Baldwin was a fairly prolific author. His works are listed here in order of the date of probably composition.
Sonnet for Langton's Principal Parts of Physic (1547) Baldwin's first printed work was the sonnet he wrote advertising the qualities of Christopher Langton's
Principal Parts of Physic. The book was printed on 10 April 1547 by Edward Whitchurch. It is the first English sonnet to see print.
A Treatise of Moral Philosophy (1548) The 1547
A Treatise of Morall Phylosophie, contayning the Sayinges of the Wyse, authored by Baldwin and printed by Whitchurch, was a small
black-letter octavo of 142 leaves. An enlarged edition of this work was later published by
Thomas Paulfreyman, and continued to be popular for a century.
Canticles of Salomon (1549) Baldwin's next project was a complicated English translation of the Song of Songs. He dedicated to king Edward VI, and notes the warm reception at court of
Thomas Sternhold's Metrical Psalms. In the preface to the reader, Baldwin explains his method, which is to take the text verse by verse, in English translation, then add an “argument”, explaining what it means, which is followed by a lengthy paraphrase. Baldwin uses a wide variety of verse-forms in these paraphrases. Baldwin himself printed the Canticles in 1549, describing himself as the servant of Edward Whitchurch. It was the only book he printed under his own name.
Wonderful News (c. 1552) William Baldwin may be safely identified as the “W. B. Londoner” who translated Pier Paolo Vergerio's
Epistola de morte Pauli tertii (1549) as
Wonderful News of the Death of Paul III. The initials and place are right, and the preface concludes with Baldwin's motto : “Love and Live”. It was printed by Thomas Gaultier around 1552.
Beware the Cat (1553) Beware the Cat is generally regarded as Baldwin's masterpiece. It is formally a first-person narrative, and relates an event which took place on a night during the Christmas of 1552/53. Baldwin and others have been engaged on the production of entertainments for the court, and one of them, Gregory Streamer, is persuaded to relate how he made an ointment which enabled him to understand the speech of animals, and particularly cats. Marginal notes add a droll commentary to his “orations”. The text is dedicated to the courtier John Young, and one of the characters is
George Ferrers, Baldwin's main collaborator in the writing of A Mirror for Magistrates. The text was not published until 1561, in an edition now lost. The one which now serves as the standard edition is in fact the second edition, published by Thomas Marsh in 1570. Gregory Streamer was a real person, and Baldwin's sly mockery of him called forth an anonymous ballad in defence of Streamer : A Short Answer to a Book Called Beware the Cat (1561).
The Funerals of King Edward VI (1553) In the preface to
The Funerals of King Edward VI, Baldwin says he wrote the text between the death of the king and his burial, i.e., between 6 July and 8 August 1553. He also says that he tried to have it published under Mary, but to no avail. The book was eventually published by Thomas Marsh in 1560. It is a composite of three texts. The first, which has the same title as the book as a whole, relates how God punished the sinful English by taking away their king. The second is an “Exhortation to the Repentance of Sins and Amendment of Life”. The last is an epitaph : “The Death Plaint of Lofe Praise of King Edward VI”.
A Mirror for Magistrates (1554/1555) William Baldwin was the compiler of one of the great monuments of mid-Tudor literature : A Mirror of Magistrates. It consists of a sequence of “tragedies”, in which its poets are presented as taking on the role of the fallen princes of England from the reign of Richard II to Henry VII, who have come back from the grave to tell their tales. The history of the genesis and production of this work is complex and obscure. But we know that Baldwin wrote a good deal of the early version, finished but suppressed by the end of 1555 at the latest. Some version of this text was finally published by Thomas Marsh in 1559, with a continuation in 1563. Baldwin was responsible for the tragedies of Lord Mowbray (IV), Owen Glendower (VI), Richard, Earl of Cambridge (VIII), Richard, Duke of York (XIII), and George, Duke of Clarence (XVIII), and (in 1563) the tragedy of Anthony, Lord Rivers (XX). He also wrote all the proses sections connecting the tragedies. ==Apocryphal Works==