Skip to main content
Birth date
1503
Death date
1542
Birth town
Kent
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 171 - 180 of 322
Title Post date Rating Comments
Lament my loss, my labor, and my pain
Average: 5 (1 vote)
0
Was I never yet of your love grieved
Average: 4 (4 votes)
0
Avising the bright beams of these fair eyes
No votes yet
0
Mistrustful minds be moved
No votes yet
0
After great storms the calm returns
No votes yet
0
From thought to thought, from hill to hill love doth me lead
No votes yet
0
As for them all I do not thus lament
No votes yet
0
Lyve thowe gladly, yff so thowe may
No votes yet
0
To wet your eye withouten tear
No votes yet
0
Deme as Ye List Uppon Goode Cause
No votes yet
0
Thomas Wyatt was born at Allington Castle in Kent, and educated at St John's College, Cambridge. While travelling as a diplomat for Henry VIII he developed his interest in Continental poetry; he was the first English poet to use the Italian forms of the sonnet and terza rima, and the French rondeau. His translation of the Penitential Psalms is based on a version by the Italian poet Pietro Aretino.

In the course of his career Wyatt served his King Henry in a variety of offices, including those of Marshal of Calais, Sheriff of Kent and Ambassador to Spain, and he was also jailed several times. His first imprisonment, in 1534, was for brawling; two years later his relationship with the disgraced Anne Boleyn resulted in a short spell in the Tower of London. Thomas and Anne had been lovers before her marriage to Henry, and his sense of loss at their separation forms the subject of the famous sonnet 'Whoso List To Hunt'.

Wyatt was restored to favour and knighted in 1537, and spent the next two years on his embassy to the court of Charles V of Spain. In 1540 however, his trusted patron Thomas Cromwell was executed, leaving him without an ally at court. The following year Wyatt was accused of treason by his enemies and imprisoned in the Tower once more. He managed to secure his own release but died of a fever soon afterwards.