Isabella Whitney

Isabella Whitney Poems

Good Brother whe a vacat time
doth cause you hence to ryde:
And that the fertyl feelds do make,
you from the Cittie byde.
...

The time is come, I must depart
from thee, ah famous city;
I never yet to rue my smart,
did find that thou had'st pity.
...

Isabella Whitney Biography

Isabella Whitney (born late 1540s; fl. 1567–1573) is the earliest identified woman to have published secular poetry in the English language. Isabella Whitney was born sometime in the late 1540s in Coole Pilate, Cheshire, England . She came from a reformist family which allowed the daughters as well as sons access to a certain degree of humanist education. She had a brother, Geoffrey Whitney, who wrote A Choice of Emblems in 1586 . From what we can gather from A Sweet Nosgay Whitney also had a brother-in-law and three sisters, though their identities are not certain. Unlike many of the other women writers of the sixteenth century, Isabella Whitney did not come from a noble family. Rather, she was of the middle class and lived on meager finances. This can be seen in A Sweet Nosegay, where she states that she is "whole in body, and in mind, / but very weak in purse" . Isabella left Cheshire at an early age to work in London as a servant. While there, she wrote multiple works demonstrating an acute awareness of public taste . This awareness, combined with a sharp satirical tone allowed her to become one of the first professional women writers in Europe. She was also the first woman to write a collection of original poetry, and is thought to be the first professional female poet in England . According to most critics, Isabella Whitney’s works contained a certain degree of autobiographical material. This can be seen in two of her connected poems: A Communication Which the Author had to London before she Made Her Will and The Manner of Her Will, and What She Left to London and to All Those in it, of her Departing where the writer is not only lacking in finances, but also spends the majority her time amongst "the poor, the imprisoned, and the insane", otherwise known as the commonwealth of London . These works were written in ballad metre and contained both witty and animated descriptions of everyday life. Judging from these popular inclusions, it is likely that the reason for the publishing of her works was simply to supplement her scanty income .Isabella Whitney pioneered her field of women poets. She published her poetry in a time when it was not customary for a woman, especially one not of the aristocracy, to do so. In addition, her material contained controversial issues such as class-consciousness and political commentary as well as witty satire, and was made available to the upper and the middle class [9]. Whitney’s two best known works are The copy of a letter, lately written in meeter, by a yonge gentilwoman: to her vnconstant louer written in (1567?), and A sweet nosgay, or pleasant posye contayning a hundred and ten phylosophicall flowers written in 1578.)

The Best Poem Of Isabella Whitney

To Her Brother G. W.

Good Brother whe a vacat time
doth cause you hence to ryde:
And that the fertyl feelds do make,
you from the Cittie byde.
Then canot I once from you heare
nor know I how to send:
Or where to harken of your health
and al this would be kend.
And most of me, for why I least.
of Fortunes fauour fynd:
No yeldyng yeare she me allowes,
nor goodes hath me assind.
But styll to friends I must appeale
(and next our Parentes deare,)
You are, and must be chiefest staffe
that I shal stay on heare.
Wherfore mine owne good brother graunt
me when yt you ar here:
To se you oft and also hence,
I may haue knowledge wheare
A messenger to harke vnto,
that I to you may wryte:
And eke of him your answers haue
which would my hart delight.
Receaue of me, and eke accept,
a simple token heare:
A smell of such a Nosegay as
I do for present beare.
Unto a vertuous Ladye, which
tyll death I honour wyll:
The losse I had of seruice hers,
I languish for it styll.

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