Abraham Fraunce is perhaps better known for the distinguished literary circle to which he belonged, including Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Nashe, Sir Philip Sidney and Edmund Spenser, than for the verse, academic Latin, drama, and philosophical treatises he wrote on logic, rhetoric, emblems, and the law. His influence in this circle may indeed have been significant, for Steven May has recently argued that he may well have been responsible not only for showing Marlowe early parts of
Fraunce himself published a number of his own works in verse and prose during his relatively short lifetime, but left several notable works in manuscript, which either remain unpublished or were never published until recent times. Three of them were dedicated or presented to Sir Philip Sidney (*(Fraunce, Abraham) Yeeld, Yeeld, Yeeld, O Yeeld: Omnia vincit amor. Venus est Dignissima pomo … addressed to Sir Philip Sidney
. For a brief comment on this, see H.R. Woudhuysen,