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See also: English musician and poet, was as early as 1549 in the service of See also: William
See also: Herbert, afterwards See also: earl of Pembroke
.
His friend See also: Thomas
See also: Newton, in a poem prefixed to The Hive of Hunnye (1578), says: " In See also: prime of youth thy pleasant See also: Penne depaincted Sonets sweete," and mentions his interludes, gallant See also: lays, rondelets and songs, explaining that it was in the winter of his age that he turned to sacred See also: lore and high philosophy
.
In 1550 he published Certayne Psalms
..
. in Englishe metre, and shortly afterwards was made a gentleman of the See also: Chapel Royal
.
At Mary's accession he retained his See also: appointment, but in 1555 he is said to have been one of a party of twelve conspirators who had determined to take Mary's See also: life
.
Nothing came of this See also: plot, but shortly afterwards he was party to a conspiracy to dethrone Mary in favour of See also: Elizabeth
.
See also: Hunnis, having some knowledge of See also: alchemy, was to go abroad to See also: coin the necessary gold, but this doubtful See also: mission was exchanged for the task of making false keys to the See also: treasury in See also: London, which he was able to do because of his friendship with See also: Nicholas Brigham, the See also: receiver of the See also: exchequer
.
The conspirators were, however, betrayed by one of their number, Thomas See also: Whyte
.
Some of them were executed, but Hunnis escaped with imprisonment
.
The See also: death of Mary made him a See also: free See also: man, and in 1559 he married See also: Margaret, Brigham's widow, but she died within the See also: year, and Hunnis married in 156o the widow of a See also: grocer
.
He himself became a grocer and freeman of the City of London, and super-visor of the See also: Queen's Gardens at See also: Greenwich
.
In 1566 he was made Master of the See also: Children of the Chapel Royal
.
No See also: complete piece of his is extant, perhaps because of the See also: rule that the plays acted by the Children should not have been previously printed
.
In his later years he See also: purchased See also: land at See also: Barking, See also: Essex
.
If the lines above his signature on a 1557 edition of See also: Sir Thomas More's See also: works are genuine, he remained a poor man, for he refuses to make a will on the ground that " the See also: good that I shall leave, will notpay all I owe." In Harleian MS
.
6403 is a See also: story that one of his sons,in the capacity of page, drank the See also: remainder of the poisoned cup supposed to have been provided by See also: Leicester for Walter Devereux, 1st earl of Essex, but escaped with no injury beyond the loss of his hair
.
Hunnis's extant works include Certayne Psalms (1549), A Hive full of Hunnye (1578), Seven Sobbes of a sorrowful Soule for Sinne (1583), Hunnies Recreations (1588), sixteen poems in the See also: Paradise of Dainty Devices (1576), and two in See also: England's Helicon (1600)
.
See Mrs C
.
See also: Carmichael Stopes's See also: tract on William Hunnis, reprinted (1892) from the Jahrbuch der deutschen See also: Shakespeare Gesellschaft
.
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