Wood says that many thought Dyer to be a
Rosicrucian, and that he was a firm believer in
alchemy, although it is doubtful that an organised Rosicrucian movement existed during Dyer's lifetime. He had a great reputation as a poet among his contemporaries, but very little of his work has survived.
George Puttenham, in the
Arte of English Poesie speaks of "Maister Edward Dyar, for Elegie most sweete, solemne, and of high conceit." One of the poems once universally accepted as his is "My Mynde to me a kingdome is", which
Steven W. May considers as possibly written by
Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. Among the poems in ''England's Helicon'' (1600), signed S.E.D., and included in
Dr A.B. Grosart's collection of Dyer's works (
Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library, vol. iv, 1876) is the charming pastoral "My Phillis hath the morninge sunne," but this comes from the
Phillis of
Thomas Lodge. Grosart also prints a prose tract entitled
The Prayse of Nothing (1585). The
Sixe Idillia from
Theocritus, reckoned by
John Payne Collier among Dyer's works, were dedicated to, not written by, him. In 1943 Alden Brooks proposed Sir Edward Dyer as a candidate in the
Shakespearean authorship question in his book
Will Shakspere and the Dyer’s Hand. Further see: Ralph Sargant,
At the Court of Queen Elizabeth: The Life and Lyrics of Edward Dyer. OUP, 1935 Steven May,
The Elizabethan Courtier Poets: Their Poems and Their Contexts. University of Missouri Press, 1991. ==In media==