The collection comprises mostly the works of
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey and
Thomas Wyatt the Elder. Both were heavily influenced by
Italian poetry, although Wyatt's meter would be adapted to conventional English
iambic stress by Tottel. The star poet of ''Tottel's Miscellany'', the Earl of Surrey, created the English sonnet form by modifying the
Petrarchan sonnet. If the English sonnet is also called the Shakespearean sonnet, that can be attributed to Shakespeare's fame. The form which Surrey created (three
quatrains in alternate rhyme and a concluding
couplet) is easier to write in English than the Petrarchan form, with its more complex rhyme scheme. Wyatt's inclusion in ''Tottel's Miscellany'' would mark the first time this poet's work was printed. Other contributors include
Nicholas Grimald,
Thomas Norton,
Thomas Vaux,
John Heywood,
Edward Somerset and other uncertain or unknown authors.
Hamlet. This is a sample of a poem by Sir Thomas Wyatt found in the text:. The first edition of ''Tottel's Miscellany'' (1557) featured forty poems by Surrey, ninety-six poems by Wyatt, forty poems by Grimald, and ninety-five poems written by unknown authors. Tottel made note that of those anonymous poems, the authors were sure to include
Thomas Churchyard, Thomas Vaux, Edward Somerset, John Heywood and
Sir Francis Bryan. It has been decided definitely that of those ninety-five poems, two were written by Vaux, one by John Heywood, and one by Somerset. The only first edition left is in the
Bodleian Library in England. A reprint, which was limited to sixty copies, was edited by
John Payne Collier in 1867. The second edition was also published in 1557; thirty of Grimald's poems were removed but thirty-nine additional ones were added to the "uncertain authors" category with a final tally of 281 poems. There are only two copies of this work in existence left, one in the Grenville Collection at the
British Museum, the other at
Trinity College, Cambridge. The next seven editions were all printed between 1558 and 1586, with the final ninth edition being published in 1587. ==Impact==