Sir Francis Hubert is known as an author for his lengthy verse narrative of the history of Edward II, a moralistic and politically charged work, originally written c.1597-1600. Initially suppressed because of its dangerous subject matter, namely a monarch's relationship with his unpopular favourite (Gaveston), which could be seen as a parallel to Charles I's relationship with the unpopular Duke of Buckingam, as well as its treatment of a monarch's deposition and murder, the poem was not published until 1628. This unauthorized edition prompted Hubert to arrange for the publication of an authentic version a year later, just before his death. By this time the poem had been considerably revised and expanded. In the meantime it had enjoyed a wide, notionally clandestine, manuscript circulation, perhaps largely commercial, which came to encompass both a 576-stanza version and a 664-stanza version (subject to slight variations in stanza numbers). At present 23 contemporary manuscript copies are known to survive (
Of Hubert's diverse other Workes
(in the words of his publisher L. Chapman), a religious poem,
Only one example of Hubert's handwriting is currently recorded: namely his signature on a bill of sale in 1608 (*