ambassador to the emperor, in succession to Richard Pate, and he remained
abroad, mostly in Spain, till April 1539. The negotiations in which he
was engaged were aimed at securing friendly relations between the emperor
and Henry VIII. The diplomacy proved intricate, and although Wyatt displayed
in its conduct sagacity and foresight, he achieved no substantial success.
He
found time in 1537 to send interesting letters of moral advice to his son
(printed by Nott). In May 1538 Edmund Bonner [q.v.] and Simon Heynes
[q.v.] were ordered under a special commission to Nice, where the emperor
was staying, to join Wyatt in dissuading him from taking part in a general
council convened by the pope at Vicenza. Wyatt entertained Bonner and his
companion at Villa Franca, where the English embassy had secured apartments
remote from the heat and crowd of Nice; but Wyatt resented the presence
of coadjutors and treated them with apparent contempt. Bonner retaliated
by writing to Cromwell (from Blois, 2 Sept. 1538) that Wyatt was engaged
in traitorous correspondence with Reginald Pole, lived loosely, and used
disrespectful language to the king (cf. Inner Temple Petyt MS. No.
47, f. 9; printed in Gent. Mag. 1850, i. 563-70). Cromwell, a staunch
friend of Wyatt, ignored the accusation, and on 27 Nov. 1538 wrote to him
in terms of confidence. Wyatt was recalled to England in April 1539.
Special Mission to the Emperor
. In the following December he was despatched to Flanders to interview
the emperor, who was on the point of paying a visit to the king of France
in Paris. Thither Wyatt followed the emperor. In January 1540 Wyatt was
especially requested to procure from the French court the arrest of a Welshman
named Brancetor, an ally of Cardinal Pole, who had taken service in the
household of the emperor, and was with him in Paris. Wyatt failed to secure
the arrest of the man, who appealed to the emperor and to the French government
for protection. Wyatt pressed the matter in an audience of the emperor,
but he proved unconciliatory. Henry VIII, on hearing from Wyatt of his
difficulties, instructed him to remain firm. Wyatt followed the emperor
to Brussels and boldly renewed his entreaties without result. Wyatt's inability
to improve the relations between Henry VIII and the emperor were in part
responsible for Cromwell's fall. In 1540 he returned from the Low Countries.
Fallout from Cromwell's Loss, His Restoration &
Death
. After Cromwell’s execution Bonner and Heynes renewed their old
attack upon Wyatt. Their charges were now treated seriously, and Wyatt
was sent to the Tower at the same time as another innocent ally of Cromwell,
Sir John Wallop [q.v.] Wyatt was privately informed of the accusation,
and sent an elaborate paper of explanations, denying with much spirit that
any treasonable intent could be deduced from any reports of his conversation
(cf. Harl. MS. 78, arts. 6, 7; first printed by Horace Walpole in
Miscellaneous Antiquities, 1772, ii. 21-54, from a transcript made
by the poet Gray). But according to a letter sent by the lords of the council
to Sir William Howard on 26 Mar 1541, Wyatt 'confessed uppon his examination,
all the thinges objected unto him, in a like lamentable and pitifull sorte
as Wallop did, whiche surely were grevous, delyvering his submission in
writing, declaring thole history of his offences, but with a like protestation,
that the same proceeded from him in his rage and folishe vaynglorios fantazie
without spott of malice; yelding himself only to his majesties marcy, without
the whiche he sawe he might and must needes be justely condempned. And
the contemplation of which submission, and at the greate and contynual
sute of the Quenes Majestie, His Highnes, being of his owne most godly
nature enclyned to pitie and mercy, hathe given him his pardon in as large
and ample sorte as his grace gave thother to Sir John Wallop, whiche pardons
be delyvered, and they sent for to come hither to Highnes at Dover.' Thenceforth
the king's favour was secure. He had added the estate of Boxley to his
large Kentish property, and now elsewhere, exchanging some of his land
in Kent for other estates in Dorset and Somerset. He was made high steward
of the manor of Maidstone, and early in 1542 he was returned to parliament
as knight of the shire for Kent. In the summer of 1542 he was sent to Falmouth
to conduct the imperial ambassador to London. The heat of the weather and
the fatigue of the journey brought on a violent fever, which compelled
him to halt at Sherborne in Dorset. There Wyatt died, and on 11 Oct. 1542
he was buried in the great church of Sherborne. The register describes
him as 'vir venerabilis.' The 'inquisitio post mortem,' dated 8 Jan. 1542/3,
enumerates vast estates in Kent (34 Hen. VIII, Kent, m. 90).
Likenesses
. Sir Thomas Wyatt's (bust) portrait (with flowing black beard and
bald head) on panel is in the picture gallery at the Bodleian Library,
Oxford. The Earl of Romney (at his London residence) owns a portrait (small
bust) on panel by Lucas Cornelisz. Two other similar portraits were exhibited
at South Kensington in 1866. Two drawings by Holbein are in the Royal Library
at Windsor; one was engraved for Leland's tract in 1542, and is said to
have been drawn on wood by Holbein. A painting after one of Holbein's sketches
is in the National Portrait Gallery, London. According to Vertue, a full-length
portrait was at Ditchley, the present seat of Viscount Dillon; it has long
been missing. The Bodleian portrait has often been engraved (cf. Dr. Nott's
edition of Wyatt's 'Works,' frontispiece).
Family
. Wyatt married about 1520 Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Brooke,
lord Cobham, and had by her an only surviving son, Sir Thomas Wyatt [q.v.]
His widow married Sir Edward Warner [q.v.]
Tributes
. Wyatt's unexpected death was widely mourned. John Leland, the antiquary,
published in 1542 a Latin elegy of much merit, 'Naenia in mortem Thomae
Viati equitis incomparabilis,' which was dedicated to the Earl of Surrey
(with woodcut of Wyatt). There followed an interesting anonymous effort:
"The Excellent Epitaffe of Syr Thomas Wyat, with two other compendious
dytties, wherin are touchyd, and set furth the state of mannes lyfe. (Imprynted
at London by John Herforde for Roberte Toye [1542],' 4to, 4 leaves): the
portrait of Wyatt, in a circle, is reproduced from Leland's 'Naenia;' a
partial reissue was entitled 'A compendious dittie, wherein the state of
mans lyfe is briefely touched,' London, by Thomas Berthelet, 3 Jan. 1547/8.
but the most interesting poetic tributes to Wyatt were paid by Surrey in
two poems — one a sonnet and the other an elegy in forty-eight lines which
were first published by Tottel in 'Songes and Sonettes' (1557).
Works of a Sacred Nature
. Wyatt belonged to the cultivated circle of Henry VIII's court.
He closely studied foreign literature, and acquired a high reputation as
a writer of English verse. He ordinarily shares with Henry Howard, earl
of Surrey [q.v.], the honour of having introduced the sonnet from Italy
into this country. He is better entitled to be treated as the pioneer.
Wyatt was Surrey's senior by fifteen years. At Wyatt's death Surrey was
only twenty-four. When Wyatt first studied Petrarch's sonnets in Italy,
Surrey was barely nine. Surrey may be fairly regarded as Wyatt's disciple.
Wyatt wrote both sacred and secular verse, but none of his compositions
were published in his lifetime. His sacred poems, in which he shows the
influence of Dante and Alamanni, appeared in 1549 as 'Certayne Psalmes
chosen out of the Psalter of Dauid commonly called the vij penytentiall
Psalmes, drawen into Englyshe meter by Sir Thomas Wyat, knyght, whereunto
is added a prologe of the auctore before every Psalma very pleasant and
profettable to the godly reader. Imprinted at London by Thomas Raynald
and John Harryngton, MDXLIX, 4to.' A sonnet in praise of the book by Surrey
is prefixed, and is reprinted in Tottel's 'Songes and Sonettes' (ed. Arber,
p. 28). The work is dedicated by the printer Harryngton to William Parr,
marquis of Northampton.
Works of a Secular Nature
. Many of Wyatt’s secular poems were first printed in 1557, with
those of Surrey and some anonymous contemporaries, by Richard Tottel, in
the volume called 'Songes and Sonettes,' which is commonly quoted as 'Tottel's
Miscellany.' Ninety-six poems are there assigned to Wyatt out of a total
of 310. In Nott's edittion of the works of surrey and Wyatt (1815-16) important
additions to the collection of Tottel were made from manuscript sources.
The most historically interesting of Wyatt's surviving poems are thirty-one
regular sonnets; of these ten are direct translations of Petrarch, and
many others betray his influence. The metre is simplified from the Italian
model, and the two concluding lines usually form a rhymed couplet. The
rest of Wyatt's poems consist of rondeaus, epigrams, lyrics in various
short metres, and satires in heroic couplets. His muse was largely imitative,
and French and Spanish verse was laid under contribution as well as Italian.
His epigrams often imitate the strabotti of Serafino dell'Aquila.
His satires are inspired by a study of Horace of Persius. Wyatt's poetic
efforts often lack grace, his versification is at times curiously uncouth,
his sonnets are strained and artificial in style as well as in sentiment;
but he knew the value of metrical rules and musical rhythm, as the 'Address
to his Lute' amply attests. Despite his persistent imitation of foreign
models, too, he displays at all points an individual energy of thought,
which his disciple surrey never attained. As a whole his work evinces a
robuster taste and intellect than Surrey's.
Popularity
. ‘Tottel’s Miscellany’ was constantly reprinted [see HOWARD,
HENRY, EARL OF SURREY;
TOTTEL, RICHARD]. Wyatt's poems
were separately reprinted from 'Tottel's Miscellany' twice in 1717; in
Bell's 'Annotated Edition of English Poets' in 1854; by the Rev. George
Gilfillan, Edinburgh, in 1858; and by James Yeowell in the 'Aldine Poets,'
1863.
The poetical works of Wyatt and Surrey have often been edited together,
notably in 1815-16, by George Frederick Nott [q.v.], who printed many new
poems by Wyatt for the first time from the Harington MSS. and the Duke
of Devonshire's manuscript collections (2 vols. 4to), and again in 1831
by Sir Harris Nicolas.
Sources
. [An elaborate memoir by Nott is prefixed to his edition of Wyatt's
works (1816); a few additions are made by Nicolas and Yeowell in their
respective editions of Wyatt's poems. John Bruce, in Gent. Mag. 1850, ii.
235 seq., gave a series of valuable extracts touching Sir Thomas's career
from the Wyatt manuscripts, a remnant of a collection of family papers
made in 1727 by a descendant, Richard Wyatt (1673-1753); in 1850, when
Bruce used them, these papers were in the possession of the Rev. B. D.
Hawkins of Rivenhall, Essex, but they were made over in 1872 to the earl
of Romney, in whose ancestors' possession they had formerly been; they
are now the property of the present earl (information kindly given by the
Hon. R. Marsham-Townshend). Mr. Cave Browne in his History of Boxley Parish,
Maidstone, 1892, pp. 134 seq., made some use of the Wyatt MSS. See also
Arber's preface to his reprint of Tottel's Miscellany, 1870; Cooper's Athenae
Cantabr.; Froude's History, Miss Strickland's Queens of England; Bapst's
Deux Gentilhommes-Poetes de la Cour de Henry VIII, 1891; Thomas's Historical
Notes; Miscell. geneal. et Heraldica, new ser. ii. 107; Brewer and Gairdner's
Letters and Papers of Henry VIII; Cal. State Papers, Spanish, v.-vi.; Friedmann's
Anne Boleyn; George Wyat's Account of Anne Boleigne, 1817; Brewer's Henry
VIII; Warton's Hist. of English Poetry; Professor Courthope's Hist. of
English Poetry, ii. 44-67 (an important critical study); Mr. Churton Collins
in T. H. Ward's English Poets; Rudolf Alsher's Sir Thomas Wyatt und seine
Stellung in der Entwickelungsgeschichte der englischen Literatur und Verskunst,
Vienna, 1886 (chiefly dealing with Wyatt's metres); W. E. Simonds's Sir
Thomas Wyatt and his Poems (Boston, 1889).]
(4)
Since the painting has been painted over, it is not possible to determine
for sure that the artist was Hans Holbein. This portrait comes from the
collection of Louis XIV and is located in the Arundel Collection under
the title "Il ritratto del Cavaglier Wyat." There are numerous copies in
England. The copy in the National Gallery in Dublin is not as good as the
picture in Paris. The person portrayed was formerly in error thought to
be Thomas More. Syr Henry Wyat of Allington Castle was a counselor to and
friend of Thomas More. We may confirm the identification by comparing it
to ancient signed copies. It would date from its style to 1528.
[Portrait size is 530
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(5)
[Portrait size is 258
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(6)
A.
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B. William Bruce Bannerman, The Visitations of Kent taken in the
years 1530-1 by Thomas Bendte. Harlean Society Publications, vol. 74
(1923), p. 22 [FHL 016076 item 2]
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