Skip to main content
Birth date
1563
Death date
1631
Birth town
Warwickshire
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 81 - 90 of 425
Title Post date Rating Comments
And thus like slaves we sell our soules to sinne
No votes yet
0
Why doe I quake my down-fall to reporte?
No votes yet
0
O breake my hart quoth he, O breake and dye
No votes yet
0
The Trent
No votes yet
0
Endimion and Phoebe
No votes yet
0
It was not long e're he perceiv'd the skies
No votes yet
0
To the Worthy Knight, and My Noble Friend, Sir Henry Goodere
No votes yet
0
Upon the Three Sonnes of the Lord Sheffield, Drowned in Humber
No votes yet
0
To the Noble Lady, the Lady I. S. of Worldly Crosses
No votes yet
0
Elegie Upon the Death of the Lady Penelope Clifton, An
No votes yet
0
Drayton was born at Hartshill in Warwickshire and as a youth he became page to Sir Henry Goodere of Polesworth. He fell in love with Sir Henry's daughter, Anne, and worshipped her as 'Idea' in his poetry. Even after her marriage to Sir Henry Rainford he continued to celebrate her charms in verse, and he never married.

He had wanted to be a poet from the age of ten, and achieved his ambition through hard work and a succession of noble patrons, in spite of some ill-fortune. His first work was a verse paraphrase of parts of the Old Testament and Apocrypha, The Harmony of the Church. Ironically, the Harmony caused offence among the authorities and was banned. When James I became king in 1603 Drayton angled for royal favour with To the Majesty of King James: a Gratulatory Poem. Unfortunately he omitted to include the customary tribute to the late Queen Elizabeth, and this gaffe probably cost him an appointment at court.

In spite of this setback, Drayton had a fairly successful career as a poet, and he counted Ben Jonson and William Drummond of Hawthornden among his friends.