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Birth date
1582
Death date
1635
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 21 - 30 of 58
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Elegy upon the death of Queene Anne, An
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On Mr. Rice the Manciple of Christ-Church
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Elegy upon the Death of His Own Father, An
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Cuffe's Speech at his Execution
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To a Lady whose Husband was jealous of her cares of his Visits
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Epitaph On his most honoured Friend Richard Earl of Dorset, An
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In Quendam Anniversariorum Scriptorem
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To the Bell-Founder of Great Tom of Christ-Church in Oxford
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Certaine Poeme, A, As it was presented in Latine by Divines and Others
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On the Lady Arabella
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Was born in 1582, the son of a nurseryman at Eweli, Surrey. At Oxford, to which he proceeded from Westminster school in 1597, he was noted as a wit. On taking orders he continued to display this talent from the pulpit, and James I., in consideration of his “fine fancy and preaching,” made him one of the royal chaplains. In 1620 he became vicar of Stewkley, Berkshire, and in the same year was made dean of Christchurch, Oxford. In 1628 he was made bishop of Oxford, and in 1632 translated thence to the see of Norwich. Corbet was the author of many poems, for the most part of a lively, satirical order, his most serious production being the Fairies’ Farewell. His verses were first collected and published in 1647. His conviviality was famous, and many stories are told of his youthful merrymaking in London taverns in company with Ben Jonson, who always remained his close friend, and other dramatists. He died at Norwich on the 28th of July 1635.