Chafing against his treatment by some employers as a mere servant (whom he considered below him due to his background and education), Whythorne searched for a patron to allow him to concentrate on composing. His musical manuscripts indicate that near the end of his life he found a patron in
Francis Hastings, but little is known of this relationship despite Whythorne's lengthy preface. Whythorne traveled widely throughout Europe and spent six months in
Italy, learning its language and music. Whythorne returned to
England in 1555, impressed by the continental respect for music and musicians that was absent in England. He later railed against the "blockheads and dolts" of England who failed to appreciate music. Whythorne wrote a book of his travels in Italy, no copy of which survives. Upon his return to England, Whythorne served as a music tutor in
Cambridge and London, where he survived a
Bubonic plague outbreak in 1563 that killed members of his household. In 1571, he was appointed master of music at the Chapel of Archbishop Parker and published seventy-six
Songes for Three, Fower, and Five voyces, the only English secular music known to have been published between 1530 and 1588. Another mentionable work, composed in 1590, is Whythorne's
Duos or Songs for Two Voices. ==Autobiography==