William Bosworth
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

William Bosworth (died 1650?) was an English poet, known for a posthumous volume of verse from 1651.


Life

He belonged to a family (whose name is sometimes spelt Boxworth) of
Boxworth Boxworth is a village in South Cambridgeshire, situated about eight miles to the north-west of Cambridge. It falls under the Papworth Everard and Caxton ward and lies within the diocese of Ely. The village covers an area of 1,053 ha. (2,602 a.) ...
in Cambridgeshire. He wrote much poetry in his youth, but published nothing. He died about 1650.


Works

In 1651 an admiring friend (R. C.) issued ''The Chast and Lost Lovers Lively shadowed in the persona of Arcadius and Sepha .... To this is added the Contestation betwixt Bacchus and Diana, and certain Sonnets of the Author to Avrora. Digested into three Poems by Will. Bosworth, Gent.'', London, 1651. It contained Bosworth's poetry, with a dedication to John Finch, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. Five copies of verses signed respectively L. B., F. L. ( Francis Lovelace), E. G. ( Edmund Gayton), S. P., and L. C., lament Bosworth's death. The major poem of the volume is the ''Historie of Arcadius and Sepha'' in two books. It was a romance in the style of Sir Philip Sidney, and non-political, making it unusual for its period.


Notes

;Attribution 1650 deaths 17th-century English poets 17th-century English male writers 17th-century English writers Year of birth unknown English male poets {{UK-poet-stub