[John Cleveland],
Eleanor Withington,
John Cleveland, Fellow and Rhetoric Reader of St John's College, Cambridge, Royalist poet and satirist, was one of the most popular poets of his day. His frequently witty verses, both amatory and political, were widely circulated in manuscript, particularly in the universities and London society, and printed editions of his works proliferated from 1647 to 1668.
Unfortunately Cleveland showed little interest in regulating or controlling his own texts. The editor of his verse posthumously published in 1659, for instance, recorded that the poet had no considerable collection of his own papers, they being despersed among his friends
. The result of this — despite this editor's claim that Cleveland's Genuine Muse
could not be mistaken as not to discern his pieces from any of the other Poems
— is a somewhat confused canon, in which poems by Cleveland were liable to get mixed up with poems by others or with poems that were dubiously or erroneously attributed to him, in both manuscript and printed sources. Although a substantial nucleus of poems can be attributed to him with reasonable confidence, probably no comprehensive canon can be established definitively, and the authorship of certain poems is likely to remain uncertain.
For present purposes the verse canon accepted in the edition by Morris and Withington is represented here, but for one of their inclusions plus one other widely circulated poem consigned to the Poems Doubtfully Attributed to Cleveland
category (
Besides a small body of letters he wrote in English, some of which, including his successful petition to Cromwell for release from prison (
One other Royalist prose text, By Francis Whyte of Greyes Inne
. Francis White, from Broughton, Leicestershire, was admitted to Gray's Inn on 20 April 1638.
For brief anecdotes about Cleveland in