The lives of the most famous English poets, or, The honour of Parnassus in a brief essay of the works and writings of above two hundred of them, from the time of K. William the Conqueror to the reign of His present Majesty, King James II / written by William Winstanley, author of The English worthies ...

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Title
The lives of the most famous English poets, or, The honour of Parnassus in a brief essay of the works and writings of above two hundred of them, from the time of K. William the Conqueror to the reign of His present Majesty, King James II / written by William Winstanley, author of The English worthies ...
Author
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698.
Publication
London :: Printed by H. Clark for Samuel Manship ...,
1687.
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Subject terms
Poets, English.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66698.0001.001
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"The lives of the most famous English poets, or, The honour of Parnassus in a brief essay of the works and writings of above two hundred of them, from the time of K. William the Conqueror to the reign of His present Majesty, King James II / written by William Winstanley, author of The English worthies ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66698.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

THOMAS KID, THOMAS WATSON, &c.

THomas Kid, a writer that seems to have been of pretty good esteem for versifying in for∣mer times, being quoted among some of the more fam'd Poets, as Spencer, Drayton, Daniel, Lodge, &c. with whom he was either contemporary, or not much later: There is particularly remembred his Tragedy, Cornelia.

There also flourish'd about the same time Tho∣mas Watson, a contemporary immitater of Sir Philip Sidney, as also Tho. Hudson, Joh. Markham, Tho. Achelly, Joh. Weever, Ch. Middleton, Geo. Turbervile, Hen. Constable, with some others, especially one John Lane, whose Works though much better me∣riting than many that are in print, yet notwith∣standing had the ill fate to be unpublish'd, but they are all still reserved in Manuscript, namely, his Poe∣tical Vision, his Alarm to the Poets, his Twelve Months, his Guy of Warwick, a Heroick Poem; and lastly, his Supplement to Chaucer's Squires Tale.

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