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Author:Edward de Vere

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Edward de Vere
(1550–1604)

17th Earl of Oxford; Elizabethan courtier and poet

Edward de Vere

Works

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  • The Poems of Edward de Vere (1921, J. Thomas Looney, ed.) (external scan)

Individual poems

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Numbered according to May.[1]

  1. Labour and its Reward ("The labouring man that tills the fertile soil")
  2. Care and Disappointment ("Even as the wax doth melt")
  3. The Forsaken Man ("A crown of bays shall that man wear")
  4. Loss of Good Name ("Fram'd in the front of forlorn hope")
  5. Not Attaining to his Desire he complaineth ("I am not as I seem to be")
  6. Reason and Affection ("If care or skill could conquer vain desire")
  7. Love and Wit ("My meaning is to work what wonders love hath wrought")
  8. The Lively Lark
  9. Love and Antagonism ("The trickling tears that fall along my cheeks")
  10. Revenge of Wrong ("Fain would I sing, but fury makes me fret")
  11. Come Hither Shepherd Swain (some versions begin "When wert thou born, Desire?")
  12. Winged with Desire
  13. Love compared to a tennis-play ("Whenas the heart at tennis plays")
  14. What Cunning can Express
  15. Love thy Choice ("Who taught thee first to sigh")
  16. Were I a King

Attributed

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  1. Anne Vavasour's Echo ("Sitting alone upon my thought")
  2. My Mind to me a Kingdom is
  3. Woman's Changeableness ("If women could be fair")
  4. I do increase their wand'ring wits

Works about de Vere

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References

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  1. Steven W. May, "The poems of Edward de Vere, seventeenth Earl of Oxford and Robert Devereux, second Earl of Essex" in Studies in Philology, 77 (Winter 1980), Chapel Hill, pp.1-132.


Some or all works by this author were published before January 1, 1929, and are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. Translations or editions published later may be copyrighted. Posthumous works may be copyrighted based on how long they have been published in certain countries and areas.

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